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  1. Dec 21, 2012 · Political views of Voltaire. Voltaire thought that the political system in France was corrupt and unfair, that it favored the Aristocracy and noblemen and the poor commoners had little rights. He was not a fan of democracy. He thought it was used to make the underclasses think they had rights.

  2. Aug 31, 2009 · Philosophie à la Voltaire also came in the form of political activism, such as his public defense of Jean Calas who, Voltaire argued, was a victim of a despotic state and an irrational and brutal judicial system. Voltaire often attached philosophical reflection to this political advocacy, such as when he facilitated a French translation of ...

  3. Nov 23, 2023 · Voltaire also involved himself in politics in the 1740s, typically in the form of diplomatic missions on behalf of the government. Keen to see firsthand how authoritarian rulers operated, Voltaire spent time at various royal courts, most notably Frederick the Great, King of Prussia (r. 1740-1786).

    • Mark Cartwright
  4. Unlike Rousseau, Voltaire always considered the existing social and political order safely established and firmly settled. He did not wish to uproot it and overturn it and, out of the confusion and the debris, evolve a fairer, freer society. Voltaire never desired social revolution; but he ardently longed for the happy

  5. Sep 15, 2014 · Voltaire was the chief social and political protagonist of his age; he promoted the ideas of religious and political tolerance as propagated by British liberal thinkers such as Locke and Swift. In particular, he spread liberal rationalist Enlightenment ideas to continental Europeans.

  6. In the years after 1760, Voltaire finally found the voice as a public intellectual that has ever since characterized him. ‘The campaigner’ outlines his time at his new home in Ferney, France, near the border with Geneva, and his crusade for religious tolerance.

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