Freedom of speech
Voltaire, as a freemasonic enlightenment thinker, did not believe God had revealed himself in any one text, but in all. He believed in "God" generically, not personally, as someone who had revealed himself in a unified personal manor.
dont worry about it
The English system of government was better than the French.
it would be necessary to invent him.
yes i believe he did i am not completely sure but i am 95.2% sure
A famous quote by Voltaire . Its meaning is still debated today. The way I (like to) see it, it is a sentence said in irony. Voltaire is saying, "Let us accept that God exists. But what if he didn't? Well, we would have to invent him, because he is necessary for the individual / society , for whatever reasons. So then, if he DIDN'T exist, we would actually be living exactly the same way, believing in a God that is not there." With this irony, Voltaire is trying to show that God does not exist. Perhaps Voltaire is saying that it does not matter whether God exists or not.
Voltaire believed that history's greatest man was Isaac Newton. Voltaire said that Newton used his genius for the good of mankind.
It was actually Hobbes, not Voltaire, who warned that in the absence of good government, life tends to be nasty, brutish, and short. However, it is true that Voltaire also commented on the nastiness of life, particularly in his novel Candide.
Voltaire believed in tolerance, reason, freedom of religious beliefs, and freedom of speech.
A:As a Deist, Voltaire had no need for prayer, so we can be sure he never literally said this prayer. Here, Voltaire was using irony, by saying that if the Christian God ever did anything for him, it was to make his enemies seem ridiculous.
No they did not believe in god
I believe in god. also, write why u believe in god :)