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Reviews for Voltaire: A Life

 Voltaire magazine reviews

The average rating for Voltaire: A Life based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2020-07-25 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 3 stars Agnieszka Flizik
Informativo, mas não muito mais que isso. A tarefa deste livro é hercúlea: Voltaire é o gigante do Iluminismo. Apesar de ter vivido numa época intelectualmente rica, Voltaire estava um pouco mais à frente. É um dos grandes mestres do pensamento crítico. Mordaz, divertido e muito inteligente. Entre Diderot, Rousseau, D'Alambert, etc., Voltaire continua a destacar-se. Esta obra traça uma abordagem didática mas não explora o sentido mais profundo da obra de Voltaire. Contudo, como pré-leitura da sua obra, serve bem o propósito.
Review # 2 was written on 2014-08-02 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 3 stars Jeffery Kilby
The point of biography is to tell the story of a life and - if possible - to tell you why that life in particular was significant. Ian Davidson's Voltaire: A Life does an excellent job of the first but at best a middling job of the second. To be fair, he is clear in his intentions. He hasn't set out to write a literary or philosophical biography - the clue is in the title. And it's an easy read of a busy and varied career. But why do we keep returning to Voltaire nearly three centuries later? It's for what has lasted those long years - works like his English Letters and Candide, his campaigns against the ancien regime's inept, brutal and theocratic criminal justice system, as well as his symbolic value as a rallying point for rationality. Davidson may give us Voltaire the man, but does not provide enough context and backdrop to render his real contributions to the world at all meaningful to the reader. Instead, he pays too much attention to his financial and domestic activities, the day-to-day minutiae all too available from so prolific a correspondent (20,000 letters over his lifetime). All of which would be fine, if a social history of Voltaire and his life was what was most needed. But, in an age where Enlightenment values are under attack as never before, as Davidson himself notes - there has never been a better time to return to and examine their legacy. In his attacks on miscarriages of justice, Voltaire mocks the idea that one eighth of a proof, times eight, adds up to a proof. Davidson's biography effectively has the same flaw - the assumption that a wealth of factual information about his subject will give you a sense of the whole. It's a necessary beginning in the search for significance - of course. But only a beginning.


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