Benjamin Constant

Benjamin Constant (October 25, 1767December 8, 1830) was a Swiss thinker, writer and politician. Constant was born in Lausanne, Switzerland, to descendants of Huguenots. He was educated by private tutors and at the universities at Erlangen and Edinburgh. In the course of his life, he spent many years in France, Switzerland, Germany, and Britain. He was intimate with Anne Louise Germaine de Stal and their intellectual collaboration made them one of the most important intellectual pairs of their time. He was active in French politics as a publicist and politician during the latter half of the French Revolution and between 1815 and 1830. During part of this latter period, he sat in the French National Assembly. He was one of its most eloquent orators and a leader of the left-liberal opposition known as the Indepentants. A classical liberal author, he pleaded for individual liberty, restrictions on government authority on the individual, and increasing voting rights. He is well-known for his theory of modern liberty. This theory says that modern social organisation, above all the rise of commercial social relations, makes it historically necessary that moderns enjoy individual liberty and political participation. He set modern liberty in contrast to the ancient liberty of the ancient Greeks and Romans, which gave citizens great participation in public affairs, but at the expense of their individual freedom. Constant thus attacked Napoleon's martial appetite on the grounds that it was illiberal and no longer suited to modern commercial social organization. Constant was, however, no proponent of radical libertarianism. His religious writings pleaded for a guiding religious sentiment, which would encourage moral duty and self-abnegating sacrifices. Thus, while he pleaded for individual liberty as vital for individual moral development and approprate for modernity, he disregarded egoism and self-interest as part of a true definition of individual liberty. His moral and religious thought was strongly influenced by German thinkers, such as Immanuel Kant, whom he read in preparing his religious history. His works include:
  • De l'esprit de conqute et l'usurpation (On the spirit of conquest and on usurpation) (1815), an important pamphlet against Napoleon
  • the novel Adolphe,
  • De la religion (1824-1831), a five-volume history of ancient religion.

See also

External links

Constant, Benjaimn Constant, Benjamin Constant, Benjamin

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
bad religion
gare montparnasse
sluis
the fugees
homepna
16 rule
geto boys
goldfinger
guru (rapper)
circle of confusion
kingdom of ireland
light meter
printer point
joan osborne
college green
acts of union 1536 1543
hlne cixous
bokeh
home and away
creativity movement
h.d.
progressive democrats
social democratic and labour party
gordon campbell
creed (band)
weathered
british columbia liberal party
suzanne valadon
s.c.i.e.n.c.e.
itzhak perlman
enhanced cd
ben kingsley
battletech 3065 online
green party of british columbia
my favorite year
new democratic party of british columbia
political culture of canada
tom conti
ludwig quidde
reuben, reuben
f. murray abraham
prime minister of northern ireland
starman (film)
list of republican roman consuls