Philosophical Dictionary

Philosophical Dictionary

by Voltaire
Philosophical Dictionary

Philosophical Dictionary

by Voltaire

eBook

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Overview

The incendiary book that skewers the sacred institutions of eighteenth-century France from the famous Enlightenment philosopher and author of Candide.
 
From adultery to virtue, this alphabetically organized collection of essays gives you a glimpse into the brilliant mind of Voltaire. Instantly placed on the Vatican’s list of banned books when it was originally published in 1764, Philosophical Dictionary showcases Voltaire’s cutting wit and fearlessness in letting loose his thoughts—no matter how controversial—on Roman Catholicism, beauty, democracy, liberty, nature, prejudices, tyranny, superstition, tolerance, and other subjects that were considered off-limits in his day. This timeless classic reveals a revolutionary mind and its ideas, those at the core of progressive thought then and now.
 
“The book still has the power to make you gasp at its audacity . . . I cannot think of any political work this old which survives modern scrutiny so well—not so much because it contains essential truths, but because it is still such fun to read. Dangerous fun, that is: it’s like being in the presence of a particularly enraged alternative comedian, an Enlightenment Bill Hicks, perhaps.” —The Guardian
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781504084482
Publisher: Open Road Media
Publication date: 03/28/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 504
Sales rank: 78,261
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Voltaire (1694–1778) was the pseudonym of François-Marie Arouet, one of the most prominent writers and thinkers of the Enlightenment. After studying at the Collège de Clermont (now the Lycée Louis-le-Grand), he began writing philosophical works as well as poems, comedic plays, and other forms of literature. Voltaire was often imprisoned for publicly criticizing the French monarchy. His controversial beliefs included religious freedom, freedom of expression, and separation of church and state. 

Table of Contents

Preface by Voltaire
Adultery
Advocate
Ancients and Moderns
Animals
Antiquity
Arts
Astrology
Atheism
Authority
Authors
Banishment
Bankruptcy
Beauty
Bishop
Books
Bouleverd
Bourges
Brahmins
Character
Charlatan
Civil Laws
Climate
Common Sense
Concatenation of Events
Contradictions
Corn
Cromwell
Customs
Democracy
Destiny
Devout
Ecclesiastical Ministry
Emblem
English Theatre, On the
Envy
Equality
Expiation
Extreme
Ezourveidam
Faith
False Minds
Fatherland
Final Causes
Fraud
Free-Will
French
Friendship
God
Helvetia
History
Ignorance
Impious
Joan of Arc
Kissing
Languages
Laws
Liberty
Library
Limits of the Human Mind
Local Crimes
Love
Luxury
Man
Man In the Iron Mask
Marriage
Master
Men of Letters
Metamorphosis
Milton, On the Reproach of Plagiarism Against Mohammedans
Mountain
Nakedness
Natural Law
Nature
Necessary
New Novelties
Philosopher
Power, Omnipotence
Prayers
Precis of Ancient Philosophy
Prejudices
Rare
Reason
Religion
Sect
Self-Esteem
Soul
States, Governments
Superstition
Tears
Theist
Tolerance
Truth
Tyranny
Virtue
Why?
Declaration of Admirers, Questioners and Doubters
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