Académie des Sciences, Arts et Belles-Lettres de Dijon

The Académie de Dijon was founded by Hector-Bernard Pouffier, the most senior member of the Parlement de Bourgogne, in 1725. It received royal lettres patentes in 1740. In 1775, it became the "Académie des Sciences, Arts et Belles-Lettres de Dijon." From 1855 to 1869, it was called the "Académie Impériale des Sciences, Arts et Belles-Lettres de Dijon" before returning in 1870 to the name "Académie des Sciences, Arts et Belles-Lettres de Dijon."

In July 1750, it sponsored a prize competition on the question of "whether the reestablishment of the sciences and the arts contributed to purifying morals." Jean-Jacques Rousseau won the prize by arguing in the negative, in his Discourse on the Arts and Sciences. In 1754, he again competed for the prize with his Discourse on the Origin and Basis of Inequality Among Men, but did not win the prize that year.

The Académie des Sciences, Arts et Belles-Lettres de Dijon still exists, and still offers the prize.

Famous members

Notes and references

This is a translation, with interpolations, of the article in the French Wikipedia.

gollark: You can happily drop heavy objects from quite high up, or fire bullets, with cereal bar amounts of energy, though.
gollark: In Eragon, you can do arbitrary things magically, but it costs as much energy as "doing it yourself" would.
gollark: But still, you would expect mages to carry around ridiculously energy dense carbohydrate slurry or something.
gollark: I suppose there is a limit to how fast you can digest cereal bars.
gollark: They seem to get oddly tired out during combat in that, even though I ran the numbers and they could plausibly do lots of combat things with just a few cereal bars for energy.

References

  1. Henri Baudot, Note sur une statue de Minerve, destinée... dans Mémores de l'Académie, 1843–1844. Partie des Lettres pp. 371–373.

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