Paul Garreau
Paul Émile, baron de Garreau (25 October 1811 – 25 September 1880) was a French physician and philosopher.
Contents
Biography
Paul Garreau was born at La Rochelle in the Charente-Maritime department, the son of Pierre Garreau and Susanne Elisabeth Texier. Doctor of medicine, he was a pathologist and military doctor in the French campaigns in Algeria, Lebanon and Italy. Garreau was also chief physician at the Saint-Cyr school.
On March 14, 1863 he was made Officer of the Legion of Honour.[1] In 1871 he married Élisabeth-Sophie Gallot (1826–1911),[2] poetess and novelist. He died without descendants.[3]
Works
- Propositions sur quelques points de la pathologie du crâne et du cerveau (1837; theses)
- Essai sur les bases ontologiques de la science de l’homme (1846)
- Du Moi ontologique et de la métaphysique de l’ecleticisme (1847)
- Essai sur quelques points de pathogénie et de classification médicale (1854)
- Essai sur les premier principes des sociétés (1859)
- Contre l’animisme. Nouvel essai d’une théorie cartésienne (1863)
- Lettres à M. Sales-Girons sur l'occasionalisme en physiologie (1864)
- De Service de Santé de l’Armée et de l’organisation qu’il réclame (1865)
- La "philosophie de la liberté" de M. Secrétan, professeur à Lausanne (1872; on Charles Secrétan)
Notes
<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />
Cite error: Invalid <references>
tag; parameter "group" is allowed only.
<references />
, or <references group="..." />
External links
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ "Garreau, Paul Emile," Base de Données Lèonore.
- ↑ "Élisabeth-Sophie Gallot," BnF.
- ↑ Vilar, Juan B. (2000). "Una novelista protestante francesa del siglo XIX: Élisabeth-Sophie Gallot, baronesa Garreau," Anales de Historia Contemporánea, No. 16, pp. 303–36.