Pierre Bayle

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Pierre Bayle (18 November 1647 – 28 December 1706) was a French philosopher and writer.

Bayle was a self-pronounced Protestant and as a fideist he advocated a separation between the spheres of faith and reason, on the grounds of God being incomprehensible to man. As a forerunner of the Encyclopedists and an advocate of the principle of the toleration of divergent beliefs, his works subsequently influenced the development of the Enlightenment.

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[edit] Biography

He was born at Carla-le-Comte (later renamed Carla-Bayle in his honor), near Pamiers (Ariège), France, and was educated by his father, a Calvinist minister, and at an academy at Puylaurens. He afterwards entered a Jesuit college at Toulouse, and became a Roman Catholic a month later (1669). After seventeen months, he returned to Calvinism and fled to Geneva. There he became acquainted with the teachings of René Descartes. For some years he worked under the name of Bèle as a tutor for various Parisian families, but in 1675 he was appointed to the chair of philosophy at the Protestant University of Sedan.

In 1681 the university at Sedan was suppressed. Just before that event, Bayle had fled to the Dutch Republic, where he almost immediately was appointed professor of philosophy and history at the Ecole Illustre in Rotterdam. There he published his famous Pensées diverses sur la comète de 1680 in 1682, as well as his critique of Louis Maimbourg's work on the history of Calvinism. The great reputation achieved by this critique stirred the envy of Bayle's Calvinist colleague of both Sedan and Rotterdam, Pierre Jurieu, who had written a book on the same subject.

Between 1684 and 1687, Bayle published his Nouvelles de la république des lettres, a journal of literary criticism.

In 1686, Bayle published the first two volumes of Philosophical Commentary, an early plea for toleration in religious matters. This was followed by volumes three and four in 1687 and 1688.

In 1690 there appeared a work entitled Avis important aux refugies, which Jurieu attributed to Bayle, whom he attacked with great animosity. After a long quarrel, Bayle was deprived of his chair in 1693. However, he was not depressed by this misfortune, especially as he was at the time engaged in the preparation of his massive magnum opus, the Historical and Critical Dictionary, which actually constituted one of the first encyclopedias (before the term had come into wide circulation) of ideas and their originators. Bayle's attempt at impartial presentation of these ideas was instituted within a non-partisan framework of thoughtful consideration of both sides of any dispute. In his articles e.g. on the "Mahomet" and "Savonarola", Bayle displays his penchant for judicious assessment of highly controversial figures and philosophies, while eschewing partisan interpretations.

The remaining years of Bayle's life were devoted to miscellaneous writings, arising in many instances out of criticisms made of his Dictionary. He remained in Rotterdam until his death on 28 December 1706 and was buried there in the Waalse Kerk where Jurieu would be buried as well, 7 years later. Already in 1706 a statue in his honor was erected at Pamiers, "la reparation d'un long oubli" ("the reparation of a long neglect"). In 1959 a street was named after him in Rotterdam.

Bayle's erudition was considerable.[clarification needed] As an original thinker, he was not outstanding[clarification needed]; but as a critic he was deemed second to none in his own time[clarification needed], and even now the insight and skill with which he handled his subject is notable.[clarification needed][citation needed]

The Nouvelles de la république des lettres (see Louis P. Betz, P. Bayle und die Nouvelles de la république des lettres, Zürich, 1896) was the first thorough-going attempt to popularize literature, and it was eminently successful. His multi-volume Historical and Critical Dictionary, however, constitutes Bayle's masterpiece. The astute English translation of "The Dictionary", by Bayle's fellow Huguenot exile Pierre des Maizeaux, was named by U.S. President Thomas Jefferson as one of the one hundred foundational texts that formed the first collection of the Library of Congress.

[edit] Editions

  • Historical and Critical Dictionary (1695-1697; 1702, enlarged; best that of P. des Maizeaux, 4 vols., 1740)
  • Selections in English: Pierre Bayle (Richard H. Popkin transl.), Historical and Critical Dictionary - Selections, Hackett Publishing Company Inc, 1991. ISBN 0-87220-103-1.
  • Les Œuvres de Bayle (3 vols., The Hague)

[edit] Further reading

  • Pierre des Maizeaux, Vie de Bayle
  • Ludwig Andreas Feuerbach, Pierre Bayle (1838)
  • Damiron, La Philosophie en France au XVIIIe siècle (1858-1864)
  • Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve, “Du genie critique et de Bayle" (Revue des deux mondes, 1 December 1855)
  • A. Deschamps, La Génèse du scepticisme erudit chez Bayle (Liege, 1878)
  • J. Denis, Bayle et furleu (Paris, 1886)
  • Ferdinand Brunetière, La Critique littéraire au XVIIIe siècle (vol. 1, 1890), and La Critique de Bayle (1893)
  • Émile Gigas, Choix de to correspondance inédite de Pierre Bayle (Paris, 1890, reviewed in Revue critique, 22 December 1890)
  • de Budé, Lettres inédites addressées a J. A. Turretini (Paris, 1887)
  • J. F. Stephen, Horae Sabbaticae (London, 1892, 3rd ser. pp. 174192)
  • A. Cazes, P. Bayle, sa vie, ses œuvres, etc. (1905).

[edit] References

Elisabeth Labrousse, Pierre Bayle (La Haye: M. Nijhoff, 1963) Elisabeth Labrousse, Bayle, trans. Denys Potts (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1983)

[edit] External links