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  1. Francine Descartes (19 July 1635, Deventer – 7 September 1640, Amersfoort) was René Descartes's daughter. Francine was the daughter of Helena Jans van der Strom, a domestic servant of Thomas Sergeant — a bookshop owner and associate of Descartes at whose house in Amsterdam Descartes lodged on 15 October 1634. When Descartes ...

  2. Biographie. Francine Descartes, née le 19 juillet 1635 à Deventer et morte cinq ans plus tard, le 7 septembre 1640 à Amersfoort, est le seul enfant qu'ait reconnu René Descartes et le fruit de la seule relation sexuelle certaine qu'on lui connaisse. Sa mère est une servante hollandaise prénommée Helena.

  3. 19. Aug. 2016 · The psychologist John Cohen, in his 1966 book Human Robots in Myth and Science, adds the new detail of a “fellow traveler” who discovers the machine: “There is a story that Descartes himself constructed an automaton which he called Francine, and that during a sea voyage, an inquisitive fellow traveler opened the case in which ...

    • Minsoo Kang
    • 2017
  4. 30. Mai 2018 · Did Descartes build a mechanical replica of his dead daughter Francine? How does this story relate to the philosophical zombie problem and the uncanny valley? Explore the history, psychology and ethics of human-like robots.

  5. 3. Dez. 2008 · In 1635, Descartes fathered a daughter named Francine. Her mother was Descartes’ housekeeper, Helena Jans. They lived with Descartes part of the time in the latter 1630s. He was arranging for the daughter to live with a female relative of his for the sake of her education when he learned of her death in September 1640, which saddened him ...

  6. 9. Apr. 2001 · Descartes has been heralded as the first modern philosopher. He is famous for having made an important connection between geometry and algebra, which allowed for the solving of geometrical problems by way of algebraic equations.

  7. 25. Juli 2018 · A book review of Gods and Robots by Adrienne Mayor, which explores the history of automata from ancient Greece to the present. The article mentions Descartes's daughter Francine as a possible inspiration for his view of living things as machines.