Title: Candide ou l
1Candide ou lOptimiste
- Francois-Marie Arouet
- Dit
- VOLTAIRE
2Introduction
- What does Candide mean? Why the subtitle?
- John Ralston Saul and Voltaires Bastards The
Dictatorship of Reason in the WestWhy such a
book? Why such a title? - Has the era of globalization betrayed the
spirit of Voltaire and of the Age of
enlightenment? - Has the control of knowledge become the business
of an elite betraying the very spirit of the
Enlightenment while claiming to be its
inheritors?
3Outline of the presentation (part 1)
- Origins of the Enlightenment
- 15th century bifurcation and the knowledge
explosion of the Renaissance (16th century) - Discoveries, science, religion and humanism
- 17th century and logical reasoning
- Utopia and the notion of progress
4Outline of the presentation (part 2)
- The Age of Enlightenment
- The spirit of the Enlightenment a time of
synthesis and debate - Human autonomy, finality of human actions,
universality - Knowledge acquisition, spirit of inquiry,
Aufklärung, liberation from existing systems - Progress or utopia?
5Outline of the presentation (part 3)
- Voltaire and Candide
- Voltaire
- What is Candide?
- Aspects of Candide (criticism of optimism,
Leibniz, religion, education, militarism, and the
political and judicial systems) and tools used by
Voltaire (Irony, satire, parody, pathos) - The philosophy of optimism and happiness an
ultimate utopia
6Outline of the presentation (part 1)
- Origins of the Enlightenment
- 15th century bifurcation and the knowledge
explosion of the Renaissance (16th century) - Discoveries, science, religion and humanism
- 17th century and logical reasoning
- Utopia and the notion of progress
7(1) Origins of the Enlightenment
- Julia Kristeva, Desire in Language A semiotic
Approach to Literature and Art, 1980, Columbia
University Press - The second half of the middle ages .. was a
period of transition for European culture
thought based on the sign replaced that based on
the symbol.
8(1) Origins of the Enlightenment
- Practically, what does that mean?
- 15th-16th centuries Explosion of knowledge and
new vision of the world - End of a theological understanding of the world
- Progressive doubts toward religious
interpretation of reality - Beginning of a scientific interpretation of
reality
9(1) Origins of the Enlightenment
- An Age of discoveries
- Geographic
- Scientific and medical
- Philosophical
- Religious
- Humanism a focus on man
- Rabelais
- Montaigne
10(1) Origins of the Enlightenment
- Utopia and the notion of progress
- Thomas More ou-topos (nowhere) and eu-topos
(place of happiness) - Myth of the Golden Age
- Political space
- Illusive progress
11Outline of the presentation (part 2)
- The Age of Enlightenment
- The spirit of the Enlightenment a time of
synthesis and debate - Human autonomy, finality of human actions,
universality - Knowledge acquisition, spirit of inquiry,
Aufklärung, liberation from existing systems - Progress or utopia?
12(2) The Age of Enlightenment
- The Enlightenment (Tzvetan Todorov)
- A European spirit
- A time of synthesis, recapitulation, summing up
- A time of debate and philosophical differences
- Three majors traits
- Human autonomy
- Finality of human actions
- Universality
13(2) The Age of Enlightenment
- Human autonomy
- Emphasis on individual choice rather than on what
is imposed by an external power - Need to have entire freedom to critique, to
examine, to doubt, to make up ones own mind - No longer any sacredness of authority --
Authority must be integrated with humanity,
natural rather than supernatural - Rejection of magic and religious revelation
Separation of church (private sphere) and state
(public sphere) - Greatest autonomy that brought by knowledge and
science (Newton)
14(2) The Age of Enlightenment
- Finality of human actions
- Individuals responsible for their own actions
- Quest for happiness replaces quest for salvation
and love of fellow human beings replaces love for
God - State there to serve the common good rather than
a divine plan - Concept of inalienable rights
- Right to life (capital punishment illegitimate
the Calas affair) - Integrity of the human body (torture
illegitimate) - Integrity of the human race
15(2) The Age of Enlightenment
- Universality
- Belonging to the human race more important than
belonging to a specific society or nation - Practice of liberty contained in the principle of
universality, but individual freedom limited by
the rights inherent to all human beings - Sacredness no longer linked to religious dogma
but to human rights - If all human beings have identical rights ? equal
in rights (principle of equality)
16(2) The Age of Enlightenment
- Three more aspects of the Enlightenment (Yann
Fauchois) - Education, knowledge acquisition, inquiry,
pedagogy, independent thinking, central to the
spirit of enlightenment - Increase in intellectual autonomy rupture with
traditions concept of Aufklärung developed by
Kant (closer to the English term enlightenment
than the French term lumieres) - Enlightenment goes well beyond intellectual
exchanges ? pan-European consciousness of the
need for liberation from existing systems (will
lead ultimately to the French Revolution)
17(2) The Age of Enlightenment
- Progress and utopia
- The myth of happiness as a condition of progress
- Human law and natural law Primitivism and the
myth of the Noble Savage (Montesquieu,Diderot) - The myth of the return to nature (Rousseau)
- Perfectibility as a promise of happiness
(Rousseau) - Uchronia as utopia (belief in a better future)
- Architecture and urbanism in utopian thinking
18Outline of the presentation (part 3)
- Voltaire and Candide
- Voltaire
- What is Candide?
- Aspects of Candide (criticism of optimism,
Leibniz, religion, education, militarism, and the
political and judicial systems) and tools used by
Voltaire (Irony, satire, parody, pathos) - The philosophy of optimism and happiness an
ultimate utopia
19(3) Voltaire and Candide
- Voltaire Important biographical milestones
- 1694 born in Paris (november 21)
- 1704-1711 studies in rhetoric and philosophy
- 1713 diplomatic posting at the Hague
- 1716 imprisoned in the Bastille for eleven months
after having published satirical writings on the
mores of the Regent - 1718 Takes the pseudonym Voltaire when freed from
geole - 1723 Publishes La Henriade, an epic about Henri
IV - 1726-1729 self-exile in England after a two-week
incarceration at the Bastille
20(3) Voltaire and Candide
- 1734 publishes Les Lettres philosophiques
Enormous scandal Letters sentenced to be burned - 1734-1744 Voltaire hides at Cirey at the castle
of of Emilie du Châtelet - 1735 Traité de métaphysique
- 1738 Éléments de la philosophie de Newton
- 1741 Mahomet ou le fanatisme
- 1744 Becomes Louis XVs historiographer
- 1746 Elected to the Académie française
- 1748 Zadig, first philosophical tale
21(3) Voltaire and Candide
- 1750-1753 Berlin at the court of King Friedrich
II of Prussia - 1753 Settles in Ferney near Geneva
- 1756 Essai sur lHistoire générale des mœurs
- 1757 Contributes to the 7th volume of the
Encyclopaedia - 1759 Candide
- 1762 The Calas affair
- 1764 Dictionnaire philosophique portatif
- 1765 La Philosophie de lHistoire
- 1770 Questions sur lEncyclopédie (nine volumes)
- 1778 Comes back to Paris and dies in May
- 1791 Remains transferred to the Pantheon
22(3) Voltaire and Candide
- Some characteristics of Voltaire
- Terms that describe Voltaire satirist, witty,
insolent, polemical, pamphleteer, all manners
that put him at odds with authorities and will
lead to imprisonments and exiles - Advocate for social and judicial reforms Calls
for reforms of the French judicial system - Admirer of the British system of government
- Critical of French monarchy and of the Church
Combats the divine right of French kings and
the power of the church - Combats censorship
- Shrewd business man becomes very wealthy
23(3) Voltaire and Candide
- What is Candide?
- A philosophical tale
- Candide, the eponymous hero, is a simple and
credulous young man to whom his tutor, Pangloss,
teaches a simplistic theory about optimism - The character of Cunégonde shows Voltaires
misogyny - Candide goes from misadventure to misadventure
- This gives Voltaire an opportunity to question
the theory as well as all metaphysical theories
that cannot be scientifically demonstrated - Attack against fanaticism, intolerance,
superstitions, and defense of pragmatism as a
form of wisdom and lucidity
24(3) Voltaire and Candide
- Some aspects of Candide and the tools used by
Voltaire - A tale Adventures, misadventures, travels,
battles, love story, jealousy, etc. - Violent criticism of aristocracy (chapter 1) and
of the feudal system (chapters 15 to 18) using
satire - Germany as an illusion of paradise (Westphalia
the poorest of German provinces Germany reduced
to clichés) Satire of Friedrich II of Prussia and
of the philosopher king
25(3) Voltaire and Candide
- Criticism of Leibniz philosophy Behind
Pangloss, one can see Leibniz Philosophy of
Pangloss (which means all languages in Greek,
or does not stop speaking) is dogmatic and
grotesque (chapter 1) - All countries visited by Candide are reduced to
clichés (France, chapter 22, Spain and Portugal,
Chapters 6 and 13), Turkey (chapter 20) - Imitation of and inspiration from certain
literary genres (Rabelais) Parody of others
(the roman précieux)
26(3) Voltaire and Candide
- Criticism of war and battles (chapter 3) using
parody and ridicule Chapter 3 ridicules wars,
depicts suffering mixing satire and horror,
condemns war and the kings use of them - Condemnation of fanaticisms Chapter 6 central
to Voltaires argument against fanaticism,
criticism of universities (Coimbra) and
condemnation of superstitions - Condemnation of slavery (chapter 19)
27(3) Voltaire and Candide
- The philosophy of optimism and happiness
ultimate utopia criticized by Voltaire (chapters
17-18) - Characteristics of utopia wealth and luxury,
pleasure, happiness and generosity, politeness
and good manners - In fact nothing but a dream, ideal world becomes
a caricature - Voltaires morale that such a world is too
perfect to exist and therefore cannot exist
28Conclusion I
- Voltaire is not considered a philosopher, but his
influence on Western thought is one of the most
important - His faith in humanity takes into account mans
weaknesses, but has nothing to do with naïve
optimism - Voltaires rationalism is geared toward social
action rather than toward dealing with the
mysteries of the universe - However, the question of evil comes back
constantly throughout his works, aggravated by
his political pessimism and his metaphysical angst
29Conclusion I
- Voltaire has profound doubts about the order of
things He is profoundly affected by the Lisbon
earthquake - Beyond his scientific relativism, his rejection
of Leibniz providentialism, he becomes obsessed
by religious fanaticism, which he calls
linfâme - Unable to influence the realm of politics, his
propensity toward action leads him to fight the
judicial system. Being - From the champion of reason, he becomes in the
latter part of his life a passionate engaged
intellectual fighting for justice, the first one
in the history of France - To what extent is Voltaire himself a Candide,
the one who asks perfectly unanswerable but
crucial questions
30Conclusion II
- Modernity as envisaged by the Enlightenment
consisted simultaneously in developing knowledge,
arts and sciences, and in using them for moral
progress, greater justice and human happiness.
The modern era has seen an institutionalization
(professionalization) of cultural and scientific
production that has increased the gap between the
culture of experts and popular culture - Jürgen Habermas
31Conclusion II
- Our reality is dominated by elites who have
spent much of the last two centuries, indeed of
the last four, organizing society around answers
and around structures designed to produce
answers.. These structures have fed upon
expertise and that expertise upon complexity.
The effect has been to render universal
understanding as difficult as possible Never
before in history have there been such enormous
elites carrying such burdens of knowledge
32Conclusion II
- The possession, use and control of knowledge
have become their central theme However, their
power depends not on the effect with which they
use that knowledge but on the effectiveness with
which they control its use. - John Ralston Saul,
- Voltaires Bastards
33Conclusion II
- Were Voltaire to reappear today, he would be
outraged by the new structures, which somehow
deform the changes for which he struggled. As
for his descendants our ruling elites he
would deny all legal responsibility and set about
fighting them, as he once fought the courtiers
and priests of eighteenth-century Europe. - John Ralston Saul,
- Voltaires Bastards