Problems with Voltaire
Essay by marlinsfan75 • January 15, 2013 • Essay • 528 Words (3 Pages) • 1,360 Views
Problems in Voltaire's Society
I am always wondering about what compels a man to think of today's society with open eyes, and actually allow him to visualize change. Voltaire achieved this as he wrote Candide. In this novel Voltaire mocks the problems of his everyday surroundings by pointing them out in a way that is both humorous and to the point. He uses the main character, Candide to represent the everyday person during that time. He also uses a set of characters that represent everyday people and how their actions can influence the everyday man in either a positive or negative way. He then shows how the everyday man encounters these influences and how it helps him become a more prescient person.
Francois Marie Arouet de Voltaire's novella, Candide, incorporates many themes, yet concentrates a direct assault on the ideas of Leibniz and Pope. These two well-known philosophers both held the viewpoint that the world created by God was the best of all possibilities, a world of perfect order and reason. Pope specifically felt that each human being is a part of God's great and all-knowing plan or design for the world.
Voltaire had a very opposite point of view in that he saw a world of needless pain and suffering all around him. Voltaire, a deist, believed that God created the world, yet he felt that the people were living in a situation that was anything but perfect. Thus, the major theme of Candide is one of the world not being the best of all possibilities, full of actions definitely not determined by reason or order, but by chance and coincidence.
Throughout the entire book, Voltaire portrays religious men, such as monks and priests, as hypocrites who do not live up to the religious standards that they set upon others. Voltaire first attacks the men of the Church and their hypocrisy in chapter three. After escaping from the Bulgars, Candide was obviously in need of food and possibly medical attention, but could find no help. When he came upon a minister who had just spoken of charity, Candide asked for some food to eat, but was harshly turned away. After speaking of charity to others, the minister turned Candide away just because they didn't share the same view of the Pope. To make matters worse, the minister's wife proceeded to throw a pot of urine over Candide's head. Voltaire used these rather repulsive acts to show the hypocrisy found in many church
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