Jump to content

Émile Boirac

Daga Wikipedia, Insakulofidiya ta kyauta.
Émile Boirac
Rayuwa
Haihuwa Guelma (en) Fassara, 26 ga Augusta, 1851
ƙasa Faransa
Mutuwa Dijon, 20 Satumba 1917
Makwanci Péjoces Cemetery (en) Fassara
Karatu
Makaranta University of Bordeaux (en) Fassara
Harsuna Esperanto (mul) Fassara
Faransanci
Harshen Latin
Sana'a
Sana'a mai falsafa, Esperantist (en) Fassara, psychic (en) Fassara, psychologist (en) Fassara, university teacher (en) Fassara da parapsychologist (en) Fassara
Kyaututtuka
Mamba Esperanto Language Committee (en) Fassara
Academy of Esperanto (en) Fassara

Émile Boirac (26 ga watan Agustan shekara ta 1851 - 20 ga watan Satumbar shekara ta 1917) masanin falsafa ne na Faransa, masanin ilimin halayyar dan adam, mai gabatar da Esperanto kuma marubuci.[1]

Tarihin rayuwa

[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]

An haifi Boirac a Guelma, Aljeriya . Ya zama shugaban Jami'ar Grenoble a 1898, kuma a 1902 shugaban Jami'an Dijon. Wani sanannen mai ba da shawara ga harshen duniya, Esperanto, ya jagoranci taron duniya na farko (Boulogne-Sur-Mer, Faransa, 7 ga Agusta zuwa 12 ga Agusta 1905) kuma ya jagoranci Kwalejin Esperanto.

Ya kasance daya daga cikin na farko da ya yi amfani da kalmar "déjà vu", inda ya bayyana a cikin wata wasika ga editan Revue philosophique a 1876, kuma daga baya a cikin littafin Boirac L'Avenir des Sciences Psychiques, inda ya kuma gabatar da kalmar "metagnomy" ("sanin abubuwan da ke bayan waɗanda za mu iya sani") a matsayin cikakkiyar bayanin abin da aka fi sani da shi, sa'an nan, wanda aka fi sani.

Ya kasance ɗaya daga cikin ƙungiyar da ta gudanar da gwaje-gwaje a kan matsakaiciyar Italiyanci Eusapia Palladino . Ya kuma bincika Magnetism na dabba, da kuma abubuwan da suka faru daban-daban kamar shigar da barci, "canjin hankali", "magnetic relationship", "fitar da hankali", "fadar da karfi na motsi" da dai sauransu.

Boirac ya mutu a Dijon a shekarar 1917.

  • Paul Joire
  • Albert de Rochas
  • Joseph Grasset
  1. M. Brady Brower. Unruly Spirits: The Science of Psychic Phenomena in Modern France (University of Illinois Press, 2010) p. 63.