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GERALDTON

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Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 762 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GERALDTON  , a

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town in the
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district of Victoria,West
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Australia, on Champion
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Bay, 306 m. by
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rail N.W. of Perth . Pop . (1901) 2593 . It is the seat of a
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Roman Catholic bishop, an important seaport carrying on a considerable trade with the surrounding gold-fields and agricultural districts, the centre of a considerable railway
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system and an increasingly popular seaside resort . The harbour is safe and extensive, having a pier affording accommodation for large steamers . The chief exports are gold, copper, lead, wool and sandalwood . G$RANDO,
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MARIE JOSEPH DE (1772-1842), French philosopher, was born at Lyons on the 29th of
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February 1772 . When the city was besieged in 1793 by the armies of the Republic, de Gerando took up arms, was made prisoner and with difficulty escaped with his
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life . He took
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refuge in
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Switzerland, whence he afterwards fled to Naples . In 1796 the establishment of the
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Directory allowed him to return to France . At the age of twenty-five he enlisted as a private in a cavalry regiment . About this time the Institute proposed as a subject for an essay this question, —" What is the influence of symbols on the faculty of thought ?

" De Gerando gained the

prize, and heard of his success after the
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battle of Zurich, in which he had distinguished himself . This
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literary triumph was the first step in his upward career . In 1799 he was attached to the
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ministry of the interior by Lucien
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Bonaparte; in 1804 he became general secretary under Champagny; in 18o5 he accompanied
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Napoleon into Italy; in r8o8 he was nominated master of requests; in 1811 he received the title of councillor of state; and in the following
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year he was appointed governor of Catalonia . On the overthrow of the
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empire, de Gerando was allowed to retain this office; but having been sent during the
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hundred days into the department of the Moselle to organize the defence of that district, he was punished at the second Restoration by a few months of neglect . Ha was soon after, however, readmitted into the council of state, where he distinguished himself by the prudence and conciliatory tendency of his views . In 1819 he opened at the law-school of Paris a class of public and administrative law, which in 1822 was suppressed by government, but was reopened six years later under the Martignac ministry . In 1837 he was made a baron . He died at Paris on the 9th of November 1842 . De Gerando's best-known
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work is his Histoire comparee
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des systemes de philosophic relativement aux principes des conuctissances humaines (Paris, 1804, 3 vols.) . The germ of this work had already appeared in the author's M emoire de la generation des connaissances humaines (Berlin, 18o2), which was crowned by the Academy of Berlin . In it de Gerando, after a rapid review of ancient and
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modern speculations on the origin of our ideas, singles out the theory of
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primary ideas, which he endeavours to combat under all its forms . The latter
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half of the work, devoted to the analysis of the intellectual faculties, is intended to show how all human knowledge is the result of experience; and reflection is assumed as the source of our ideas of substance, of unity and of identity .

It is divided into two parts, the first of which is purely

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historical, and devoted to an exposition of various philosophical systems; in the second, which comprises fourteen chapters of the entire work, the distinctive characters and value of these systems are compared and discussed . In spite of the disadvantage that it is impossible to
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separate advantageously the
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history and critical examination of any
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doctrine in the arbitrary manner which de Gerando chose, the work has
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great merits . In correctness of detail and comprehensiveness of view it was greatly
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superior to every work of the same kind that had hitherto appeared in France . During the Empire and the first years of the Restoration, de Gerando found time to prepare a second edition (Paris, 1822, 4 vols.), which is enriched with so many additions that it may pass for an entirely new work . The last chapter of the
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part published during the author's lifetime ends with the revival of letters and the philosophy of the 15th century . The second part, carrying the work down to the close of the 18th century, was published posthumously by his son in 4 vols . (Paris, 1847) . Twenty-three chapters of this were
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left
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complete by the author in
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manuscript; the remaining three were supplied from other
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sources, chiefly printed but unpublished
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memoirs . His essay Du perfectionnement moral et de l'
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education de soi-meeeme was crowned by the French Academy in 1825 . The fundamental idea of this work is that human life is in reality only a great education, of which perfection is the aim . Besides the
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works already mentioned, de Gerando left many others, of which we may indicate the following: Considerations sur diverses mkthodes d'observation des peoples sausages (Paris, 18os); Eloge de Dumarsais,—discours qui a remporte le prix propose par la seconde classe de l'Institut
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National (Paris, 18o5); Le Visiteur de pauvre (Paris, 182o) ; Instituts du droit administratif (4 vols., Paris, 183o) ; Cours normal des instituteurs primaires ou directions relatives a l'education physique, morale, et intellectuelle dans
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les ecoles primaires (Paris, 1832); De l'education des sourds-muets (2 vols., Paris, 1832); De la bienfaisance publique (4 vols., 1838) . A detailed analysis of the Histoire comparee des systemes will be found in the Fragments philosophiques of M .

Cousin . In connexion with his psychological studies, it is interesting that in 1884 the French Anthropological Society reproduced his instructions for the observation of
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primitive peoples, and modern students of the beginnings of speech in children and the cases of
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deaf-mutes have found useful
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matter in his works . See also J . P . Damiron, Essai sur la philosophie en France au XIX, siecle .

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