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Charles Batteux

 
Music Encyclopedia: Charles Batteux

(b Allenhui, 7 May 1713/1715; d Paris, 14 July 1780). French aesthetician, one of the clearest exponents of the precepts of the Age of Reason. His main work, Les beaux arts réduits à un même principe (1746), proposed that the arts (including music) are all imitations of nature, which in turn reveals truth, beauty and reason.



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French Literature Companion: Charles Batteux
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Batteux, Charles, abbé (1713-80). A teacher of rhetoric, and professor of Greek and Latin at the Collège de France, Batteux composed many theoretical and pedagogical works. Les Beaux-Arts réduits à un même principe (1746) bases a general theory of the arts on the imitation of ‘la belle nature’; De la construction oratoire (1763) discusses the topical question of ‘natural’ word order; the Cours de belles-lettres (1747-50), later published with other works in Principes de littérature (1753), gave currency to the notion of ‘belles-lettres’ and outlined a normative training in reading French and classical literature.

[Peter France]

Wikipedia: Charles Batteux
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Charles Batteux (May 6, 1713 – July 14, 1780) was a French philosopher and writer on aesthetics.

Batteaux was born near Vouziers (Ardennes), and studied theology at Reims. In 1739 he came to Paris, and after teaching in the colleges of Lisieux and Navarre, was appointed to the chair of Greek and Roman philosophy in the Collège de France. In 1746 he published his treatise Les Beaux-Arts réduits à un même principe, an attempt to find a unity among the various theories of beauty and taste, and his views were widely accepted.

The reputation thus gained, confirmed by his translation of Horace (1750), led to his becoming a member of the Académie des Inscriptions (1754) and of the Académie Française (1761). His Cours de belles lettres (1765) was afterwards included with some minor writings in the large treatise, Principes de la littérature (1774). His philosophical writings were La morale d'Épicure tirée de ses propres écrits (1758), and the Histoire des causes premières (1769). In consequence of the freedom with which in this work he attacked the abuse of authority in philosophy, he lost his professorial chair. His last and most extensive work was a Cours d'études à l'usage des élèves de l'école militaire in forty-five volumes.

In the Beaux-Arts, Batteux developed a theory which is derived from John Locke through Voltaire's sceptical sensualism. He held that Art consists in the faithful imitation of the beautiful in nature. Applying this principle to the art of poetry, and analysing, line by line and even word by word, the works of great poets, he deduced the law that the beauty of poetry consists in the accuracy, beauty and harmony of individual expression. This theory had at least the merit of insisting on propriety of expression. His Histoire des causes premières was among the first attempts at a history of philosophy, and in his work on Epicurus, following on Gassendi, he defended Epicureanism against the general attacks made against it.

See Dacier et Dupuy, Éloges, in Mémoires de l'Académie des Inscriptions.

References

Cultural offices
Preceded by
Odet-Joseph Giry
Seat 37
Académie française
1761-1780
Succeeded by
Antoine-Marin Lemierre

 
 

 

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Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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