René Le Bossu

René Le Bossu or le Bossu (16 March 1631  14 March 1680) was a French critic. His surname comes from the French word for "humpback".

Life

He was born in Paris, studied at Nanterre, and in 1649 became one of the regular canons of the Abbey of St Genevieve. He wrote Parallèle des principes de la physique d'Aristote et de celle de René Descartes (1674) and Traité du poème épique (1675). The latter book on epic poetry was highly praised by Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux. Its leading doctrine was that the subject should be chosen before the characters, and that the action should be arranged without reference to the personages who are to figure in the scene.[1]

gollark: Your solution to a bad system is to make it involved in *more* important roles?
gollark: People should probably be expected to learn some things independently at some point.
gollark: I do wonder, though, has anyone actually tested whether train pathfinding time is brought to actually-significant levels with loops?
gollark: I'm pretty sure it's a preference thing and that elsewhere there are arguments raging on it.
gollark: Also, "use the same train direction" as other people would probably make more sense than "use this train direction".

References

  1.  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bossu, René le". Encyclopædia Britannica. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 287..


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