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Émile Littré

Émile Maximilien Paul Littré (French: [litʁe]; 1 February 1801 – 2 June 1881) was a French lexicographer, freemason[1] and philosopher, best known for his Dictionnaire de la langue française, commonly called le Littré.

Émile Littré

Biography edit

Littré was born in Paris. His father, Michel-François Littré, had been a gunner and, later, a sergeant-major of marine artillery in the French navy who was deeply imbued with revolutionary ideas of the day. Settling down as a tax collector, he married Sophie Johannot, a free-thinker like himself, and devoted himself to the education of his son Émile. The boy was sent to the Lycée Louis-le-Grand, where Louis Hachette and Eugène Burnouf became his friends. After he completed his studies at the lycée, he was undecided as to what career he should adopt; however, he devoted himself to mastering the English and German languages, classical and Sanskrit literature, and philology.[2]

He finally decided to become a student of medicine in 1822. He passed all his examinations in due course, and had only his thesis to prepare in order to obtain his degree as doctor when, in 1827, his father died leaving his mother without means. He abandoned his degree at once despite his keen interest in medicine, and, while attending lectures by Pierre Rayer, began teaching Latin and Greek to earn a living. He served as a soldier for the populists during the July Revolution of 1830, and was one of the members of the National Guard who followed Charles X to Rambouillet. In 1831, he obtained an introduction to Armand Carrel, the editor of Le National, who gave him the task of reading English and German papers for excerpts. By chance, in 1835, Carrel discovered Littré's skills as a writer and from that time on, he was a constant contributor to the journal, eventually becoming its director.[3]

In 1836, Littré began to contribute articles on a wide range of subjects to the Revue des deux mondes, and in 1837, he married. In 1839, the first volume of his complete works of Hippocrates appeared in print. Due to the outstanding quality of this work, he was elected to the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres in the same year. He noticed the works of Auguste Comte, the reading of which formed, as he himself said, "the cardinal point of his life." From this time forward, the influence of positivism affected his own life, and, what is of more importance, he influenced positivism, giving as much to this philosophy as he received from it. He soon became a friend of Comte, and popularised his ideas in numerous works on the positivist philosophy. He continued translating and publishing his edition of Hippocrates' writings, which was not completed until 1862, and he published a similar edition of Pliny's Natural History. After 1844, he took Fauriel's place on the committee engaged to produce the Histoire littéraire de la France, where his knowledge of the early French language and literature was invaluable.[4]

 
Caricature of Émile Littré carrying one volume of his "Dictionary of the French Language"

Littré started work on his great Dictionnaire de la langue française in about 1844, which was not to be completed until thirty years later. He participated in the revolution of July 1848, and in the repression of the extreme Republican Party in June 1849. His essays, contributed during this period to the National, were collected together and published under the title of Conservation, revolution et positivisme in 1852, and show a thorough acceptance of all the doctrines propounded by Comte. However, during the later years of his master's life, he began to perceive that he could not wholly accept all the dogmas or the more mystic ideas of his friend and master. He concealed his differences of opinion, and Comte failed to recognise that his pupil had outgrown him, as he himself had outgrown his master Henri de Saint-Simon.[4]

Comte's death in 1858 freed Littré from any fear of alienating his master. He published his own ideas in his Paroles de la philosophie positive in 1859. Four years later, in a work of greater length, he published Auguste Comte et la philosophie positive, which traces the origin of Comte's ideas through Turgot, Kant, and Saint-Simon. The work eulogises Comte's own life, his method of philosophy, his great services to the cause and the effect of his works, and proceeds to show where he himself differs from him. He approved wholly of Comte's philosophy, his great laws of society and his philosophical method, which indeed he defended warmly against John Stuart Mill. However, he stated that, while he believed in a positivist philosophy, he did not believe in a "religion of humanity".[4]

About 1863, after completing his translations of Hippocrates and his Pliny, he began work in earnest on his great French dictionary. He was invited to join the Académie française, but declined, not wishing to associate himself with Félix Dupanloup, bishop of Orléans, who had denounced him as the head of the French materialists in his Avertissement aux pères de famille. At this time, he also started La Revue de philosophie positive with Grégoire Wyrouboff, a magazine that embodied the views of modern positivists.[4]

 
Caricature of Émile Littré and Charles Darwin depicted as performing monkeys breaking through gullibility ("credulité"), superstitions, errors, and ignorance. Illustration by André Gill.

Thus, his life was absorbed in literary work until the events that overthrew the Second Empire called him to take a part in politics. He felt himself too old to undergo the privations of the Siege of Paris, and retired with his family to Brittany. He was summoned by Gambetta to Bordeaux to lecture on history, and thence to Versailles to take his seat in the senate to which he had been chosen by the département of the Seine. In December 1871, he was elected a member of the Académie française in spite of the renewed opposition of Msgr. Dupanloup, who resigned his seat rather than receive him.[4]

Littré's Dictionnaire de la langue française ("Dictionary of the French Language") was completed in 1873 after nearly 30 years of work. The draft was written on 415,636 sheets, bundled in packets of one thousand, stored in eight white wooden crates that filled the cellar of Littré's home in Mesnil-le-Roi. The landmark effort gave authoritative definitions and usage descriptions to every word based on the various meanings it had held in the past. When it was published by Hachette, it was the largest lexicographical work on the French language at that time.[citation needed]

In 1874, Littré was elected Senator for life of the Third Republic.[5] His most notable writings during these years were his political papers that attacked and revealed the confederacy of the Orléanists and Legitimists against the Republic; his re-editions of many of his old articles and books, among others the Conservation, révolution et positivisme of 1852 (which he reprinted word for word, appending a formal, categorical renunciation of many of the Comtist doctrines therein contained); and a little tract, Pour la dernière fois, in which he maintained his unalterable belief in the philosophy of Materialism.[4]

In 1875, he applied for membership in the Masonic Lodge La Clémente Amitié (Grand Orient de France). When asked whether he believed in the existence of a supreme being in the presence of 1000 Freemasons, he replied:

A wise man of ancient times, who was asked the same question by a king, thought about an answer for days, but was never able to answer. I please you not to request an answer from me. No science denies a "first cause", because it finds neither another warrant nor proof. All knowledge is relative and we always meet unknown phenomena and laws we don't know its cause. The one who proclaims with determination to neither believe nor disbelieve in a God proofs not to understand the problem of what makes things exist and disappear.[6]

When it became obvious that the old man would not live much longer, his wife and daughter, who had always been fervent Catholics, strove to convert him to their religion. He had long discussions with Father Louis Millériot, a celebrated Controversialist, and Abbé Henri Huvelin, the noted priest of Église Saint-Augustin, who were much grieved at his death. When Littré was near death, he converted, was baptised by the abbé and his funeral was conducted with the rites of the Roman Catholic Church.[4][7][8] Littré is interred at Montparnasse Cemetery in Paris.

Works edit

Translations and re-editions edit

  • Translation of the complete works of Hippocrates (1839–1863)
  • Translation of Pliny's Natural History (1848–1850)
  • Translation of Strauss's Vie de Jésus (1839–1840)
  • Translation of Müller's Manuel de physiologie (1851)
  • Re-edition of the political writings of Armand Carrel, with notes (1854–1858)

Dictionaries and writings on language edit

  • Reprise du Dictionnaire de médecine, de chirurgie, etc. with Charles-Philippe Robin, of Pierre-Hubert Nysten (1855)
  • Histoire de la langue française a collection of magazine articles (1862)
  • Dictionnaire de la langue française ("Le Littré") (1863–1873)
  • Comment j'ai fait mon dictionnaire (1880)

Philosophy edit

  • Analyse raisonnée du cours de philosophie positive de M. A. Comte (1845)
  • Application de la philosophie positive au gouvernement (1849)
  • Conservation, révolution et positivisme (1852, 2nd ed., with supplement, 1879)
  • Paroles de la philosophie positive (1859)
  • Auguste Comte et la philosophie positive (1863)
  • La Science au point de vue philosophique (1873)
  • Fragments de philosophie et de sociologie contemporaine (1876)

Other works edit

  • Études et glanures (1880)
  • La Verité sur la mort d'Alexandre le grand (1865)
  • Études sur les barbares et le moyen âge (1867)
  • Médecine et médecins (1871)
  • Littérature et histoire (1875)
  • Discours de reception à l'Académie française (1873)

References edit

  1. ^ Dictionnaire universel de la Franc-Maçonnerie by Monique Cara, Jean-Marc Cara, Marc de Jode (Larousse, 2011).
  2. ^ Chisholm 1911, p. 794.
  3. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 794–795.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Chisholm 1911, p. 795.
  5. ^ Delamarre, Louis Narcisse (1910). "Paul-Maximilien-Emile Littré" . Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 9.
  6. ^ Eugen Lennhoff, Oskar Posner, Dieter A. Binder: Internationales Freimaurer Lexikon. 5. Auflage, Herbig Verlag, p. 299, 519-520. ISBN 978-3-7766-2478-6.
  7. ^ Christopher Clark; Wolfram Kaiser (2003). Culture Wars: Secular-Catholic Conflict in Nineteenth-Century Europe. Cambridge University Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-1-139-43990-9.
  8. ^ The Death-bed of a Positivist, The New York Times, 19 June 1881

Sources edit

  • For his life consult C.A. Sainte-Beuve, Notice sur M. Littré, sa vie et ses travaux (1863); and Nouveaux Lundis, vol. v.; also the notice by M. Durand-Gréville in the Nouvelle Revue of August 1881; E Caro, Littré et le positivisme (1883); Pasteur, Discours de récéption at the Academy, where he succeeded Littré, and a reply by Ernest Renan.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Littré, Maximilien Paul Émile". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 794–795.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Works by Emile Littré at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Émile Littré at Internet Archive
  • Collection Medic@ offers Littré's edition of Hippocrates, complete in scanned page images
  • Delamarre, Louis Narcisse (1910). "Paul-Maximilien-Emile Littré" . Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 9.
  • (in French) Dictionnaire de la langue française Littré (1863–1876)

Émile, littré, Émile, maximilien, paul, littré, french, litʁe, february, 1801, june, 1881, french, lexicographer, freemason, philosopher, best, known, dictionnaire, langue, française, commonly, called, littré, contents, biography, works, translations, editions. Emile Maximilien Paul Littre French litʁe 1 February 1801 2 June 1881 was a French lexicographer freemason 1 and philosopher best known for his Dictionnaire de la langue francaise commonly called le Littre Emile Littre Contents 1 Biography 2 Works 2 1 Translations and re editions 2 2 Dictionaries and writings on language 2 3 Philosophy 2 4 Other works 3 References 4 Sources 5 Further reading 6 External linksBiography editLittre was born in Paris His father Michel Francois Littre had been a gunner and later a sergeant major of marine artillery in the French navy who was deeply imbued with revolutionary ideas of the day Settling down as a tax collector he married Sophie Johannot a free thinker like himself and devoted himself to the education of his son Emile The boy was sent to the Lycee Louis le Grand where Louis Hachette and Eugene Burnouf became his friends After he completed his studies at the lycee he was undecided as to what career he should adopt however he devoted himself to mastering the English and German languages classical and Sanskrit literature and philology 2 He finally decided to become a student of medicine in 1822 He passed all his examinations in due course and had only his thesis to prepare in order to obtain his degree as doctor when in 1827 his father died leaving his mother without means He abandoned his degree at once despite his keen interest in medicine and while attending lectures by Pierre Rayer began teaching Latin and Greek to earn a living He served as a soldier for the populists during the July Revolution of 1830 and was one of the members of the National Guard who followed Charles X to Rambouillet In 1831 he obtained an introduction to Armand Carrel the editor of Le National who gave him the task of reading English and German papers for excerpts By chance in 1835 Carrel discovered Littre s skills as a writer and from that time on he was a constant contributor to the journal eventually becoming its director 3 In 1836 Littre began to contribute articles on a wide range of subjects to the Revue des deux mondes and in 1837 he married In 1839 the first volume of his complete works of Hippocrates appeared in print Due to the outstanding quality of this work he was elected to the Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres in the same year He noticed the works of Auguste Comte the reading of which formed as he himself said the cardinal point of his life From this time forward the influence of positivism affected his own life and what is of more importance he influenced positivism giving as much to this philosophy as he received from it He soon became a friend of Comte and popularised his ideas in numerous works on the positivist philosophy He continued translating and publishing his edition of Hippocrates writings which was not completed until 1862 and he published a similar edition of Pliny s Natural History After 1844 he took Fauriel s place on the committee engaged to produce the Histoire litteraire de la France where his knowledge of the early French language and literature was invaluable 4 nbsp Caricature of Emile Littre carrying one volume of his Dictionary of the French Language Littre started work on his great Dictionnaire de la langue francaise in about 1844 which was not to be completed until thirty years later He participated in the revolution of July 1848 and in the repression of the extreme Republican Party in June 1849 His essays contributed during this period to the National were collected together and published under the title of Conservation revolution et positivisme in 1852 and show a thorough acceptance of all the doctrines propounded by Comte However during the later years of his master s life he began to perceive that he could not wholly accept all the dogmas or the more mystic ideas of his friend and master He concealed his differences of opinion and Comte failed to recognise that his pupil had outgrown him as he himself had outgrown his master Henri de Saint Simon 4 Comte s death in 1858 freed Littre from any fear of alienating his master He published his own ideas in his Paroles de la philosophie positive in 1859 Four years later in a work of greater length he published Auguste Comte et la philosophie positive which traces the origin of Comte s ideas through Turgot Kant and Saint Simon The work eulogises Comte s own life his method of philosophy his great services to the cause and the effect of his works and proceeds to show where he himself differs from him He approved wholly of Comte s philosophy his great laws of society and his philosophical method which indeed he defended warmly against John Stuart Mill However he stated that while he believed in a positivist philosophy he did not believe in a religion of humanity 4 About 1863 after completing his translations of Hippocrates and his Pliny he began work in earnest on his great French dictionary He was invited to join the Academie francaise but declined not wishing to associate himself with Felix Dupanloup bishop of Orleans who had denounced him as the head of the French materialists in his Avertissement aux peres de famille At this time he also started La Revue de philosophie positive with Gregoire Wyrouboff a magazine that embodied the views of modern positivists 4 nbsp Caricature of Emile Littre and Charles Darwin depicted as performing monkeys breaking through gullibility credulite superstitions errors and ignorance Illustration by Andre Gill Thus his life was absorbed in literary work until the events that overthrew the Second Empire called him to take a part in politics He felt himself too old to undergo the privations of the Siege of Paris and retired with his family to Brittany He was summoned by Gambetta to Bordeaux to lecture on history and thence to Versailles to take his seat in the senate to which he had been chosen by the departement of the Seine In December 1871 he was elected a member of the Academie francaise in spite of the renewed opposition of Msgr Dupanloup who resigned his seat rather than receive him 4 Littre s Dictionnaire de la langue francaise Dictionary of the French Language was completed in 1873 after nearly 30 years of work The draft was written on 415 636 sheets bundled in packets of one thousand stored in eight white wooden crates that filled the cellar of Littre s home in Mesnil le Roi The landmark effort gave authoritative definitions and usage descriptions to every word based on the various meanings it had held in the past When it was published by Hachette it was the largest lexicographical work on the French language at that time citation needed In 1874 Littre was elected Senator for life of the Third Republic 5 His most notable writings during these years were his political papers that attacked and revealed the confederacy of the Orleanists and Legitimists against the Republic his re editions of many of his old articles and books among others the Conservation revolution et positivisme of 1852 which he reprinted word for word appending a formal categorical renunciation of many of the Comtist doctrines therein contained and a little tract Pour la derniere fois in which he maintained his unalterable belief in the philosophy of Materialism 4 In 1875 he applied for membership in the Masonic Lodge La Clemente Amitie Grand Orient de France When asked whether he believed in the existence of a supreme being in the presence of 1000 Freemasons he replied A wise man of ancient times who was asked the same question by a king thought about an answer for days but was never able to answer I please you not to request an answer from me No science denies a first cause because it finds neither another warrant nor proof All knowledge is relative and we always meet unknown phenomena and laws we don t know its cause The one who proclaims with determination to neither believe nor disbelieve in a God proofs not to understand the problem of what makes things exist and disappear 6 When it became obvious that the old man would not live much longer his wife and daughter who had always been fervent Catholics strove to convert him to their religion He had long discussions with Father Louis Milleriot a celebrated Controversialist and Abbe Henri Huvelin the noted priest of Eglise Saint Augustin who were much grieved at his death When Littre was near death he converted was baptised by the abbe and his funeral was conducted with the rites of the Roman Catholic Church 4 7 8 Littre is interred at Montparnasse Cemetery in Paris Works editTranslations and re editions edit Translation of the complete works of Hippocrates 1839 1863 Translation of Pliny s Natural History 1848 1850 Translation of Strauss s Vie de Jesus 1839 1840 Translation of Muller s Manuel de physiologie 1851 Re edition of the political writings of Armand Carrel with notes 1854 1858 Dictionaries and writings on language edit Reprise du Dictionnaire de medecine de chirurgie etc with Charles Philippe Robin of Pierre Hubert Nysten 1855 Histoire de la langue francaise a collection of magazine articles 1862 Dictionnaire de la langue francaise Le Littre 1863 1873 Comment j ai fait mon dictionnaire 1880 Philosophy edit Analyse raisonnee du cours de philosophie positive de M A Comte 1845 Application de la philosophie positive au gouvernement 1849 Conservation revolution et positivisme 1852 2nd ed with supplement 1879 Paroles de la philosophie positive 1859 Auguste Comte et la philosophie positive 1863 La Science au point de vue philosophique 1873 Fragments de philosophie et de sociologie contemporaine 1876 Other works edit Etudes et glanures 1880 La Verite sur la mort d Alexandre le grand 1865 Etudes sur les barbares et le moyen age 1867 Medecine et medecins 1871 Litterature et histoire 1875 Discours de reception a l Academie francaise 1873 References edit Dictionnaire universel de la Franc Maconnerie by Monique Cara Jean Marc Cara Marc de Jode Larousse 2011 Chisholm 1911 p 794 Chisholm 1911 pp 794 795 a b c d e f g Chisholm 1911 p 795 Delamarre Louis Narcisse 1910 Paul Maximilien Emile Littre Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 9 Eugen Lennhoff Oskar Posner Dieter A Binder Internationales Freimaurer Lexikon 5 Auflage Herbig Verlag p 299 519 520 ISBN 978 3 7766 2478 6 Christopher Clark Wolfram Kaiser 2003 Culture Wars Secular Catholic Conflict in Nineteenth Century Europe Cambridge University Press p 86 ISBN 978 1 139 43990 9 The Death bed of a Positivist The New York Times 19 June 1881Sources editFor his life consult C A Sainte Beuve Notice sur M Littre sa vie et ses travaux 1863 and Nouveaux Lundis vol v also the notice by M Durand Greville in the Nouvelle Revue of August 1881 E Caro Littre et le positivisme 1883 Pasteur Discours de reception at the Academy where he succeeded Littre and a reply by Ernest Renan nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Littre Maximilien Paul Emile Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 794 795 Further reading edit in French Jean Hamburger Monsieur Littre Flammarion Paris 1988External links editWorks by Emile Littre at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Emile Littre at Internet Archive Collection Medic offers Littre s edition of Hippocrates complete in scanned page images Delamarre Louis Narcisse 1910 Paul Maximilien Emile Littre Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 9 in French Dictionnaire de la langue francaise Littre 1863 1876 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emile Littre amp oldid 1176601245, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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