RIBOT T.
SHOPENHAUER'S PHILOSOPHY
from the fourth edition of the original
translated by
T. K. Potocki
Warsaw 1892, Edited by the Editor of the Weekly "Voice", pp. 168, [1], format 14x21cm
Théodule Armand Ferdinand Constant Ribot (born December 18, 1839 in Guingamp, died December 9, 1916 in Paris) - French psychologist and philosopher.
Son of apothecary Théodore Simon Ribot (1808-1870) and Marie Françoise Julienne Yvonne, née Le Camus (1812-1847). He studied at the Lycée de St Brieuc. From 1856 he worked as a teacher of philosophy; from 1862 he was employed at the École normale supérieure. From 1885 he taught courses in experimental psychology at the Sorbonne; he coined and first used the term anhedonia in his monograph La psychologie des sentiments (1896). In 1888 he was appointed professor of experimental and comparative psychology at the Collège de France.
He wrote on Arthur Schopenhauer's philosophy and on German comparative psychology; he also worked on psychopathology.
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