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  1. Clotilde de Vaux, born Clotilde Marie (April 3, 1815 in Paris – April 5, 1846 in Paris), was a French intellectual known to have inspired the French philosopher Auguste Comte's Religion of Humanity.

  2. Clotilde de Vaux née Charlotte Clotilde Joséphine Marie [1] à Paris le 3 avril 1815 et morte le 5 avril 1846 dans la même ville, inspira à Auguste Comte la « religion de l'Humanité ».

  3. Clotilde de Vaux. Retrato de Louis-Jules Étex (1810-1889). Vista de la tumba. Clotilde de Vaux nació Charlotte Clotilde Josephine Marie en París el 3 de abril de 1815 y murió el 5 de abril de 1846 en la misma ciudad, Auguste Comte inspiró la “ religión de la Humanidad ”. Resumen. 1 biografía. 2 Nacimiento del positivismo religioso.

  4. Clotilde de Vaux, July 1845. INTRODUCTION. In late 1844, Comte met Clotilde de Vaux, the woman to whom he later attributed his emotional development and most important ideas. His disciples and most historians have generally accepted his judgment about the impact she had on his evolution.

    • Mary Pickering
    • 2009
  5. This chapter explores the different personalities of Clotilde de Vaux, a nineteenth-century French woman who resisted and performed various roles in response to the culture and texts around her. It examines how she played the abandoned wife, the rebellious daughter, the prostitute, the writer, and more.

  6. Clotilde de Vaux. friend of Comte. Learn about this topic in these articles: relationship with Comte. In Auguste Comte: Life. …romantic and emotional experience with Clotilde de Vaux, who died the following year of tuberculosis.

  7. French writer and muse of Auguste Comte. Born in Paris on April 3, 1815; died of tuberculosis in Paris on April 5, 1846; first child of Captain Joseph Marie and Countess Henriette-Josephine de Ficquelmont; educated at home by her mother; married Amenee de Vaux; beloved by philosopher Auguste Comte.