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Voltaire and The Enlightenment

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The eighteenth century was a crucial changing point in the European history because of The Enlightenment. The Enlightenment was revolutionary because of Voltaire, a writer that used his ideas to attack the established Catholic Church, and to propagate the freedom of religion, scientific thoughts, skepticism and experiential philosophy.
Voltaire was born in 1694, a year that was under the regiment of Louis XIV. At that time, the aristocracy ruled France in an extreme way that most commoners were struggling in poverty. From a middle-class family, Voltaire did not like the political environment of France and the aristocratic system. As a well-educated and intelligent student from the college of Louis-le-Grand, he became a secretary for …show more content…

By this storyline, Voltaire wanted to tell the French aristocracy that they did not have any heritage. Once they were expelled from their current positions, they needed to live as commoners, or maybe suffered more because they had never done anything in the castle.
Even though Candide was expelled, he was still very happy because he always believed in optimistic philosophy. He learnt the philosophy from his teacher, Panloss, a parody of the contemporary philosophers in the seventeenth century that always argued about the metaphysics, which had no use in the real world. Also, the optimism was a satire from the philosophy of Leibniz, a popular philosopher around that time. The optimism was widely used in the Christian churches to tell people that life was always full of happiness because the perfect God created the world. Human beings suffered in the world because they did not see the greater purpose from God. The sufferings were only trials and in the end the human being would still deserve ultimate happiness. After the Lisbon’s earthquake, which killed more than 30,000 people, many of who died because they were just praying to the God without actually doing anything, Voltaire was very angry about the situation that the priests in the church did not help people, but led them to sit in the church and pray. Therefore, he wanted to attack this philosophy, so in Candide he described the horrible

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