Encyclopedists

                     (1) The writers of the eighteenth century who edited or contributed articles to the
                     "Encyclopédie". (2) Those among them especially who belonged to the
                     "philosophic" party, joined in the "illumination" movement, and may be grouped
                     together because of a certain community of opinions on philosophical, religious,
                     moral, and social questions.

                              I. THE ENCYCLOPÉDIE AND THE ENCYCLOPEDISTS

                     The "Encyclopédie, ou, Dictionnaire raisonné des sciences, des arts et des
                     métiers, par une société de gens de lettres, mis en ordre et publié par M. Diderot
                     . . . et quant à la partie mathématique par M. d'Alembert . . ." in the complete
                     original edition comprises 35 folio volumes as follows: 17 vols. of text (Paris,
                     1751-1765); 11 vols. of plates (Paris, 1762-1772); 5 vols. of supplement, i.e., 4 of
                     text and 1 of plates (Amsterdam and Paris, 1776-1777); 2 vols. of analytical
                     index prepared by Pierre Mouchon (Amsterdam and Paris, 1780). In 1745, a
                     French translation of Chambers's "Cyclopædia", prepared by John Mills with the
                     assistance of Gottfried Sellius, was to be published in Paris by the king's printer,
                     Le Breton. After the necessary royal privilege had been obtained, a number of
                     difficulties between Mills and Le Breton caused the failure of the enterprise, and
                     Mills returned to England. Le Breton asked Jean-Paul de Gua, professor in the
                     Collège de France, to assume the editorship and revise the manuscripts. But
                     again misunderstandings and disputes obliged de Gua to resign. Diderot was
                     then called upon to complete the preparation of the manuscripts. At his
                     suggestion, however, it was decided to undertake a more original and more
                     comprehensive work. Diderot's friend, d'Alembert, agreed to edit the
                     mathematical sciences. Diderot (1713-84) had not yet written any original work
                     except the "Pensées philosophiques" (1746), in which the foundations of
                     Christianity are examined and undermined, revelation rejected, and reason
                     proclaimed independent. The Parliament had ordered the book to be burnt. The
                     "Promenade d'un sceptique" was written in 1747, but not published before the
                     author's death. Diderot had also published a translation of Stanyan's "Grecian
                     History" (1743) and an adaptation of Shaftesbury's "Inquiry concerning Virtue and
                     Merit" under the title "Principes de la philosophie, ou Essai sur le mérite et la
                     vertu" (1745). His main recommendation as editor of the new Encyclopédie,
                     however, was the "Dictionnaire universel de médecine" (1746-1748), a translation
                     of Dr. Robert James's "Medical Dictionary". D'Alembert (1717-83) was already
                     famous as a mathematician. At the age of twenty-two he had presented two
                     studies to the Académie des Sciences, "Sur le calcul intégral" (1740). The
                     following year he was elected a member of the Académie. He had acquired a still
                     greater reputation by his "Traité de dynamique" (1743) and the "Mémoire sur la
                     cause générale des vents" (1747), the latter winning for its author the prize
                     offered by the Berlin Academy and membership in that body.

                     While the articles were being printed Diderot was imprisoned at Vincennes, 29
                     July, 1749, for his "Lettre sur les aveugles à l'usage de ceux qui voient", or rather
                     for a passage in it which had displeased Madame Dupré de Saint-Maur. After four
                     months his publishers obtained his release; in November, 1750, the
                     Encyclopédie was announced in a prospectus by Diderot, and, in July, 1751, the
                     first volume was published. It opened with a "Discours préliminaire" by
                     d'Alembert, in which the problem of the origin of ideas is solved according to
                     Locke's sensualism, and a classification of sciences is proposed which, except
                     in a few minor points, is that of Bacon. In the prospectus Diderot had already
                     said: "If we succeed in this vast enterprise our principal debt will be to Chancellor
                     Bacon who sketched the plan of a universal dictionary of sciences and arts at a
                     time when there were, so to say, neither sciences nor arts." D'Alembert
                     acknowledged the same indebtedness. Thus, British influence was considerable
                     both in shaping the doctrine of the "Encyclopédie" and in bringing about its
                     publication. The second volume appeared in January, 1752. In consequence of
                     many protests against the spirit of the work, its sale was stopped, and later the
                     arrêt of the King's Council suppressed both volumes as injurious to religion and
                     royal authority (7 February, 1752). Three months later, however, Diderot and
                     d'Alembert were asked to continue the work, a fact which they announce with
                     pride in the preface to the third volume (October, 1753). The following volumes
                     were published without any interruption until after the publication of the seventh
                     volume (1757), when new difficulties arose. In his article on Geneva, d'Alembert
                     had stated that the ministers of that city were Socinians, and praised them for
                     their unbelief. They protested strongly, and this was the occasion for bitter
                     discussions in which Voltaire and Rousseau took a prominent part. The outcome
                     was that d'Alembert, tired of vexations, resigned the editorship. Rousseau also
                     ceased to have anything to do with the Encyclopédie, and thenceforth showed a
                     vehement hostility to it. On the other hand, there were so many denunciations
                     that finally an arrêt of the Council (8 March, 1759) revoked the privilege granted in
                     1746, and forbade the sale of the volumes already printed and the printing of any
                     future volume. And yet, under the secret protection of Choiseul, Madame de
                     Pompadour, Malesherbes, then director-general of the Librairie, and Sartine, the
                     chief of police, work was resumed almost immediately. The ten remaining
                     volumes were to be published together. After Diderot had corrected the
                     proof-sheets, Le Breton, fearing new vexations, suppressed passages likely to be
                     objectionable and to cause friction with the authorities. Diderot noticed the
                     changes too late to prevent them. The articles were mutilated to an extent which
                     it is now impossible to determine, as all manuscripts and proof-sheets were
                     immediately destroyed. At last, in 1765, volumes VIII-XVII were published,
                     completing the text of the Encyclopédie.

                     It is not possible to mention here all the contributors (about 160) to the work.
                     Diderot himself wrote 990 articles on almost every subject, philosophical,
                     religious, and moral, but especially on the arts and trades. Great care was taken
                     in the treatment of the mechanical arts. No trouble was spared to obtain minute
                     descriptions of various machines and the means of using them. All this was
                     explained in the text and illustrated in the plates. D'Alembert's articles, with few
                     exceptions, are on the mathematical and physical sciences. From the beginning
                     Rousseau (1712-1778), then known as the author of several musical works and
                     compositions, agreed to write the articles on music. He also wrote the article,
                     "Economie politique". The collaboration of Buffon (1707-88) who had promised to
                     write on "Nature" is announced in the second volume, but it is doubtful if that
                     article, as printed, is from him. Most of the topics in natural history were treated
                     by Daubenton (1716-99). Articles by d'Holbach (1723-89), Marmontel, Bordeu,
                     are announced in the third volume. The fourth introduces Voltaire (1694-1778) as
                     the author of some literary articles, and says of him: "The Encyclopédie, on
                     account of the justice it has rendered and will always continue to render him,
                     was worthy of the interest which he now takes in it." In the "Discours
                     préliminaire", d'Alembert had praised him as occupying "a distinguished place in
                     the very small number of great poets", and extolled him for his qualities as a
                     prose writer. Condorcet, Grimm, Quesnay, Turgot, Necker also contributed
                     articles or memoirs. De Jaucourt furthered the cause of the Encyclopédie not
                     only by his numerous articles and his constant interest, but also by his attitude
                     and reputation. Far from sharing the materialistic and atheistic tendencies of
                     many of his co-workers, he was at the same time friendly to the Encyclopedists
                     and to some of their enemies. Montesquieu at his death (1755) left an unfinished
                     article on Taste (Goût); but his "Lettres persanes" (1721) and "Esprit des lois"
                     (1748) inspired many of the social and political articles in the Encyclopédie.

                            II. THE SPIRIT AND INFLUENCE OF THE ENCYCLOPÉDIE

                     The expression spirit of the Encyclopédie may at first seem to be a misnomer. In
                     that vast compilation is found the greatest diversity of subjects and even of views
                     on the same subjects. The writers of the articles belong to all professions and to
                     all classes of society. Names of military men, lawyers, physicians, artists,
                     clergymen, scientists, philosophers, theologians, statesmen, etc. appear on the
                     lists of contributors given at the beginning of each volume. The articles are of
                     unequal value; proportion is lacking, each contributor apparently writing as he
                     thinks fits. Verbosity is a prominent defect, and, at times, the authors indulge in
                     endless digressions. Voltaire repeatedly asked for brevity and better method.
                     (See Letters to d'Alembert, esp. in 1756).

                     The articles seem to have been gathered together from various sources without
                     any preconceived plan, without any unity or sufficient supervision. Under these
                     conditions the spirit of the Encyclopédie might denote merely one special
                     tendency, or one group of tendencies, which, at first manifested along with many
                     others, gradually became important and finally predominant. To some extent it is
                     that, but it is also more than that. The Encyclopédie was not intended only as a
                     great monument to record the progress realized in sciences, arts, civil and
                     religious institutions, industry, commerce, and all other lines of human
                     endeavour; the Encyclopedists purposed moreover to prepare the future and
                     indicate the way to further progress. The Encyclopédie would be a record, but it
                     would also be a standard; not a mere onlooker, but a leader. In fact, appearing as
                     it did in the third quarter of the eighteenth century, it is a mirror in which the
                     events of the whole century are focused.

                     At the time of the publication of the Encyclopédie, the French Government was,
                     owing to many causes and influences, already considerably weakened, and still
                     weakening. Dissatisfaction and unrest, though not yet well defined, were
                     spreading among the people. Existing institutions and customs, both religious
                     and political, had recently been denounced in several publications. The
                     "philosophers" were favourably received in the salons of the aristocracy. On the
                     other hand, Jansenism, with the endless discussions of which it had been the
                     source or the occasion, and also with the lack of knowledge and looseness of
                     morals among some members of the clergy, had prepared the way for a reaction
                     in the sense of unbelief. There were other causes less direct, perhaps, and more
                     remote, yet influential in bringing about a break with the past. In Descartes one
                     may find unequivocal germs of the neglect, contempt even, of tradition in
                     philosophy, especially when immediate evidence, the idée claire, is made the
                     sole valid criterion of truth. The influence of British philosophers was far from
                     tending to check the growth of rationalism. Nor can we overlook the influence of
                     the famous "Querelle des Anciens et des Modernes", as it is known in the
                     history of French literature. In the last two decades of the seventeenth century it
                     was one of the main centres of attention. To this discussion, which resulted in a
                     victory for those who favoured the "modern", Brunetière traces back three
                     important consequences: first, the meaning of tradition becomes gradually
                     identified with that of superstition; second, progress is conceived as an
                     emancipation from, and an abjuration of, the past; finally, and this is still more
                     important, education in all its stages consists more and more in derision of the
                     past. True, recent times everywhere offered masterpieces of art, literature, and
                     science. Whatever side we may take in the old quarrel to-day, and however much
                     less radical and more impartial our views may be, we can at least understand the
                     attitude of those who succeeded the great men of the age of Louis XIV.

                     Another important factor was scientific progress. After being too frequently
                     confined to idle a priori controversies, science was asserting its rights, and these
                     it soon came to exaggerate, while it failed to recognize the rights of others.
                     Reason gradually freed itself from the superstition of the past and claimed
                     absolute independence. Ancient, or rather Christian, conceptions of God and the
                     world were not even deemed worthy of the serious consideration of a "thinker".
                     Efficient causes alone were recognized, final causes proscribed. In nature
                     science always dealt with immutable laws; soon the possibility of miracles and
                     revelation was denied, while mysteries were regarded as absurd. Thus, in the
                     place of traditional beliefs, new ideas were introduced, tending to rationalism,
                     materialism, naturalism, and deism. On positive points there was but little
                     agreement; the tendency was primarily negative. It was an opposition to received
                     dogmas and institutions, an effort to establish a new theoretical and practical
                     philosophy on the basis of merely naturalistic principles. Nothing is truer than
                     d'Alembert's statement, in the "Discours préliminaire", that "our century believes
                     itself destined to change all kinds of laws". Towards the middle of the eighteenth
                     century the representatives of this movement were the "philosophers", and they
                     were about to centralize their efforts in the Encyclopédie. Great prudence was
                     necessary, and it was used. Some men who were known for their conservative
                     opinions were asked to contribute articles, and the Encyclopédie contained
                     some unexceptionable doctrines and moderate views on religious, ethical, and
                     social problems; moreover, the editors themselves and those who shared their
                     views frequently concealed or disguised their true convictions. As Voltaire says,
                     they were in the sad necessity of "printing the contrary of what they believed"
                     (Letter to d'Alembert, 9 October, 1756). More was insinuated than was clearly
                     expressed, and at times a sarcastic remark was used with better effect than a
                     definite statement or argument. When the main article to which one would
                     naturally turn for information contained nothing objectionable, other articles, less
                     likely to attract attention, expressed different and more "philosophic" views. That
                     such was the condition of affairs is attested by a significant passage in a letter of
                     d'Alembert to Voltaire (21 July, 1757). To the latter's criticism of certain articles
                     he replies: "No doubt we have bad articles in theology and metaphysics; but with
                     theologians for censors, and a privilege, I defy you to make them any better.
                     There are other articles less exposed to the daylight in which all is repaired. Time
                     will enable people to distinguish what we have thought from what we have said."
                     Hence, although the Encyclopédie itself contains many articles in which
                     anti-Christian principles are openly professed, the true, unrestrained
                     encyclopedic spirit was found in the meetings of the "philosophers" and in the
                     salons, where they were looked upon as oracles. Today it is to be found in the
                     later works of the Encyclopedists and chiefly their letters and memoirs. In the
                     impious and cynical d'Alembert, for instance, as known from his correspondence
                     with Voltaire, one would fail to recognize the prudent and reserved d'Alembert of
                     the Encyclopédie. "You were born with the finest and most virile genius", Voltaire
                     wrote to him (4 June, 1769), "but you are free only with your friends, when the
                     doors are closed". This last remark applies also to Diderot and the other
                     Encyclopedists. Their private letters reveal their true spirit and intentions, and
                     prove that the apparent moderation and tolerance shown in their public writings
                     were dictated by fear and not by conviction.

                     It is difficult to estimate the influence which the Encyclopédie exerted on the
                     events that followed it publication, especially the French Revolution. To a large
                     extent undoubtedly it was not the source, but only the reflection, of the religious
                     and social views of the time. Not the Encyclopédie so much as the
                     Encyclopedists exerted a real influence. Since their spirit was antagonistic to the
                     Church and, in many respects, also to the State, one may ask why its
                     manifestations were not suppressed; why in particular its organ, the
                     Encyclopédie, was allowed to proceed, notwithstanding the warnings of its
                     adversaries and its repeated condemnation by the civil authorities. In a word,
                     what was done to check its influence or to oppose its doctrines? In general, it
                     may be answered that little was done, and, under the circumstances, perhaps
                     little could be done. The defenders of the Faith were not idle; they wrote books
                     and articles in refutation of the "philosophers"; but their voice was not heard, and
                     their scattered efforts were of little avail against the organized forces and the
                     powerful protectors of their adversaries. The Jesuits, the secular clergy,
                     especially Archbishop Christophe de Beaumont, of Paris, and Bishop Le Franc
                     de Pompignan, of Le Puy, who wrote pastorals on the subject, and several other
                     writers and preachers denounced the Encyclopédie. We have seen that they
                     succeeded more than once in having its publication and sale prohibited by the
                     Government. The suspensions were only temporary. The Encyclopedists were
                     under the patronage of high personages at the Court; they were protected
                     especially by Malesherbes, the director of the Librairie, who controlled, among
                     other things, the granting of privileges for new publications and the censuring of
                     books, and by Sartine, the chief of police, on whom depended the enforcement of
                     the laws and ordinances concerning the printing and sale of books. Malesherbes
                     always showed himself the friend of not only of the Encyclopédie, but also of the
                     Encyclopedists. Owing to this friendship, many works were published
                     notwithstanding the official position of the Government. In 1759, after the decision
                     of the council had revoked the privilege formerly granted, it was Malesherbes who
                     warned Diderot that his papers were to be seized the next day. As it was too late
                     to look for a place of safety where they could be taken, Malesherbes had them
                     sent to his own house.

                     Thus the Government secretly favoured an enterprise which it officially censured,
                     and, under this protection the Encyclopédie was begun and completed. Partly for
                     the same reason, partly also for deeper reasons concerning the religious and civil
                     conditions in France, the efforts to combat the Encyclopédie were not rewarded
                     with much success. Moreau in the "Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire des
                     Cacouacs" (1757), Palissot, in his "Petites lettres sur de grands philosophes"
                     (1757) and in his comedy "Les philosophes" (1760), tried to use the weapons of
                     ridicule and satire which some of the "philosophers", especially Voltaire, wielded
                     with greater skill. Fréron, in the "Année littéraire", was at times sarcastic, and
                     always ready to give and take blows. Constantly at war with the Encyclopedists,
                     he was at a great disadvantage, for they enjoyed Malesherbe's protection,
                     whereas for him the censure was always very severe. Thus he was hardly
                     allowed to write on Voltaire's "Ecossaise" (1760), in which he had been publicly
                     insulted on the stage. The Jansenists, in the "Nouvelles ecclésiastiques", did
                     little more than insult the Encyclopedists. In the "Journal de Trévoux", the
                     Jesuits, and among them especially Berthier (1704-82), who was director of the
                     Journal from 1745 till the suppression of the Society of Jesus, wrote frequent
                     criticisms. But notwithstanding all this opposition the spirit of irreligion was
                     steadily gaining. Too often the criticism was weak, the attack unskillful. In some
                     cases even, the anti-Encyclopedists, instead of harming their opponents, rather
                     contributed to their success by giving them notoriety and affording them an
                     opportunity for using their influence. The Jesuits were expelled from France in
                     1762; this gave a new victory and a new prestige to the "philosophers".
                     D'Alembert, who wrote "La destruction des Jésuites en France" (1765), looks
                     upon this expulsion as the just punishment of their hostility towards the
                     Encyclopédie. Gradually the people were becoming accustomed to the new
                     spirit, and thus it was that, whereas the first volumes had created a great stir in
                     France, the appearance of the last volumes was scarcely noticed.

                     Unknown or little known in 1750, the "philosophers" had now won their battle,
                     and were the recognized victors. Their success made them bolder in declaring
                     openly what fear had frequently obliged them to veil in their former works and in
                     the Encyclopédie. These doctrines had also been made more familiar by the
                     publication of several works before the completion of the Encyclopédie, the most
                     important being Diderot's "Pensées sur l'interprétation de la nature" (1754);
                     Helvétius's "De l'esprit" (1758); Rousseau's "Discours sur l'origine et les
                     fondements de l'inégalité parmi les hommes" (1753), "Contrat social" (1762), and
                     "Emile" (1762); Voltaire's "Dictionnaire philosophique" (1765); d'Holbach's
                     "Système de la nature" (1770). Hence, on 8 July, 1765, Voltaire could write to
                     d'Alembert: "They clamour against the philosophers, and are right; for, if opinion
                     is the ruler of the world, this ruler is governed by the philosophers. You can
                     hardly imagine how their empire is spreading."

                     BRUNETIÈRE, Etudes critiques sur l'histoire de la littérature française (Paris, 1896-); in these
                     Etudes are found several essays on men and events related to the Encyclopédie; ID., Manuel de
                     l'histoire de la littérature française (2d ed., Paris, 1899) and the sources indicated in it, especially
                     the Mémoires and the Correspondances of the ENCYCLOPEDISTS; ID., Les origines de l'esprit
                     encyclopédique in Revue hebdomadaire (November, 1907), 141, 281, 421; DAMIRON, Mémoires
                     pour servir à l'histoire de la philosophie au XVIIIe siècle (Paris, 1858-1864); DUCROS, Diderot
                     (Paris, 1894); ID., Les Encyclopédistes (Paris, 1900); DUPRAT, Encyclopédistes (Paris, 1866);
                     LANFREY, L'Eglise et les philosophes au dix-huitième siècle (Paris, 1879); LÉVY BRUHL, The
                     Encyclopedists in Open Court, XIII (1899), 129; MORLEY, Diderot and the Encyclopedists (2d ed.,
                     London, 1886); ROSENKRANZ, Diderots Leben und Werke (Leipzig, 1866); WADIA, The
                     Philosophers and the French Revolution (London, 1904); WINDELBAND, Geschichte der neueren
                     Philosophie (4th ed., Leipzig, 1907); LYONS in Encyclopædia Britannica (9th ed.), VIII, 197; RIAUX
                     in FRANCK, Dictionnaire des sciences philosophiques (2d ed., Paris, 1885), 445.

                     C .A.  Dubray
                     Transcribed by Gerald Rossi

                                       The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume V
                                    Copyright © 1909 by Robert Appleton Company
                                    Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
                                    Nihil Obstat, May 1, 1909. Remy Lafort, Censor
                                   Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York

The Catholic Encyclopedia:  NewAdvent.org