Also known as G. Bachelard
French writer and philosopher (1884-1962)
Gaston Bachelard was a French philosopher and writer who explored how imagination, dreams, and everyday objects shape the way we understand and experience the world. His ideas remain influential in fields ranging from literary criticism to psychology because he showed that poetry and creative thinking are just as important as science for understanding human experience.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Top works
via Open Library + Wikidata
via MusicBrainz · CC0
Tags
Gaston Bachelard (June 27, 1884 – October 16, 1962) was a French philosopher and poet who rose to some of the most prestigious positions in the French academy. His most important work is in poetics and the philosophy of science. In philosophy of science he introduced the concepts of epistemological obstacle and epistemological break (obstacle épistémologique et rupture épistémologique). He influenced many French philosophers in the latter part of the twentieth century, among them Michel Foucau
5 total works indexed
· 2012 · cited 5,950x
· 1993 · cited 5,488x
· 2019 · cited 2,788x
· 2000 · cited 2,603x
· 1988 · cited 2,469x
via Crossref · CC0
via Wikiquote · CC BY-SA
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).