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Historian David Fairer has written that "Stewart expounds what might be described as a panbiomorphic universe (it deserves an entirely new term just for itself), in which human identity is no different in category from a wave, flame, or wind, having an entirely modal existence."
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On 20 February 1822, the morning after his seventy-fifth birthday, 'Walking' Stewart's body was found in a rented room in
Northumberland Place, near present-day
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After retiring from travelling, Stewart eventually settled in London where he held philosophical soirées and earned a reputation as one of the city's celebrated
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After
Walking Stewart's travels came to an end around the turn of the nineteenth century, he became close friends with the English essayist and fellow-Londoner
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Gregory Claeys. "'The Only Man of Nature That Ever
Appeared in the World'": 'Walking' John Stewart and the Trajectories of Social Radicalism, 1790-1822",
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notions of a single indissoluble consciousness. Stewart began to promote his ideas publicly in 1790 with the publication in two volumes of his works
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The life and adventures of the celebrated
Walking Stewart: including his travels in the East Indies, Turkey, Germany, & America. By a relative
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that either had ever met. Recent scholarship by Kelly
Grovier has suggested that Stewart's persona and philosophical writings had a major
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Kelly
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Over the next three decades
Stewart wrote prolifically, publishing nearly thirty philosophical works, including
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111:) back to Europe between 1765 and the mid-1790s, Stewart is thought to have walked alone across Persia,
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Known as "Walking" Stewart to his contemporaries for having travelled on foot from
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The Most
Unlikely Man to Influence A Generation of Writers: Walking Stewart
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403:. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 914.
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A Claim on the
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422:(London: Pickering & Chatto, 2000-), vol. xi, p. 247.
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In 1792, while residing in Paris in the weeks following the
76:(19 February 1747 – 20 February 1822) was an English
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Sins of the Flesh: A History of
Ethical Vegetarian Thought
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described Stewart as one of London's famous eccentrics.
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John Stewart's "Sensate Matter" in the Early Republic
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During his journeys, he developed a unique system of
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Travels over the most interesting parts of the Globe
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55:20 February 1822 (age 75)
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183:The Apocalypse of Nature
124:The Revelation of Nature
452:Oxford University Press
400:Encyclopædia Britannica
290:Fairer, David. (2009).
161:Materialistic pantheism
437:Studies in Romanticism
221:. An empty bottle of
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314:. UBC Press. p. 243.
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130:'s portrait-painter,
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488:Works by or about
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261:William Wordsworth
229:Literary influence
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461:Record of My Life
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