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Voltaire

Decent Essays

Voltaire was a talented, assertive, and controversial French writer from the

eighteenth century enlightenment period. He was born in 1694 to a wealthy

family in Paris, and given the name Francois-Marie Arouet. During the early

years of his life Voltaire endured many hardships. For instance, his mother

passed away when he was seven leaving only his father and older brother to

raise him. Unfortunately, this added insult to injury as Voltaire despised

both his father and brother. Nevertheless, Voltaire's determination allowed

him to rise above his early misfortunes, and he later went on to pursue

college at the College of Louis-le-Grand in Paris. Once there he studied

literature, despite his father's wishes that he pursue …show more content…

However, as the story progresses Candide encounters much chaos, and

brutality that forced him to question his beliefs. One example in the story

found Candide captured by the Bulgarians and forced to run the gauntlet

until he begged them to smash his head in. Moreover he later discovered

another terrible act when he witnessed the execution of an admiral for the

man's failure to succeed in battle. Upon his inquiry of the justice of the

act Candide was told, " it is a good thing to kill an admiral from time to

time to encourage the others." The author uses the scenarios above

intentionally to question how such things could come to pass in a world

blessed with God's intervention.

The motive's Voltaire had for writing Candide were his disagreements with

the establishments of Absolute Monarchy and the State Catholic Church. He

not only argued against their existence as powers, but also with the rules,

belief systems, and laws they imposed on the general populous. Voltaire

believed men should have the right to worship what they chose, and the only

acceptable spiritual belief was Deism. Candide specifically attacked the

largely accepted philosophy of Optimism, theorized by Gottfried William von

Leibnez. According to

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