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Voltaire's 'Candide': Pangloss Vs. Martin

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In Voltaire’s Candide, the reader is taken on a journey that consists of floggings, rapes, murder, disease, an earthquake, and countless other atrocities. Candide becomes the primary receiver of these atrocities along with a few others. However, two men are important to note; Pangloss and Martin. Both men are masters of two very different philosophies. Pangloss, the embodiment of optimism, and Martin, the embodiment of pessimism. The two men are never with Candide together until the end, however both men try to indoctrinate Candide into their own philosophical beliefs. Throughout the story there is a constant alternation between optimism and pessimism. The two philosophies are like magnets of the same pole, they do not attract. Since Candide …show more content…

It is the simultaneous blending of optimism, pessimism and skepticism that ultimately leads Candide to find a middle ground philosophy and in the end finds him contentment with his life.
In the beginning of Candide, we are introduced to the philosophy of Candide’s teacher Pangloss. Pangloss teaches of optimism. Pangloss’s philosophy can be shortened into one quote; “that all is for the best in this “best of all possible worlds.” (Voltaire, 356). Pangloss then gives us an example of his philosophy in practice by examining the uses of noses. Plangloss states “everything is made to serve an end, everything necessarily serves the best end. Observe: noses were made to support spectacles, hence we have spectacles” (Voltaire, 356). Most people would agree that this logic is warped because god did not create noses to fit spectacles, in fact nosey were created for the contrary. This example of his philosophy is important because it demonstrations the absurdity of this kind of unfiltered optimism. However absurd, Candide holds on to this unfiltered …show more content…

Eldorado society is described to be faultless in all ways. The city essentially symbolizes the beacon of optimism or the best of all possible worlds as Pangloss would say. However, Candide decides to leave in purist of his love Cunegonde. It is once he leaves this beacon of optimism that he becomes more pessimistic in philosophy. Soon after he leaves El Dorado, he meets martin. Martin, the pessimistic philosopher, explains his reason for pessimism, “in the cities, where people appear to live in peace and the arts flourish, men are devoured by more envy, worry, and dissatisfaction than all the scourges of a city under siege” (Candide, 390). Another example of Martins’ pessimistic views is when he and Candide are discussing the sinking of Vanderdendur’s ship. Vanderdendur’s stole some of Candide’s sheep that contained many jewels, so he found this sinking to be justice and for the greater good. However Martin states, “but did the passengers aboard his ship have to perish too? God punished the scoundrel, the devil drowned the others (Candide, 390). “He is pointing out the flaw with that optimistic way of thinking. Others had to die for a crime that they did not commit therefore, questioning the reality of a perfect

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