Jean-François Eugène Robinet
Jean-François Eugène Robinet (24 April 1825, Vic-sur-Seille-3 November, 1899, Paris), was a French psychiatrist and historian who advocated the positivism of Auguste Comte. He was curator at the Carnavalet Museum[1] and mayor of the 6th arrondissement of Paris.[2]

Jean-François Eugène Robinet
Selected Works[2]
- Notice sur l’œuvre et la vie d’Auguste Comte, (1860) Paris: Dunod
- La Révolution française : Danton. Mémoire sur sa vie privée (1865) Paris: Chamerot et Lauwereyns
- Le procès des Dantonistes (1879) Paris: E. Leroux
- Danton Homme d’État (1889) Paris: Charavay Frères
gollark: It's not mandatory, it's one of the module options.
gollark: It's under "further pure 2", along with exotic topics like number theory, matrix algebra, weird recurrence relations, and group theory. I wonder why.
gollark: You do arc length integration? That's part of one of the furtherererest further maths topics in UK maths curricula (or, well, the one used by the exam board my school uses).
gollark: I have "mgollark" downloaded somewhere, which is a 117M-parameter GPT-2 model trained on 11MB of my Discord messages on free Google Colab GPUs.
gollark: You can actually train GPT-2s to be slightly more task-specific, although it takes horrible amounts of computing power.
References
- Mabire, Alric (1 December 2013). "Entre orthodoxie positiviste et histoire universitaire". Annales historiques de la Révolution française (in French) (374): 3–23. doi:10.4000/ahrf.12928. ISSN 0003-4436. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
- "Jean-François Robinet (1825-1899)". Bibliothèque nationale de France. Retrieved 28 March 2017.
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