2023年1月27日 星期五

擁有書山的人/組織:Libraries | University of Oxford. 某日本憲法學教授/Nicolas Gomez Davila Karl Lagerfeld, Designer Who Defined Luxury Fashion;某德國人:7萬本書!

Together, the Libraries hold more than 12 million printed items, over 80,000 e-journals and outstanding special collections including rare books and manuscripts, classical papyri, maps, music, art and printed ephemera.


李鴻禧教授在日本東京大學的老師,光是憲法學領域的藏書,就近萬本......



此君生前自辦過自品牌的時尚日報.....
Karl Lagerfeld, Designer Who Defined Luxury Fashion, Is Dead
https://www.nytimes.com › obituaries › k...


2019年2月19日 — Karl Lagerfeld, the most prolific designer of the 20th and 21st centuries and a man whose career formed the prototype of the modern luxury ...


 






Hanching Chung

最妙的是,太太不知道貴寶地




"La civiltà è un episodio che nasce con la rivoluzione neolitica e muore con la rivoluzione industriale."
  • Nicolas Gomez Davila   "Civilization is an episode that was born with the Neolithic revolution and died with the industrial revolution."
    Nicolas Gomez Davila
可能是 1 人和室內的圖像

11
Nicolás Gómez Dávila
Nicolás Gómez Dávila.jpg
Dávila in 1930.
Born18 May 1913
Bogotá, Colombia
Died17 May 1994 (aged 80)
Bogotá, Colombia
Alma materUniversity of Paris
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolTraditionalist conservatism
Integralism
Ultramontanism
InstitutionsUniversity of Los Andes (co-founder)
Main interests
Notable ideas
Authentic reactionary
Influences
Influenced

Nicolás Gómez Dávila (locally [nikoˈlaz ˈɡomez ˈdaβila];[a] 18 May 1913 – 17 May 1994) was a Colombian philosopher.

Gómez Dávila's fame began to spread only in the last few years before his death, particularly by way of German translations of his works. He was one of the most radical critics of modernity whose work consists almost entirely of aphorisms which he called "escolios" ("scholia" or "glosses").

Biography[edit]

Gómez Dávila was a Colombian scholar who spent most of his life in the circle of his friends and within the confines of his library. He belonged to the upper circles of Colombian society and was educated in Paris. Due to severe pneumonia, he spent about two years at home where he was taught by private teachers and developed a lifelong love of classical literature. He never, however, attended a university. In the 1930s he went back from Paris to Colombia, never to visit Europe again, except for a six-month stay with his wife in 1948. He built up an immense library containing more than 30,000 volumes around which his literary existence centred. In 1948 he helped found the University of The Andes in Bogotá.

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