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Pierre Charron

 
Biography:

Pierre Charron

The French philosopher and theologian Pierre Charron (1541-1603) wrote an influential study of skepticism. He was also a renowned preacher and reformer.

Born in Paris in 1541, Pierre Charron studied law at Paris and Orléans before receiving a law degree from Bourges. After a brief period of law practice in Paris he entered the priesthood. He then went to Montpellier, where he studied law and theology and received a doctor's degree in canon and civil law in 1571. The same year he returned to Paris and began to preach. His eloquent sermons soon brought him fame and a variety of new positions. He served as preacher to Margaret of Valois, Queen of Navarre, as theological adviser in several dioceses in southwestern France, and as canon in Bordeaux. In his capacity as an adviser, Charron succeeded in carrying out Church reforms in accordance with the decrees of the Council of Trent. While in Bordeaux, he formed a close and lasting friendship with Michel Eyquem de Montaigne. In 1589 he tried to fulfill an earlier vow to enter a monastery but was rejected, probably because of his age.

In his first major work, Les Trois Vérités (1593; The Three Truths), Charron defended the Roman Catholic Church against its Protestant opponents. His three basic truths were: the existence of God and the necessity of religion; the existence of a "revealed religion," founded by Christ; and the maintenance of the pure truth by Catholicism, the oldest of the Christian religions.

In 1600 Charron published Discours chrestiens, a collection of 16 eloquent sermons. In that year he gave up his active duties and retired to Condom in southwestern France. In 1601 he published his most famous work, the controversial De la sagesse (Of Wisdom). In this work he developed the idea of skepticism by insisting that man, by use of his own capacities, can know nothing. What man considers true principles are really only "dreams and smoke." This attitude does not undermine religion, however, since it leaves man's intellect blank and thus ready to accept the revealed truths of Christianity. In addition, Charron also developed the view that the man of wisdom (the skeptic) is guided not only by the commands of God but also by the dictates of nature. This emphasis on natural morality was an important step in the philosophical study of ethics.

While visiting Paris, Charron suffered a stroke and died on Nov. 16, 1603.

Further Reading

The only full-length biography of Charron is in French. There is a monograph in English by Jean D. Charron, The "Wisdom" of Pierre Charron (1961). Also valuable is a chapter in Eugene F. Rice, Jr., The Renaissance Idea of Wisdom (1958).

Additional Sources

Charron, Jean Daniel., The "wisdom" of Pierre Charron: an original and orthodox code of morality, Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1979, 1960.

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French Literature Companion:

Pierre Charron

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Charron, Pierre (1541-1603). Moral philosopher. Born in Paris, he began a career in the law, then became a priest and was renowned for his preaching. He shifted allegiance in 1589 from the Ligue to the Politiques; at about the same time Montaigne befriended him. In 1593 he published Les Trois Vérités, in which he argued that religion is necessary and that God exists; that Christianity is revealed truth; and that Roman Catholicism is the only authentic version of Christianity. His targets in this work were atheists, infidels, and Protestants. In his more famous work De la sagesse (1601), he shifts his attention away from strictly theological issues to man himself. Borrowing heavily from Seneca, Plutarch, Du Vair, Justus Lipsius, Huarte, and especially Montaigne, he sets out a sceptical and Neostoic philosophy which is founded on the close interrelationship of practical wisdom with knowledge and personal integrity. His reliance on Montaigne is so great that some chapters of his work are no more than transcriptions of passages from the Essais. De la sagesse appeared no less than 49 times between 1601 and 1672, and is almost as important as the Essais themselves as a source of information about Montaigne's ideas. Although he was attacked in the 17th c. as a libertin because of his positive attitude towards scepticism, there is little reason to doubt Charron's personal orthodoxy.

[Ian Maclean]

Philosophy Dictionary:

Pierre Charron

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Charron, Pierre (1541-1603) French Catholic priest who presented Montaigne's thought in didactic form in order to defend Catholicism against Calvinists and others. In his On Wisdom (1603) he argues that Pyrrhonian scepticism leaves faith as our only recourse. He also set forth a naturalistic moral theory based on Stoic ideas.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia:

Pierre Charron

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Charron, Pierre (pyĕr shärôN'), 1541-1603, French Roman Catholic theologian and philosopher. He was an important contributor to 17th-century theological thought, combining an individual form of skepticism with a strict adherence to Catholicism based on the emphasis of the importance of faith over reason. After practicing law for several years, he took orders and soon gained a reputation as an eloquent preacher. He became chaplain to Margaret, wife of Henry IV. His Traité des trois vérités (1594) set forth proofs, first, that there is a God and that a true religion exists; second, that no other religion than that of the Christians is true; and, third, that in the Roman Catholic Church alone is salvation found. In 1600 he published a collection of 16 sermons. In his most famous work, the Traité de la sagesse (1601), the influence of Montaigne, with whom he had a close relationship, appears. The skepticism of that work awoke criticism and later a summary and apology, Petit traité de la sagesse, was published.
Quotes By:

Pierre Charron

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Quotes:

"The easiest way to be cheated is to believe yourself to be more cunning than others."

"Pleasure and pain, though directly opposite are contrived to be constant companions."

"The true science and study of man, is man himself."

"The most excellent and divine counsel, the best and most profitable advertisement of all others, but the least practiced, is to study and learn how to know ourselves. This is the foundation of wisdom and the highway to whatever is good. God, Nature, the wise, the world, preach man, exhort him both by word and deed to the study of himself."

Wikipedia:

Pierre Charron

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Pierre Charron
Full name Pierre Charron
Born 1541, Paris, France
Died November 16, 1603, Paris, France
Era Renaissance philosophy
Region Western Philosophers
School Scepticism, Sensationalism

Pierre Charron (1541 – November 16, 1603) was a French 16th-century philosopher, and a close friend and contemporary of Michel Montaigne.

Contents

Biography

Pierre Charron was born in Paris, one of the twenty-five children of a bookseller. After studying law, he practiced as an advocate, with little success. He then entered the church and soon became a popular priest, rising to become a canon, and was appointed priest in ordinary to Marguerite de Valois, wife of Henry IV of Navarre. In about 1588, he determined to fulfill a vow which he had once made to become a monk; but being rejected by both the Carthusians and the Celestines, he returned to his old profession. He delivered a course of sermons at Angers, and in the next year moved to Bordeaux, where he formed a famous friendship with Michel de Montaigne. On Montaigne's death, in 1592, Charron was requested in his will to bear the Montaigne arms.[1]

In 1594 Charron published (at first anonymously, afterwards under the name of "Benoit Vaillant, Advocate of the Holy Faith," and also, in 1594, in his own name) Les Trois Vérités in which by methodical and orthodox arguments, he seeks to prove that there is a God and a true religion, that the true religion is Christianity, and that the true church is the Roman Catholic church. The last book (which is three-quarters of his whole work) is a response to a famous Protestant work, Le Traité de l'Eglise by Du Plessis Mornay; and in the second edition (1595) there is an elaborate reply to an attack made on the third Vérité by a Protestant writer. Les Trois Vérités ran through several editions, and obtained for its author the favour of the Bishop of Cahors, who appointed him grand vicar and theological canon. It also led to his being chosen deputy to the general assembly of the clergy, of which body he became chief secretary. It was followed in 1600 by Discours chrestiens, a book of sermons, similar in tone, half of which treat of the Eucharist.

Obituary

In 1601 Charron published in Bordeaux his third and most remarkable work -- the famous De la sagesse, a complete popular system of moral philosophy. Usually, and so far correctly, it is coupled with the Essays of Montaigne, to which the author is under very extensive obligations. There is, however, distinct individuality in the book. It is specially interesting from the time when it appeared, and the man by whom it was written. Conspicuous as a champion of orthodoxy against atheists, Jews and Protestants -- without resigning this position, and still upholding practical orthodoxy -- Charron suddenly stood forth as the representative of the most complete intellectual scepticism. The De la sagesse, which represented a considerable advance on the standpoint of the Trois Vérités, brought upon its author the most violent attacks, the chief being by the Jesuit François Garasse (1585-1631), who described him as a brutal atheist. It received the warm support of Henry IV and of the president, Pierre Jeannin. A second edition was soon called for. In 1603, not withstanding much opposition, it began to appear; but only a few pages had been printed when Charron died suddenly in the street of apoplexy.

Philosophy

Psychology

Charron's psychology is that of a sensationalist. With sense all our knowledge commences, and into sense all may be resolved. The soul, located in the ventricles of the brain, is affected by the temperament of the individual; the dry temperament produces acute intelligence; the moist, memory; the hot, imagination. Dividing the intelligent soul into these three faculties, he shows - after the manner later adopted by Francis Bacon - what branches of science correspond with each. With regard to the nature of the soul he merely quotes opinions. The belief in its immortality, he says, is the most universal of beliefs, but the most feebly supported by reason. As to man's power of attaining truth his scepticism is decided; and he plainly declares that none of our faculties enable us to distinguish truth from error. In comparing man with the lower animals, Charron insists that there are no breaks in nature. Though inferior in some respects, in others animals are superior. The estimate of man is not flattering. His essential qualities are vanity, weakness, inconstancy and presumption. Upon this view of human nature Charron founds his moral system. As sceptical as Montaigne, he is even more cynical, with a deeper and sterner tone. Morality has no connection with religion. Reason is the ultimate criterion.

Theology

Special interest attaches to Charron's treatment of religion. All grow from small beginnings and increase by a sort of popular contagion; all teach that God is to be appeased by prayers, presents, vows, but especially, and most irrationally, by human suffering. Each is said by its devotees to have been given by inspiration. A man is a Christian, Jew, or Muslim, before he knows he is a man. One religion is built upon another. But while he openly declares religion to be "strange to common sense," the practical result at which Charron arrives is that one is not to sit in judgment on his faith, but to be "simple and obedient," and to allow himself to be led by public authority. This is one rule of wisdom with regard to religion; and another equally important is to avoid superstition, which he boldly defines as the belief that God is like a hard judge who, eager to find fault, narrowly examines our slightest act, that He is revengeful and hard to appease, and that therefore he must be flattered and importuned and won over by pain and sacrifice. True piety, which is the first of duties, is the knowledge of God and of one's self, the latter knowledge being necessary to the former. It is the abasing of man, the exalting of God,--the belief that what He sends is all good, and that all the bad is from ourselves. It leads to spiritual worship; for external ceremony is merely for our advantage, not for His glory. Charron is thus the founder of modern secularism. His political views are neither original nor independent. He pours much hackneyed scorn on the common herd, declares the sovereign to be the source of law, and asserts that popular freedom is dangerous.

A summary and defence of the Sagesse, written shortly before his death, appeared in 1606. In 1604 his friend Michel de la Roche prefixed to an edition of the Sagesse a Life, which depicts Charron as a most amiable man of purest character. His complete works, with this Life, were published in 1635. An excellent abridgment of the Sagesse is given in Tennemann's Philosophie, vol. ix.; an edition with notes by A Duval appeared in 1820.

Bibliography

Works

  • De la Sagesse Livres Trois; par M. Pierre le Charron, Parisien, Chanoine Theologal & Chantre en l'Eglise Cathedrale de Comdom Bourdeaus, S. Millanges, 1604.
  • Toutes les Oeuvres de Pierre Charron; Parisien, Docteur es Droiets, Chantre et Chanoine Theologal de Condom derniere edition. Reveues, corrigees & augmentees. 2 vols. Paris Jacques Villery, 1635.
  • Discours chrétiens (Bordeaux, 1600) ;

Secondary sources

  • Francoise Kaye, Charron et Montaigne; du plagiat a l'orginalite, Ottawa: Editions de l'Universite d'Ottawa, 1982.
  • Michel Adam, Etudes sur Pierre Charron. Bordeaux: Presses Universitaires de Bordeaux, 1991.
  • Jeffrey Zuniga, Toward a Life of Wisdom, Pierre Charron in the Light of Modern and Postmodern skepticism Manila: University of Sto. Thomas Press, 2000.
  • Hugo Liebscher, Charron u. sein Werk, De la sagesse (Leipzig, 1890)
  • HT Buckle, Introd. to History of Civilization in England, vol. ii. 19
  • Abbé Lezat, De la predication sous Henri IV. c. vi.
  • JM Robertson, Short History of Free Thought (London, 1906), vol. ii.
  • John Owen, Skeptics of the French Renaissance (1893)
  • Lecky, Rationalism in Europe (1865).

References

  1. ^ Pierre Charron - Catholic Encyclopedia article

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

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French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Philosophy Dictionary. The Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy. Copyright © 1994, 1996, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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