'What can you say to a man who tells you he prefers
obeying God rather than men, and that as a result he's
certain he'll go to heaven if he cuts your throat?'
Voltaire's Pocket Philosophical Dictionary, first
published in 1764, is a major work of the European
Enlightenment. It is also a highly entertaining book:
this is no 'dictionary' in the ordinary sense, nor does
it treat 'philosophy' in the modern meaning of the term.
It consists of a sequence of short essays or articles,
arranged in alphabetical order, and covering everything
from Apocalypse and Atheism to Tolerance and Tyranny.
The unifying thread of these articles is Voltaire's
critique of established religion: ridicule of
established dogma, attacks on superstition, and pleas
for toleration. Witty and ironic, this is very much a
work of combat, part of Voltaire's high-profile
political struggle in the 1760s to defend the victims of
religious and political intolerance. This new
translation is based on the definitive French text, and
reprints the edition that provoked widespread
controversy and condemnation.In his Introduction
Nicholas Cronk considers the work's continuing relevance
to modern debates about religious intolerance and its
consequences. ABOUT THE SERIES: For over 100 years
Oxford World's Classics has made available the widest
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study, and much more. |
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