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Simone Weil

Simone Adolphine Weil (/ˈv/ VAY,[14] French: [simɔn vɛj] (listen); 3 February 1909 – 24 August 1943) was a French philosopher, mystic, and political activist. Over 2,500 scholarly works have been published about her, including close analyses and readings of her work, since 1995.[15]

Simone Weil
Born
Simone Adolphine Weil

3 February 1909
Paris, France
Died24 August 1943(1943-08-24) (aged 34)
Ashford, Kent, England
NationalityFrench
EducationÉcole Normale Supérieure, University of Paris[1] (B.A., M.A.)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolContinental philosophy
Marxism (early)
Christian anarchism[2]
Christian socialism[3] (late)
Christian Mysticism
Individualism[4]
Modern Platonism[5]
Main interests
Political philosophy, moral philosophy,[6] philosophy of religion, philosophy of science
Notable ideas
Decreation (renouncing the gift of free will as a form of acceptance of everything that is independent of one's particular desires;[7] making "something created pass into the uncreated"),[8] uprootedness (déracinement), patriotism of compassion,[9] abolition of political parties, the unjust character of affliction (malheur), compassion must act in the area of metaxy[10]

After her graduation from formal education, Weil became a teacher. She taught intermittently throughout the 1930s, taking several breaks due to poor health and to devote herself to political activism. Such work saw her assisting in the trade union movement, taking the side of the anarchists known as the Durruti Column in the Spanish Civil War, and spending more than a year working as a labourer, mostly in car factories, so she could better understand the working class.

Taking a path that was unusual among 20th-century left-leaning intellectuals, she became more religious and inclined towards mysticism as her life progressed.[16] Weil wrote throughout her life, although most of her writings did not attract much attention until after her death. In the 1950s and 1960s, her work became famous in continental Europe and throughout the English-speaking world. Her thought has continued to be the subject of extensive scholarship across a wide range of fields.[17] The mathematician André Weil was her brother.[18][19]

Biography

 
Weil with her father
 
Weil at age 13. The photograph was taken during a family holiday to Belgium, where she was laughing with her brother André.

Early life

Weil was born in her parents' apartment in Paris on 3 February 1909, the daughter of Bernard Weil (1872–1955), a medical doctor from an agnostic Alsatian Jewish background, who moved to Paris after the German annexation of Alsace-Lorraine. Her mother, Salomea "Selma" Reinherz (1879–1965), was born into a Jewish family in Rostov-on-Don and raised in Belgium.[20] According to Osmo Pekonen, "the family name Weil came to be when many Levis in the Napoleonic era changed their names this way, by anagram."[21] Weil was a healthy baby for her first six months, but then suffered a severe attack of appendicitis; thereafter, she struggled with poor health throughout her life. She was the younger of her parents' two children: her brother was mathematician André Weil (1906–1998), with whom she would always enjoy a close relationship.[22] Their parents were fairly affluent and raised their children in an attentive and supportive atmosphere.[23]

Weil was distressed by her father having to leave home for several years after being drafted to serve in the First World War. Eva Fogelman, Robert Coles, and several other scholars believe that this experience may have contributed to the exceptionally strong altruism which Weil displayed throughout her life.[24][25][26] From her childhood home, Weil acquired an obsession with cleanliness; in her later life she would sometimes speak of her "disgustingness" and think that others would see her this way, even though in her youth she had been considered highly attractive.[27] Weil was generally highly affectionate, but she almost always avoided any form of physical contact, even with female friends.[28]

According to her friend and biographer, Simone Pétrement, Weil decided early in life that she would need to adopt masculine qualities and sacrifice opportunities for love affairs in order to fully pursue her vocation to improve social conditions for the disadvantaged. From her late teenage years, Weil would generally disguise her "fragile beauty" by adopting a masculine appearance, hardly ever using makeup and often wearing men's clothes.[29][30]

Intellectual life

Weil was a precocious student, proficient in Ancient Greek by age 12. She later learned Sanskrit so that she could read the Bhagavad Gita in the original.[16] Like the Renaissance thinker Pico della Mirandola, her interests in other religions were universal and she attempted to understand each religious tradition as an expression of transcendent wisdom.

As a teenager, Weil studied at the Lycée Henri IV under the tutelage of her admired teacher Émile Chartier, more commonly known as "Alain".[31] Her first attempt at the entrance examination for the École Normale Supérieure in June 1927 ended in failure, due to her low marks in history. In 1928 she was successful in gaining admission. She finished first in the exam for the certificate of "General Philosophy and Logic"; Simone de Beauvoir finished second.[32] During these years, Weil attracted much attention with her radical opinions. She was called the "Red virgin",[32] and even "The Martian" by her admired mentor.[33]

At the École Normale Supérieure, she studied philosophy, earning her DES (diplôme d'études supérieures [fr], roughly equivalent to an MA) in 1931 with a thesis under the title "Science et perfection dans Descartes" ("Science and Perfection in Descartes").[34] She received her agrégation that same year.[35] Weil taught philosophy at a secondary school for girls in Le Puy and teaching was her primary employment during her short life.

Political activism

 
Leon Trotsky, for whom Weil arranged a period of residence at her parents' apartment in December 1933 while he was in Paris for secret meetings. She had argued against Trotsky both in print and in person, suggesting that élite communist bureaucrats could be just as oppressive as the worst capitalists. Weil was one of the rare few who appeared to hold her own with the Red Army founder in a face-to-face debate.[36]

She often became involved in political action out of sympathy with the working class. In 1915, when she was only six years old, she refused sugar in solidarity with the troops entrenched along the Western Front. In 1919, at 10 years of age, she declared herself a Bolshevik. In her late teens, she became involved in the workers' movement. She wrote political tracts, marched in demonstrations, and advocated workers' rights. At this time, she was a Marxist, pacifist, and trade unionist. While teaching in Le Puy, she became involved in local political activity, supporting the unemployed and striking workers despite criticism. Weil had never formally joined the French Communist Party, and in her twenties she became increasingly critical of Marxism. According to Pétrement, she was one of the first to identify a new form of oppression not anticipated by Marx, where élite bureaucrats could make life just as miserable for ordinary people as did the most exploitative capitalists.[37]

In 1932, Weil visited Germany to help Marxist activists who were at the time considered to be the strongest and best organised communists in Western Europe, but Weil considered them no match for the then up-and-coming fascists. When she returned to France, her political friends in France dismissed her fears, thinking Germany would continue to be controlled by the centrists or those to the left. After Hitler rose to power in 1933, Weil spent much of her time trying to help German communists fleeing his regime.[37] Weil would sometimes publish articles about social and economic issues, including "Oppression and Liberty" and numerous short articles for trade union journals. This work criticised popular Marxist thought and gave a pessimistic account of the limits of both capitalism and socialism. Leon Trotsky himself personally responded to several of her articles, attacking both her ideas and her as a person. However, according to Pétrement, he was influenced by some of Weil's ideas.[38]

Weil participated in the French general strike of 1933, called to protest against unemployment and wage cuts. The following year, she took a 12-month leave of absence from her teaching position to work incognito as a labourer in two factories, one owned by Renault, believing that this experience would allow her to connect with the working class. In 1935, she resumed teaching and donated most of her income to political causes and charitable endeavours.

In 1936, despite her professed pacifism, she travelled to the Spanish Civil War to join the Republican faction. She identified as an anarchist,[39] and sought out the anti-fascist commander Julián Gorkin, asking to be sent on a mission as a covert agent, to rescue the prisoner Joaquín Maurín. Gorkin refused, saying she would almost certainly be sacrificing herself for nothing, as it would be most unlikely she could pass as a Spaniard. Weil replied that she had "every right"[40] to sacrifice herself if she chose, but after arguing for more than an hour, she was unable to convince Gorkin to give her the assignment. Instead she joined the anarchist Durruti Column of the French-speaking Sébastien Faure Century, which specialised in high-risk "commando"-style engagements.[41] As she was extremely short-sighted, Weil was a very poor shot, and her comrades tried to avoid taking her on missions, though she did sometimes insist. Her only direct participation in combat was to shoot with her rifle at a bomber during an air raid; in a second raid, she tried to man the group's heavy machine gun, but her comrades prevented her, as they thought it would be best for someone less clumsy and near-sighted to use the weapon. After being with the group for a few weeks, she burnt herself over a cooking fire. She was forced to leave the unit, and was met by her parents who had followed her to Spain. They helped her leave the country, to recuperate in Assisi. About a month after her departure, Weil's unit was nearly wiped out at an engagement in Perdiguera in October 1936, with every woman in the group being killed.[42]

Weil was distressed by the Republican killings in eastern Spain, particularly when a fifteen-year old Falangist was executed after he had been taken prisoner and Durruti had spent an hour trying to get him to change his political position before giving him until the next day to decide.[43]

During her stay in the Aragon front, Weil sent some chronicles to the French publication Le Libertaire, and on returning to Paris Weil continued to write essays on labour, on management, war and peace.[44]

Encounter with mysticism

 
The Basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli in Assisi where Simone had one of three spiritual "encounters that really counted," leading to her conversion to Christianity.[45]

Weil was born into a secular household and raised in "complete agnosticism".[46][47] As a teenager, she considered the existence of God for herself and decided nothing could be known either way. In her Spiritual Autobiography however, Weil records that she always had a Christian outlook, taking to heart from her earliest childhood the idea of loving one's neighbour. Weil became attracted to the Christian faith beginning in 1935, the first of three pivotal experiences for her being when she was moved by the beauty of villagers singing hymns in a procession she stumbled across while on holiday to Portugal (in Póvoa de Varzim).[48][49] While in Assisi in the spring of 1937, Weil experienced a religious ecstasy in the Basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli—the same church in which Saint Francis of Assisi had prayed. She was led to pray for the first time in her life as Lawrence A. Cunningham relates:

Below the town is the beautiful church and convent of San Damiano where Saint Clare once lived. Near that spot is the place purported to be where Saint Francis composed the larger part of his "Canticle of Brother Sun". Below the town in the valley is the ugliest church in the entire environs: the massive baroque basilica of Saint Mary of the Angels, finished in the seventeenth century and rebuilt in the nineteenth century, which houses a rare treasure: a tiny Romanesque chapel that stood in the days of Saint Francis—the "Little Portion" where he would gather his brethren. It was in that tiny chapel that the great mystic Simone Weil first felt compelled to kneel down and pray.[50]

Weil had another, more powerful, revelation a year later while reciting George Herbert's poem Love III, after which "Christ himself came down and took possession of me",[51] and, from 1938 on, her writings became more mystical and spiritual, while retaining their focus on social and political issues. She was attracted to Catholicism, but declined to be baptized at that time, preferring to remain outside due to "the love of those things that are outside Christianity".[52][53][54] During World War II, she lived for a time in Marseille, receiving spiritual direction from Joseph-Marie Perrin,[55] a Dominican Friar. Around this time, she met the French Catholic author Gustave Thibon, who later edited some of her work.

Weil did not limit her curiosity to Christianity. She was interested in other religious traditions—especially the Greek and Egyptian mysteries; Hinduism (especially the Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita); and Mahayana Buddhism. She believed that all these and other traditions contained elements of genuine revelation,[56] writing:

Greece, Egypt, ancient India, the beauty of the world, the pure and authentic reflection of this beauty in art and science...these things have done as much as the visibly Christian ones to deliver me into Christ's hands as his captive. I think I might even say more.[57]

Nevertheless, Weil was opposed to religious syncretism, claiming that it effaced the particularity of the individual traditions:

Each religion is alone true, that is to say, that at the moment we are thinking of it we must bring as much attention to bear on it as if there were nothing else ... A "synthesis" of religion implies a lower quality of attention.[58]

Later years

 
A commemorative plaque on the exterior of the apartment building on Riverside Drive in New York City, where Weil lived in 1942

In 1942, Weil travelled to the United States with her family. She had been reluctant to leave France, but agreed to do so as she wanted to see her parents to safety and knew they would not leave without her. She was also encouraged by the fact that it would be relatively easy for her to reach Britain from the United States, where she could join the French Resistance. She had hopes of being sent back to France as a covert agent.[59]

Older biographies suggest Weil made no further progress in achieving her desire to return to France as an agent—she was limited to desk work in London, although this did give her time to write one of her largest and best known works: The Need for Roots.[60] Yet there is now evidence that Weil was recruited by the Special Operations Executive, with a view to sending her back to France as a clandestine wireless operator. In May 1943, plans were underway to send her to Thame Park in Oxfordshire for training, but were cancelled soon after, as her failing health became known.[61][62]

 
Weil's grave in Bybrook Cemetery, Ashford, Kent, August 2012

The rigorous work routine she assumed soon took a heavy toll. In 1943, Weil was diagnosed with tuberculosis and instructed to rest and eat well. However, she refused special treatment because of her long-standing political idealism and her detachment from material things. Instead, she limited her food intake to what she believed residents of German-occupied France ate. She most likely ate even less, as she refused food on most occasions. It is probable that she was baptized during this period.[63] Her condition quickly deteriorated, and she was moved to a sanatorium in Ashford, Kent.[26]

After a lifetime of battling illness and frailty, Weil died in August 1943 from cardiac failure at the age of 34. The coroner's report said that "the deceased did kill and slay herself by refusing to eat whilst the balance of her mind was disturbed".[64]

The exact cause of her death remains a subject of debate. Some claim that her refusal to eat came from her desire to express some form of solidarity toward the victims of the war. Others think that Weil's self-starvation occurred after her study of Arthur Schopenhauer.[65] In his chapters on Christian saintly asceticism and salvation, Schopenhauer had described self-starvation as a preferred method of self-denial. However, Simone Pétrement,[66] one of Weil's first and most significant biographers, regards the coroner's report as simply mistaken. Basing her opinion on letters written by the personnel of the sanatorium at which Simone Weil was treated, Pétrement affirms that Weil asked for food on different occasions while she was hospitalized and even ate a little bit a few days before her death; according to her, it is in fact Weil's poor health condition that eventually made her unable to eat.[67]

Weil's first English biographer, Richard Rees, offers several possible explanations for her death, citing her compassion for the suffering of her countrymen in occupied France and her love for and close imitation of Christ. Rees sums up by saying: "As for her death, whatever explanation one may give of it will amount in the end to saying that she died of love."[68]

Philosophy

Absence

Absence is the key image for her metaphysics, cosmology, cosmogony, and theodicy. She believed that God created by an act of self-delimitation—in other words, she argued that because God is conceived as utter fullness, a perfect being, no creature can exist except where God is not. Thus, creation occurred only when God withdrew in part. This idea mirrors tzimtzum, a central notion in the Jewish Kabbalah creation narrative.

This is, for Weil, an original kenosis ("emptiness") preceding the corrective kenosis of Christ's incarnation. Thus, according to her, humans are born in a damned position, not because of original sin, but because to be created at all they must be what God is not; in other words, they must be inherently "unholy" in some sense. This idea fits more broadly into apophatic theology.

This notion of creation is a cornerstone of her theodicy, for if creation is conceived this way—as necessarily entailing evil—then there is no problem of the entrance of evil into a perfect world. Nor does the presence of evil constitute a limitation of God's omnipotence under Weil's notion; according to her, evil is present not because God could not create a perfect world, but because the act of "creation" in its very essence implies the impossibility of perfection.

However, this explanation of the essentiality of evil does not imply that humans are simply, originally, and continually doomed; on the contrary, Weil claims that "evil is the form which God's mercy takes in this world".[69] Weil believed that evil, and its consequent affliction, serve the role of driving humans towards God, writing, "The extreme affliction which overtakes human beings does not create human misery, it merely reveals it."[70]

Affliction

Weil's concept of "affliction" (French: malheur) goes beyond simple suffering, though it certainly includes it. According to her, only some souls are capable of experiencing the full depth of affliction—the same souls that are also most able to experience spiritual joy. Weil's notion of affliction is a sort of suffering "plus" which transcends both body and mind, a physical and mental anguish that scourges the very soul.[71]

War and oppression were the most intense cases of affliction within her reach; to experience it, she turned to the life of a factory worker, while to understand it she turned to Homer's Iliad. (Her essay "The Iliad or the Poem of Force", first translated by Mary McCarthy, is a piece of Homeric literary criticism.) Affliction was associated both with necessity and with chance—it was fraught with necessity because it was hard-wired into existence itself, and thus imposed itself upon the sufferer with the full force of the inescapable, but it was also subject to chance inasmuch as chance, too, is an inescapable part of the nature of existence. The element of chance was essential to the unjust character of affliction; in other words, my affliction should not usually—let alone always—follow from my sin, as per traditional Christian theodicy, but should be visited upon me for no special reason.

The better we are able to conceive of the fullness of joy, the purer and more intense will be our suffering in affliction and our compassion for others. ...

Suffering and enjoyment as sources of knowledge. The serpent offered knowledge to Adam and Eve. The sirens offered knowledge to Ulysses. These stories teach that the soul is lost through seeking knowledge in pleasure. Why? Pleasure is perhaps innocent on condition that we do not seek knowledge in it. It is permissible to seek that only in suffering.

— Simone Weil, Gravity and Grace (chpt 16 'Affliction')

Metaxu: "Every separation is a link"

The concept of metaxu, which Weil borrowed from Plato, is that which both separates and connects (e.g., as a wall separates two prisoners but can be used to tap messages). This idea of connecting distance was of the first importance for Weil's understanding of the created realm. The world as a whole, along with any of its components, including our physical bodies, is to be regarded as serving the same function for us in relation to God that a blind man's stick serves for him in relation to the world about him. They do not afford direct insight, but can be used experimentally to bring the mind into practical contact with reality. This metaphor allows any absence to be interpreted as a presence, and is a further component in Weil's theodicy.

Beauty

For Weil, "The beautiful is the experiential proof that the incarnation is possible". The beauty which is inherent in the form of the world (this inherency is proven, for her, in geometry, and expressed in all good art) is the proof that the world points to something beyond itself; it establishes the essentially telic character of all that exists. Her concept of beauty extends throughout the universe:

"[W]e must have faith that the universe is beautiful on all levels...and that it has a fullness of beauty in relation to the bodily and psychic structure of each of the thinking beings that actually do exist and of all those that are possible. It is this very agreement of an infinity of perfect beauties that gives a transcendent character to the beauty of the world...He (Christ) is really present in the universal beauty. The love of this beauty proceeds from God dwelling in our souls and goes out to God present in the universe".[72]

She also wrote that "The beauty of this world is Christ's tender smile coming to us through matter".[73]

Beauty also served a soteriological function for Weil: "Beauty captivates the flesh in order to obtain permission to pass right to the soul." It constitutes, then, another way in which the divine reality behind the world invades our lives. Where affliction conquers us with brute force, beauty sneaks in and topples the empire of the self from within.

Philosophy in Waiting for God

Attention

As Simone Weil explains in her book Waiting for God, attention consists of suspending or emptying one's thought, such that one is ready to receive—to be penetrated by—the object to which one turns one's gaze, be that object one's neighbor, or ultimately, God.[74] As Weil explains, one can love God by praying to God, and attention is the very “substance of prayer”: when one prays, one empties oneself, fixes one's whole gaze towards God, and becomes ready to receive God.[75] Similarly, for Weil, people can love their neighbors by emptying themselves, becoming ready to receive their neighbor in all his or her naked truth, asking their neighbor: “What are you going through?”[76]

Three Forms of the Implicit Love of God

In Waiting for God, Simone Weil explains that the three forms of implicit love of God are (1) love of neighbor (2) love of the beauty of the world and (3) love of religious ceremonies.[77] As Weil writes, by loving these three objects (neighbor, world's beauty, and religious ceremonies), one indirectly loves God before “God comes in person to take the hand of his future bride,” since prior to God's arrival, one's soul cannot yet directly love God as the object.[78] Love of neighbor occurs (i) when the strong treat the weak as equals,[79] (ii) when people give personal attention to those that otherwise seem invisible, anonymous, or non-existent,[80] and (iii) when we look at and listen to the afflicted as they are, without explicitly thinking about God—i.e., Weil writes, when “God in us” loves the afflicted, rather than we loving them in God.[81] Second, Weil explains, love of the world's beauty occurs when humans imitate God's love for the cosmos: just as God creatively renounced his command over the world—letting it be ruled by human autonomy and matter's “blind necessity”—humans give up their imaginary command over the world, seeing the world no longer as if they were the world's center.[82] Finally, Weil explains, love of religious ceremonies occurs as an implicit love of God, when religious practices are pure.[83] Weil writes that purity in religion is seen when “faith and love do not fail,” and most absolutely, in the Eucharist.[84]

Works

According to Lissa McCullough, Weil would likely have been "intensely displeased" by the attention paid to her life rather than her works. She believed it was her writings that embodied the best of her, not her actions and definitely not her personality. Weil had similar views about others, saying that if one looks at the lives of great figures in separation from their works, it "necessarily ends up revealing their pettiness above all", as it's in their works that they have put the best of themselves.[85]

Weil's most famous works were published posthumously.

In the decades since her death, her writings have been assembled, annotated, criticized, discussed, disputed, and praised. Along with some twenty volumes of her works, publishers have issued more than thirty biographies, including Simone Weil: A Modern Pilgrimage by Robert Coles, Harvard's Pulitzer-winning professor, who calls Weil 'a giant of reflection.'[86]

The Need for Roots

Weil's book The Need for Roots was written in early 1943, immediately before her death later that year. She was in London working for the French Resistance and trying to convince its leader, Charles de Gaulle, to form a contingent of nurses who would serve at the front lines.

The Need for Roots has an ambitious plan. It sets out to address the past and to set out a road map for the future of France after World War II. She painstakingly analyzes the spiritual and ethical milieu that led to France's defeat by the German army, and then addresses these issues with the prospect of eventual French victory.

Gravity and Grace

While Gravity and Grace (French: La Pesanteur et la Grâce) is one of the books most associated with Simone Weil, the work was not intended to be a book at all. Rather, the work consists of various passages selected from Weil's notebooks and arranged topically by her friend Gustave Thibon. Weil had given Thibon some of her notebooks written before May 1942, but not with any intent to publish them. Hence, the resulting selections, organization and editing of Gravity and Grace were much influenced by Thibon, a devout Catholic (see Thibon's introduction to Gravity and Grace (Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1952) for more details).

Legacy

 
Simone Weil Avenue, a section of the A28 road which runs close to her grave in Ashford, was named in honour of the philosopher in 1983.

During her lifetime, Weil was only known to relatively narrow circles and even in France her essays were mostly read only by those interested in radical politics. During the first decade after her death, Weil rapidly became famous, attracting attention throughout the West. For the third quarter of the 20th century, she was widely regarded as the most influential person in the world on new work concerning religious and spiritual matters.[87] Her philosophical,[88] social and political thought also became popular, although not to the same degree as her religious work.[89]

As well as influencing fields of study, Weil deeply affected the personal lives of numerous individuals. Pope Paul VI said that Weil was one of his three greatest influences.[90] Weil's popularity began to decline in the late 1960s and 1970s. However, more of her work was gradually published, leading to many thousands of new secondary works by Weil scholars, some of whom focused on achieving a deeper understanding of her religious, philosophical and political work. Others broadened the scope of Weil scholarship to investigate her applicability to fields like classical studies, cultural studies, education and even technical fields like ergonomics.[49]

Many commentators who have assessed Weil as a person were highly positive; many described her as a saint, some even as the greatest saint of the twentieth century, including T. S. Eliot, Dwight Macdonald, Leslie Fiedler, and Robert Coles.[91] After they met at age 18, Simone de Beauvoir wroteː "I envied her for having a heart that could beat right across the world."[92] Weil biographer Gabriella Fiori writes that Weil was "a moral genius in the orbit of ethics, a genius of immense revolutionary range."[93] Maurice Schumann said that since her death there was "hardly a day when the thought of her life did not positively influence his own and serve as a moral guide."[92] In 1951, Albert Camus wrote that she was "the only great spirit of our times."[29] Foolish though she may have appeared at times—dropping a suitcase full of French resistance papers all over the sidewalk and scrambling to gather them up—her deep engagement with both the theory and practice of caritas, in all its myriad forms, functions as the unifying force of her life and thought. Gustave Thibon, the French philosopher and close friend, recounts their last meeting, not long before her death: "I will only say that I had the impression of being in the presence of an absolutely transparent soul which was ready to be reabsorbed into original light."[94]

 
Street art image of Simone Weil in Berlin-Kreuzberg (2019)

Weil has however been criticised even by those who otherwise deeply admired her, such as Eliot, for being excessively prone to divide the world into good and evil, and for her sometimes intemperate judgments. Weil was a harsh critic of the influence of Judaism on Western civilisation.[56] However, her niece Sylvie Weil and biographer Thomas R. Nevin argued that Weil did not reject Judaism and was heavily influenced by its precepts.[95] Weil was an even harsher critic of the Roman Empire, in which she refused to see any value at all.[96] On the other hand, according to Eliot, she held up the Cathars as exemplars of goodness, despite there being in his view little concrete evidence on which to base such an assessment.[56] According to Pétrement she idolised Lawrence of Arabia, considering him to be a Saint.[97] A few critics have taken an overall negative view. Several Jewish writers, including Susan Sontag, accused her of antisemitism, although this was far from a universal shared perspective.[98] A small minority of commentators have judged her to be psychologically unbalanced or sexually obsessed.[29] General Charles de Gaulle, her ultimate boss while she worked for the French Resistance, considered her "insane",[99] although even he was influenced by her and repeated some of her sayings for years after her death.[29][49]

A meta study from the University of Calgary found that between 1995 and 2012 over 2,500 new scholarly works had been published about her.[15]

Portrayal in film and onstage

Weil was the subject of a 2010 documentary by Julia Haslett, An encounter with Simone Weil. Haslett noted that Weil had become "a little-known figure, practically forgotten in her native France, and rarely taught in universities or secondary schools".[100]

Weil was also the subject of Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho's La Passion de Simone (2008), written with librettist Amin Maalouf. Of the piece, music critic Olivia Giovetti wrote:

"Framing her soprano soloist as Simone’s imaginary sister (Literal? Metaphorical? Does it matter?), the narrative arc becomes a struggle to understand the dichotomy of Simone. Wrapped in this dramatic mystery, Saariaho’s musical textures, haunting and moribund, create a meditative state. To go back to Bach’s St. Matthew Passion, if that work, written for his time, serves to reinforce the (then-revolutionary) system of the Protestant church, then “La Passion de Simone,” written for our time, questions the mystery of faith to reinforce the inexplicable experience of being human."[101]

Bibliography

Primary sources

Works in French

  • Simone Weil, Œuvres complètes. (Paris : Gallimard, 1989–2006, 6 vols.)
  • Réflexions sur la guerre (La Critique sociale, no. 10, November 1933)
  • Chronicles from the Spanish Civil War, in: 'Le Libertaire', an anarchistic magazine, 1936
  • La Pesanteur et la grâce (Paris : Plon, 1947)
  • L'enracinement : Prélude à une déclaration des devoirs envers l'être humain (Gallimard [Espoir], 1949)
  • Attente de Dieu (1950)
  • La connaissance surnaturelle (Gallimard [Espoir], 1950)
  • La Condition ouvrière (Gallimard [Espoir], 1951)
  • Lettre à un religieux (Gallimard [Espoir], 1951)
  • Les Intuitions pré-chrétiennes (Paris: Les Editions de la Colombe, 1951)
  • La Source grecque (Gallimard [Espoir], 1953)
  • Oppression et liberté (Gallimard [Espoir], 1955)
  • Venice sauvée : Tragédie en trois actes (Gallimard, 1955)
  • Écrits de Londres et dernières lettres (Gallimard [Espoir], 1957)
  • Écrits historiques et politiques (Gallimard [Espoir], 1960)
  • Pensées sans ordre concernant l'amour de Dieu (Gallimard [Espoir], 1962)
  • Sur la science (Gallimard [Espoir], 1966)
  • Poèmes, suivi de Venice sauvée (Gallimard [Espoir], 1968)
  • Note sur la suppression générale des partis politiques (Paris: Editions Gallimard, 1957 - Climats, 2006)

Works in English translation

  • Awaiting God: A New Translation of Attente de Dieu and Lettre a un Religieux. Introduction by Sylvie Weil. Translation by Bradley Jersak. Fresh Wind Press, 2012. ISBN 978-1-927512-03-6.
  • First and Last Notebooks: Supernatural Knowledge. Translated by Richard Rees. Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2015.
  • Formative Writings: 1929–1941. (1987). Dorothy Tuck McFarland & Wilhelmina Van Ness, eds. University of Massachusetts Press.
  • The Iliad or the Poem of Force. Pendle Hill Pamphlet. Mary McCarthy trans.
  • Intimations of Christianity among the Ancient Greeks. Translated by Elisabeth Chase Geissbuhler. New York: Routledge, 1998.
  • Lectures on Philosophy. Translated by Hugh Price. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1978.
  • Letter to a Priest. Translated by Arthur Willis. New York: Routledge, 2002.
  • The Need for Roots: Prelude to a Declaration of Duties Towards Mankind. Translated by Arthur Willis. New York: Routledge, 2002.
  • Gravity and Grace. Edited by Gustave Thibon. Translated by Arthur Willis. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1997.
  • The Notebooks of Simone Weil. Routledge paperback, 1984. ISBN 0-7100-8522-2 [Routledge 2004. ISBN 978-0-415-32771-8]
  • On Science, Necessity, & The Love of God. London: Oxford University Press, 1968. Richard Rees trans.
  • On the Abolition of All Political Parties. Translated by Simon Leys. New York: The New York Review of Books, 2013.
  • Oppression and Liberty. Edited by Albert Camus. Translated by Arthur Willis and John Petrie. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1973.
  • Selected Essays, 1934–1943: Historical, Political and Moral Writings. Edited and translated by Richard Rees. Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2015.
  • Seventy Letters: Personal and Intellectual Windows on a Thinker. Translated by Richard Rees. Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2015.
  • Simone Weil's The Iliad or Poem of Force: A Critical Edition. James P. Holoka, ed. & trans. Peter Lang, 2005.
  • Simone Weil: An Anthology. Sian Miles, editor. Virago Press, 1986.
  • The Simone Weil Reader: A Legendary Spiritual Odyssey of Our Time. George A. Panichas, editor. David McKay Co., 1981.
  • Two Moral Essays by Simone Weil—Draft for a Statement of Human Obligations & Human Personality. Ronald Hathaway, ed. Pendle Hill Pamphlet. Richard Rhees trans.
  • Venice Saved. Translated by Silvia Panizza and Philip Wilson. New York: Bloomsbury, 2019.
  • Waiting on God. Routledge Kegan Paul, 1951. Emma Craufurd trans.
  • Waiting for God. Translated by Emma Craufurd. New York: HarperPerennial, 2009.

Online journal

  • Attention a bi-monthly online journal (free) dedicated to exploring the life and legacy of Simone Weil.

Secondary sources

  • Allen, Diogenes. (2006) Three Outsiders: Pascal, Kierkegaard, Simone Weil. Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock.
  • Bell, Richard H. (1998) Simone Weil. Rowman & Littlefield.
  • ———, editor. (1993) Simone Weil's Philosophy of Culture: Readings Toward a Divine Humanity. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-43263-4
  • Bourgault, Sophie, & Daigle, Julie. (Eds.). (2020). Simone Weil, Beyond Ideology? Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Castelli, Alberto, "The Peace Discourse in Europe 1900-1945, Routledge, 2019.
  • Cha, Yoon Sook.
  • (2017). Decreation and the Ethical Bind: Simone Weil and the Claim of the Other. Fordham University Press.
  • Chenavier, Robert. (2012) Simone Weil: Attention to the Real, trans. Bernard E. Doering. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame.
  • Davies, Grahame. (2007) Everything Must Change. Seren. ISBN 9781854114518
  • Dietz, Mary. (1988). Between the Human and the Divine: The Political Thought of Simone Weil. Rowman & Littlefield.
  • Doering, E. Jane. (2010) Simone Weil and the Specter of Self-Perpetuating Force. University of Notre Dame Press.
  • Doering, E. Jane, and Eric O. Springsted, eds. (2004) The Christian Platonism of Simone Weil. University of Notre Dame Press.
  • Esposito, Roberto. (2017). The Origin of the Political: Hannah Arendt or Simone Weil? (V. Binetti & G. Williams, Trans.). Fordham University Press.
  • Finch, Henry Leroy. (1999) Simone Weil and the Intellect of Grace, ed. Martin Andic. Continuum International.
  • Gabellieri, Emmanuel. (2003) Etre et don: L'unite et l'enjeu de la pensée de Simone Weil. Paris: Peeters.
  • Goldschläger, Alain. (1982) Simone Weil et Spinoza: Essai d'interprétation. Québec: Naaman.
  • Guilherme, Alexandre and Morgan, W. John, 2018, 'Simone Weil (1909-1943)-dialogue as an instrument of power', Chapter 7 in Philosophy, Dialogue, and Education: Nine modern European philosophers, Routledge, London and New York, pp. 109-126. ISBN 978-1-138-83149-0.
  • Irwin, Alexander. (2002) Saints of the Impossible: Bataille, Weil, and the Politics of the Sacred. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • McCullough, Lissa. (2014) The Religious Philosophy of Simone Weil. London: I. B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1780767963
  • Morgan, Vance G. (2005) Weaving the World: Simone Weil on Science, Mathematics, and Love. University of Notre Dame Press. ISBN 0-268-03486-9
  • Morgan, W. John, 2019, '‘Simone Weil’s Lectures on Philosophy: A comment’, RUDN Journal of Philosophy, 23 (4) 420–429. DOI: 10.22363/2313-2302-2019-23-4-420-429.
  • Morgan, W. John, 2020, ‘Simone Weil’s ‘Reflections on the Right Use of School Studies with a View to the Love of God’: A Comment’, RUDN Journal of Philosophy, 24 (3), 398–409.DOI: 10.22363/2313-2302-2020-24-3-398-409.
  • Moulakis, Athanasios (1998) Simone Weil and the Politics of Self-Denial, trans. Ruth Hein. University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0-8262-1162-0
  • Panizza, Silvia Caprioglio. (2022). The Ethics of Attention: Engaging the Real with Iris Murdoch and Simone Weil. Routledge.
  • Plant, Stephen. (2007) Simone Weil: A Brief Introduction, Orbis, ISBN 978-1-57075-753-2
  • ———. (2007) The SPCK Introduction to Simone Weil, SPCK, ISBN 978-0-281-05938-6
  • Radzins, Inese Astra (2006) Thinking Nothing: Simone Weil's Cosmology. ProQuest/UMI.
  • Rhees, Rush. (2000) Discussions of Simone Weil. State University of New York Press.
  • Rozelle-Stone, A. Rebecca. (Ed.). (2019). Simone Weil and Continental Philosophy. Rowman & Littlefield.
  • Rozelle-Stone, A. Rebecca and Lucian Stone. (2013) Simone Weil and Theology. New York: Bloomsbury T & T Clark.
  • ———, eds. (2009) Relevance of the Radical: Simone Weil 100 Years Later. New York: T & T Clark.
  • Springsted, Eric O. (2010). Simone Weil and the Suffering of Love. Wipf & Stock.
  • ———. (2021). Simone Weil for the Twenty-First Century. University of Notre Dame Press.
  • Veto, Miklos. (1994) The Religious Metaphysics of Simone Weil, trans. Joan Dargan. State University of New York Press.
  • von der Ruhr, Mario. (2006) Simone Weil: An Apprenticeship in Attention. London: Continuum.
  • Winch, Peter. (1989) Simone Weil: "The Just Balance." Cambridge University Press.
  • Winchell, James. (2000) 'Semantics of the Unspeakable: Six Sentences by Simone Weil,' in: "Trajectories of Mysticism in Theory and Literature", Philip Leonard, ed. London: Macmillan, 72–93. ISBN 0-333-72290-6
  • Zaretsky, Robert. (2021). The Subversive Simone Weil: A Life in Five Ideas. University of Chicago Press.
  • ———. (2020) "The Logic of the Rebel: On Simone Weil and Albert Camus," Los Angeles Review of Books.
  • ———. (2018) "What We Owe to Others: Simone Weil's Radical Reminder," New York Times.

Biographies

  • Anderson, David. (1971). Simone Weil. SCM Press.
  • Cabaud, Jacques. (1964). Simone Weil. Channel Press.
  • Robert Coles (1989) Simone Weil: A Modern Pilgrimage. Addison-Wesley. 2001 ed., Skylight Paths Publishing.
  • Fiori, Gabriella (1989) Simone Weil: An Intellectual Biography. translated by Joseph R. Berrigan. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-1102-2
  • ———, (1991) Simone Weil. Una donna assoluta, La Tartaruga; Saggistica. ISBN 88-7738-075-6
  • ———, (1993) Simone Weil. Une Femme Absolue Diffuseur-SODIS. ISBN 2-86645-148-1
  • Gray, Francine Du Plessix (2001) Simone Weil. Viking Press.
  • McLellan, David (1990) Utopian Pessimist: The Life and Thought of Simone Weil. New York: Poseidon Press.
  • Nevin, Thomas R. (1991). Simone Weil: Portrait of a Self-Exiled Jew. Chapel Hill.
  • Perrin, J.B. & Thibon, G. (1953). Simone Weil as We Knew Her. Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  • Pétrement, Simone (1976) Simone Weil: A Life. New York: Schocken Books. 1988 edition.
  • Plessix Gray, Francine du. (2001). Simone Weil. Penguin.
  • Rexroth, Kenneth (1957) Simone Weil http://www.bopsecrets.org/rexroth/essays/simone-weil.htm
  • Guia Risari (2014) Il taccuino di Simone Weil, RueBallu 2014, Palermo, ISBN 978-88-95689-15-9
  • Sogos Wiquel, Giorgia (2022) “Simone Weil. Private Überlegungen”. Bonn, Free Pen Verlag. ISBN 978-3-945177-95-2.
  • Terry, Megan (1973). Approaching Simone: A Play. The Feminist Press.
  • White, George A., ed. (1981). Simone Weil: Interpretations of a Life. University of Massachusetts Press.
  • Yourgrau, Palle. (2011) Simone Weil. Critical Lives series. London: Reaktion.
  • Weil, Sylvie. (2010) "At home with André and Simone Weil. Evanston: Northwestern.
  • Simone Weil: A Saint for Our Time? Magazine article by Jillian Becker; New Criterion, Vol. 20, March 2002.

Audio recordings

  • David Cayley, Enlightened by Love: The Thought of Simone Weil. CBC Audio (2002)
  • "In Our Time" documentary on Weil, BBC Radio 4 (2015)[102]

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ At the time, the ENS was part of the University of Paris according to the decree of 10 November 1903.
  2. ^ « Avec Simone Weil et George Orwell », Le Comptoir
  3. ^ George Andrew Panichas. (1999) Growing wings to overcome gravity. Mercer University Press. p. 63.
  4. ^ Thomas R. Nevin. (1991) Simone Weil: Portrait of a Self-exiled Jew. The University of North Carolina Press. p. 198.
  5. ^ Doering, E. Jane, and Eric O. Springsted, eds. (2004) The Christian Platonism of Simone Weil. University of Notre Dame Press. p. 29.
  6. ^ "Course Catalogue - The Philosophy of Simone Weil (PHIL10161)". Drps.ed.ac.uk. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  7. ^ Primary source: Simone Weil, First and Last Notebooks, Oxford University Press, 1970, pp. 211, 213 and 217. Commentary on the primary source: Richard H. Bell, Simone Weil's Philosophy of Culture: Readings Toward a Divine Humanity, Cambridge University Press, 1993, p. 27.
  8. ^ Simone Weil, 2004, Gravity and Grace, London: Routledge. p. 32
  9. ^ Dietz, Mary. (1988). Between the Human and the Divine: The Political Thought of Simone Weil. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 188.
  10. ^ Athanasios Moulakis, Simone Weil and the Politics of Self-denial, University of Missouri Press, 1998, p. 141.
  11. ^ KAHN, Gilbert (Dir.), Simone Weil. Philosophe, historienne et mystique, Paris, Aubier, 1978, p. 121 (l’auditeur demande si Simone Weil a connu Guénon ; M.-M. Davy répond
  12. ^ SOURISSE, « Simone Weil et René Guénon », 1997
  13. ^ Sontag, Susan. "Simone Weil". nybooks.com.
  14. ^ "Weil". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  15. ^ a b Saundra Lipton and Debra Jensen (3 March 2012). "Simone Weil: Bibliography". University of Calgary. Retrieved 16 April 2012.
  16. ^ a b Sheldrake, Philip (2007). A Brief History of Spirituality. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 180–182. ISBN 978-1-4051-1770-8.
  17. ^ Especially philosophy and theology—also political and social science, feminism, science, education, and classical studies.
  18. ^ O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Simone Weil", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews
  19. ^ O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Weil family", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews
  20. ^ Nevin, Thomas R. (1991). Simone Weil: Portrait of a Self-exiled Jew. ISBN 9780807819999.
  21. ^ Pekonen, O. Chez les Weil. André and Simone by Sylvie Weil and At home with André and Simone Weil, translated from the French by Benjamin Ivry. Math Intelligencer *34, *76–78 (2012)
  22. ^ "The Weil Conjectures by Karen Olsson review – maths and mysticism". The Guardian. 2 August 2019. Retrieved 11 March 2021.
  23. ^ Simone Pétrement (1988); pp. 4-7.
  24. ^ According to Fogelman, Cole, and others, various studies have found that a common formative experience for marked altruists is to suffer a hurtful loss and then to receive strong support from loving carers.
  25. ^ Eva Fogelman (23 March 2012). . The Jewish Daily Forward. Archived from the original on 9 July 2013. Retrieved 6 September 2012.
  26. ^ a b Robert Coles (2001). Simone Weil: A Modern Pilgrimage (Skylight Lives). SkyLight Paths. ISBN 978-1893361348.
  27. ^ According to Pétrement (1988) p. 14, family friends would refer to Simone and André as "the genius and the beauty".
  28. ^ Simone Pétrement (1988); pp. 4–7, 194
  29. ^ a b c d John Hellman (1983). Simone Weil: An Introduction to Her Thought. Wilfrid Laurier University Press. pp. 1–23. ISBN 978-0-88920-121-7.
  30. ^ Simone Pétrement (1988); pp. 27–29
  31. ^ Hellman, John (1982). Simone Weil: An Introduction to her Thought. Wilrid Laurier University Press.
  32. ^ a b Liukkonen, Petri. . Books and Writers (kirjasto.sci.fi). Finland: Kuusankoski Public Library. Archived from the original on 24 April 2007.
  33. ^ Alain, "Journal" (unpublished). Cited in Petrement, Weil, 1:6.
  34. ^ Schrift, Alan D. (2006). Twentieth-century French Philosophy: Key Themes and Thinkers. Blackwell Publishing. p. 186. ISBN 978-1-4051-3217-6.
  35. ^ André Chervel. "Les agrégés de l'enseignement secondaire. Répertoire 1809-1950". Laboratoire de recherche historique Rhône-Alpes. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  36. ^ Simone Pétrement (1988); pp. 189–191
  37. ^ a b Simone Pétrement (1988); p. 176
  38. ^ Simone Pétrement (1988); p. 178
  39. ^ McLellan, David (1990). Utopian Pessimist: The Life and Thought of Simone Weil. Poseidon Press. ISBN 9780671685218., p121
  40. ^ Simone Pétrement (1988); p. 271
  41. ^ Simone Pétrement (1988); p. 272
  42. ^ Simone Pétrement (1988); p. 278
  43. ^ Beevor, Antony. The Battle for Spain: The Spanish Civil War 1936-1939. Hachette UK, 2012.
  44. ^ Simone Pétrement (1988); pp. 280–330
  45. ^ S. Weil, Spiritual Autobiography
  46. ^ S. Weil, What is a Jew, cited by Panichas.
  47. ^ George A Panichas (1977). Simone Weil Reader. Moyer Bell. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-918825-01-8.
  48. ^ George A Panichas (1977). Simone Weil Reader. Moyer Bell. pp. xxxviii. ISBN 978-0-918825-01-8.
  49. ^ a b c Simone Weil (2005). Sian Miles (ed.). An Anthology. Penguin Book. pp. 28–29. ISBN 978-0-14-118819-5.
  50. ^ Cunningham, Lawrence (2004). Francis of Assisi: performing the Gospel life. Illustrated edition. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 0-8028-2762-4, ISBN 978-0-8028-2762-3. Source: [1] (accessed: September 15, 2010), p. 118
  51. ^ cited by Panichas and other Weil scholars,
  52. ^ S. Weil, Spiritual Autobiography, cited by Panichas and Plant.
  53. ^ George A Panichas (1977). Simone Weil Reader. Moyer Bell. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-918825-01-8.
  54. ^ Stephen Plant (1997). Great Christian Thinkers: Simone Weil. Liguori Publications. pp. xv–xvi. ISBN 978-0764801167.
  55. ^ Weil Simone (1966). Attente de Dieu. Fayard.
  56. ^ a b c Simone Weil (2002). The Need for Roots. Routledge. p. xi, preface by T. S. Eliot. ISBN 978-0-415-27102-8.
  57. ^ Letter to Father Perrin, 26 May 1942
  58. ^ Notebooks of Simone Weil, volume 1
  59. ^ Simone Pétrement (1988); chpt. 15 'Marseilles II', see esp. pp. 462-463.
  60. ^ This was originally a lengthy report on options for regenerating France after an allied victory, though it was later published as a book.
  61. ^ "Simone Weil" by Nigel Perrin. Archived 2012-12-10 at archive.today
  62. ^ Simone Weil Personal File, ref. HS 9/1570/1, National Archives, Kew
  63. ^ Eric O. Springsted, “The Baptism of Simone Weil” in Spirit, Nature and Community: Issues in the Thought of Simone Weil (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1994) - https://sunypress.edu/Books/S/Spirit-Nature-and-Community.
  64. ^ McLellan, David (1990). Utopian Pessimist: The Life and Thought of Simone Weil. Poseidon Press. ISBN 9780671685218., Inquest verdict quoted on p. 266.
  65. ^ McLellan, David (1990). Utopian Pessimist: The Life and Thought of Simone Weil. Poseidon Press., p. 30
  66. ^ Pétrement, Simone (1988). Simone Weil: A life. Schocken, 592 pp.
  67. ^ Simone Pétrement (1988); chpt. 17 'London', see esp. pp. 530-539.
  68. ^ Richard Rees (1966). Simone Weil: A Sketch for a Portrait. Oxford University Press. p. 191. ISBN 978-0-19-211163-0.
  69. ^ Gravity and Grace, Metaxu, page 132
  70. ^ Weil, Simone. Gravity and Grace. Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1952.
  71. ^ This notion of Weil's bears a strong resemblance to the Asian notion of han, which has received attention in recent Korean theology, for instance in the work of Andrew Park. Like "affliction", han is more destructive to the whole person than ordinary suffering.
  72. ^ Weil, Simone. Waiting For God. Harper Torchbooks, 1973, pp. 164-165.
  73. ^ Weil, Simone. Waiting For God. Harper Torchbooks, 1973, pp. 164-165.
  74. ^ Weil, Simone, 1909-1943. (1973). Waiting for God (1st Harper colophon ed.). New York: Harper & Row. pp. 111–112. ISBN 0-06-090295-7. OCLC 620927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  75. ^ Weil, Simone, 1909-1943. (1973). Waiting for God (1st Harper colophon ed.). New York: Harper & Row. p. 105. ISBN 0-06-090295-7. OCLC 620927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  76. ^ Weil, Simone, 1909-1943. (1973). Waiting for God (1st Harper colophon ed.). New York: Harper & Row. pp. 114–115. ISBN 0-06-090295-7. OCLC 620927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  77. ^ Weil, Simone, 1909-1943. (1973). Waiting for God (1st Harper colophon ed.). New York: Harper & Row. pp. 137–199. ISBN 0-06-090295-7. OCLC 620927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  78. ^ Weil, Simone, 1909-1943. (1973). Waiting for God (1st Harper colophon ed.). New York: Harper & Row. p. 137. ISBN 0-06-090295-7. OCLC 620927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  79. ^ Weil, Simone, 1909-1943. (1973). Waiting for God (1st Harper colophon ed.). New York: Harper & Row. pp. 143–144. ISBN 0-06-090295-7. OCLC 620927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  80. ^ Weil, Simone, 1909-1943. (1973). Waiting for God (1st Harper colophon ed.). New York: Harper & Row. p. 149. ISBN 0-06-090295-7. OCLC 620927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  81. ^ Weil, Simone, 1909-1943. (1973). Waiting for God (1st Harper colophon ed.). New York: Harper & Row. pp. 150–151. ISBN 0-06-090295-7. OCLC 620927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  82. ^ Weil, Simone, 1909-1943. (1973). Waiting for God (1st Harper colophon ed.). New York: Harper & Row. pp. 158–160. ISBN 0-06-090295-7. OCLC 620927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  83. ^ Weil, Simone, 1909-1943. (1973). Waiting for God (1st Harper colophon ed.). New York: Harper & Row. p. 181. ISBN 0-06-090295-7. OCLC 620927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  84. ^ Weil, Simone, 1909-1943. (1973). Waiting for God (1st Harper colophon ed.). New York: Harper & Row. p. 187. ISBN 0-06-090295-7. OCLC 620927.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  85. ^ Lissa McCullough (2014). The Religious Philosophy of Simone Weil: An Introduction. I.B. Tauris. pp. 1–3. ISBN 978-1780767963.
  86. ^ Alonzo L. McDonald, from the forward Wrestling with God, An Introduction to Simone Weil by The Trinity Forum c. 2008
  87. ^ Even some of her critics conceded this, see Hellman (1982), p. 4-5
  88. ^ Note however that while Weil's philosophical work received much popular attention, including by intellectuals, she was relatively little studied by professional philosophers, especially in the English-speaking world, despite philosophy being the subject in which she was professionally trained. See for example the Introduction of Simone Weil: "The Just Balance" by Peter Winch This is an excellent source for a philosophical discussion of her ideas, especially for those interested in the overlap between her work and that of Wittgenstein.
  89. ^ Various scholars have listed her among the top five French political writers of the first half of the twentieth century, see Hellman (1982), p. 4-5.
  90. ^ The other two being Pascal and Georges Bernanos; see Hellman (1982), p. 1
  91. ^ See Hellman (1982) for a list her biographers who portrayed her as a saint.
  92. ^ a b Weil H. Bell (1998). The Way of Justice as Compassion. Rowman & Littlefield. p. xxii. ISBN 0-8476-9080-6.
  93. ^
  94. ^ Erica DaCosta (June 2004). "The Four Simone Weils" (PDF). Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  95. ^ Ivry, Benjamin (30 March 2009). "Simone Weil's Rediscovered Jewish Inspiration". The Jewish Daily Forward.
  96. ^ She even disliked Romans who are normally admired by progressives, like Virgil, Marcus Aurelius and Tacitus, reserving moderate praise only for the Gracchi.
  97. ^ Simone Pétrement (1988), p. 329, 334
  98. ^ Several of her most ardent admirers have also been Jewish, Wladimir Rabi, a contemporary French intellectual for example, called her the greatest French spiritual writer of the first half the twentieth century. See Hellman (1982), p. 2
  99. ^ "Elle est folle". See Malcolm Muggeridge, "The Infernal Grove", Fontana: Glasgow (pbk), 1975, p. 210.
  100. ^ Doris Toumarkine (23 March 2012). "Film Review: An Encounter with Simone Weil". Film Journal International. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  101. ^ "Deep Listen: Kaija Saariaho • VAN Magazine". VAN Magazine. 1 March 2018. Retrieved 20 September 2020.
  102. ^ BBC website link.

Further reading

  • Weil, Simone (1952). . The Need for Roots: Prelude to a Declaration of Duties towards Mankind. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. pp. 40–180. Archived from the original on 18 January 2017. Retrieved 14 January 2017.

External links

  • Lynch, Tony. "Simone Weil". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • A. Rebecca Rozelle-Stone; Benjamin P. Davis (2018). "Simone Weil". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University.
  • Works by or about Simone Weil in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
  • O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Weil family", MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, University of St Andrews
  • —Website for 2009 Colloquy at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville
  • — hosted at the Center for Global Justice
  • simoneweil.net — biographical notes, photos & bilingual quotes that illustrate key concepts, including force, necessity, attention and "le malheur"
  • Works by Simone Weil — public domain in Canada
  • — Documentary on Weil by Julia Haslett, premiered in Amsterdam in November 2010
  • Radio broadcast on Weil as part of BBC's In our Time series (2012)
  • Simone Weil’s texts (Catalan translation)
  • Philosophical Investigations, Special Issue on Simone Weil (1909–1943), January–April 2020.

simone, weil, confused, with, simone, veil, french, politician, simone, adolphine, weil, french, simɔn, vɛj, listen, february, 1909, august, 1943, french, philosopher, mystic, political, activist, over, scholarly, works, have, been, published, about, including. Not to be confused with Simone Veil a French politician Simone Adolphine Weil ˈ v eɪ VAY 14 French simɔn vɛj listen 3 February 1909 24 August 1943 was a French philosopher mystic and political activist Over 2 500 scholarly works have been published about her including close analyses and readings of her work since 1995 15 Simone WeilBornSimone Adolphine Weil3 February 1909Paris FranceDied24 August 1943 1943 08 24 aged 34 Ashford Kent EnglandNationalityFrenchEducationEcole Normale Superieure University of Paris 1 B A M A Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophy French philosophySchoolContinental philosophyMarxism early Christian anarchism 2 Christian socialism 3 late Christian MysticismIndividualism 4 Modern Platonism 5 Main interestsPolitical philosophy moral philosophy 6 philosophy of religion philosophy of scienceNotable ideasDecreation renouncing the gift of free will as a form of acceptance of everything that is independent of one s particular desires 7 making something created pass into the uncreated 8 uprootedness deracinement patriotism of compassion 9 abolition of political parties the unjust character of affliction malheur compassion must act in the area of metaxy 10 Influences Plato Aristotle Socrates Augustine of Hippo Thomas Aquinas Thomas More John Fisher Erasmus Michel de Montaigne David Hume Edward Gibbon Voltaire Jean Jacques Rousseau Rene Descartes Rene Guenon 11 12 Baruch Spinoza Immanuel Kant New Testament Bhagavad Gita Louise Michel Karl Marx Sigmund Freud Friedrich Nietzsche Charles Darwin Homer AlainInfluenced Albert Camus Giorgio Agamben Iris Murdoch Anne Carson Pope Paul VI Pope Francis Diogenes Allen Flannery O Connor Dorothy Day Thomas Merton Dewi Zephaniah Phillips Peter Winch Czeslaw Milosz Janos Pilinszky Jean Luc Godard Cornel West Timothy Keller Pankaj Mishra Christian Wiman Roger Scruton Susan Sontag 13 After her graduation from formal education Weil became a teacher She taught intermittently throughout the 1930s taking several breaks due to poor health and to devote herself to political activism Such work saw her assisting in the trade union movement taking the side of the anarchists known as the Durruti Column in the Spanish Civil War and spending more than a year working as a labourer mostly in car factories so she could better understand the working class Taking a path that was unusual among 20th century left leaning intellectuals she became more religious and inclined towards mysticism as her life progressed 16 Weil wrote throughout her life although most of her writings did not attract much attention until after her death In the 1950s and 1960s her work became famous in continental Europe and throughout the English speaking world Her thought has continued to be the subject of extensive scholarship across a wide range of fields 17 The mathematician Andre Weil was her brother 18 19 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Intellectual life 1 3 Political activism 1 4 Encounter with mysticism 1 5 Later years 2 Philosophy 2 1 Absence 2 2 Affliction 2 3 Metaxu Every separation is a link 2 4 Beauty 2 5 Philosophy in Waiting for God 2 5 1 Attention 2 5 2 Three Forms of the Implicit Love of God 3 Works 3 1 The Need for Roots 3 2 Gravity and Grace 4 Legacy 5 Portrayal in film and onstage 6 Bibliography 6 1 Primary sources 6 1 1 Works in French 6 1 2 Works in English translation 6 1 3 Online journal 6 2 Secondary sources 6 3 Biographies 6 4 Audio recordings 7 See also 8 Notes and references 9 Further reading 10 External linksBiography Edit Weil with her father Weil at age 13 The photograph was taken during a family holiday to Belgium where she was laughing with her brother Andre Early life Edit Weil was born in her parents apartment in Paris on 3 February 1909 the daughter of Bernard Weil 1872 1955 a medical doctor from an agnostic Alsatian Jewish background who moved to Paris after the German annexation of Alsace Lorraine Her mother Salomea Selma Reinherz 1879 1965 was born into a Jewish family in Rostov on Don and raised in Belgium 20 According to Osmo Pekonen the family name Weil came to be when many Levis in the Napoleonic era changed their names this way by anagram 21 Weil was a healthy baby for her first six months but then suffered a severe attack of appendicitis thereafter she struggled with poor health throughout her life She was the younger of her parents two children her brother was mathematician Andre Weil 1906 1998 with whom she would always enjoy a close relationship 22 Their parents were fairly affluent and raised their children in an attentive and supportive atmosphere 23 Weil was distressed by her father having to leave home for several years after being drafted to serve in the First World War Eva Fogelman Robert Coles and several other scholars believe that this experience may have contributed to the exceptionally strong altruism which Weil displayed throughout her life 24 25 26 From her childhood home Weil acquired an obsession with cleanliness in her later life she would sometimes speak of her disgustingness and think that others would see her this way even though in her youth she had been considered highly attractive 27 Weil was generally highly affectionate but she almost always avoided any form of physical contact even with female friends 28 According to her friend and biographer Simone Petrement Weil decided early in life that she would need to adopt masculine qualities and sacrifice opportunities for love affairs in order to fully pursue her vocation to improve social conditions for the disadvantaged From her late teenage years Weil would generally disguise her fragile beauty by adopting a masculine appearance hardly ever using makeup and often wearing men s clothes 29 30 Intellectual life Edit Weil was a precocious student proficient in Ancient Greek by age 12 She later learned Sanskrit so that she could read the Bhagavad Gita in the original 16 Like the Renaissance thinker Pico della Mirandola her interests in other religions were universal and she attempted to understand each religious tradition as an expression of transcendent wisdom As a teenager Weil studied at the Lycee Henri IV under the tutelage of her admired teacher Emile Chartier more commonly known as Alain 31 Her first attempt at the entrance examination for the Ecole Normale Superieure in June 1927 ended in failure due to her low marks in history In 1928 she was successful in gaining admission She finished first in the exam for the certificate of General Philosophy and Logic Simone de Beauvoir finished second 32 During these years Weil attracted much attention with her radical opinions She was called the Red virgin 32 and even The Martian by her admired mentor 33 At the Ecole Normale Superieure she studied philosophy earning her DES diplome d etudes superieures fr roughly equivalent to an MA in 1931 with a thesis under the title Science et perfection dans Descartes Science and Perfection in Descartes 34 She received her agregation that same year 35 Weil taught philosophy at a secondary school for girls in Le Puy and teaching was her primary employment during her short life Political activism Edit Leon Trotsky for whom Weil arranged a period of residence at her parents apartment in December 1933 while he was in Paris for secret meetings She had argued against Trotsky both in print and in person suggesting that elite communist bureaucrats could be just as oppressive as the worst capitalists Weil was one of the rare few who appeared to hold her own with the Red Army founder in a face to face debate 36 She often became involved in political action out of sympathy with the working class In 1915 when she was only six years old she refused sugar in solidarity with the troops entrenched along the Western Front In 1919 at 10 years of age she declared herself a Bolshevik In her late teens she became involved in the workers movement She wrote political tracts marched in demonstrations and advocated workers rights At this time she was a Marxist pacifist and trade unionist While teaching in Le Puy she became involved in local political activity supporting the unemployed and striking workers despite criticism Weil had never formally joined the French Communist Party and in her twenties she became increasingly critical of Marxism According to Petrement she was one of the first to identify a new form of oppression not anticipated by Marx where elite bureaucrats could make life just as miserable for ordinary people as did the most exploitative capitalists 37 In 1932 Weil visited Germany to help Marxist activists who were at the time considered to be the strongest and best organised communists in Western Europe but Weil considered them no match for the then up and coming fascists When she returned to France her political friends in France dismissed her fears thinking Germany would continue to be controlled by the centrists or those to the left After Hitler rose to power in 1933 Weil spent much of her time trying to help German communists fleeing his regime 37 Weil would sometimes publish articles about social and economic issues including Oppression and Liberty and numerous short articles for trade union journals This work criticised popular Marxist thought and gave a pessimistic account of the limits of both capitalism and socialism Leon Trotsky himself personally responded to several of her articles attacking both her ideas and her as a person However according to Petrement he was influenced by some of Weil s ideas 38 Weil participated in the French general strike of 1933 called to protest against unemployment and wage cuts The following year she took a 12 month leave of absence from her teaching position to work incognito as a labourer in two factories one owned by Renault believing that this experience would allow her to connect with the working class In 1935 she resumed teaching and donated most of her income to political causes and charitable endeavours In 1936 despite her professed pacifism she travelled to the Spanish Civil War to join the Republican faction She identified as an anarchist 39 and sought out the anti fascist commander Julian Gorkin asking to be sent on a mission as a covert agent to rescue the prisoner Joaquin Maurin Gorkin refused saying she would almost certainly be sacrificing herself for nothing as it would be most unlikely she could pass as a Spaniard Weil replied that she had every right 40 to sacrifice herself if she chose but after arguing for more than an hour she was unable to convince Gorkin to give her the assignment Instead she joined the anarchist Durruti Column of the French speaking Sebastien Faure Century which specialised in high risk commando style engagements 41 As she was extremely short sighted Weil was a very poor shot and her comrades tried to avoid taking her on missions though she did sometimes insist Her only direct participation in combat was to shoot with her rifle at a bomber during an air raid in a second raid she tried to man the group s heavy machine gun but her comrades prevented her as they thought it would be best for someone less clumsy and near sighted to use the weapon After being with the group for a few weeks she burnt herself over a cooking fire She was forced to leave the unit and was met by her parents who had followed her to Spain They helped her leave the country to recuperate in Assisi About a month after her departure Weil s unit was nearly wiped out at an engagement in Perdiguera in October 1936 with every woman in the group being killed 42 Weil was distressed by the Republican killings in eastern Spain particularly when a fifteen year old Falangist was executed after he had been taken prisoner and Durruti had spent an hour trying to get him to change his political position before giving him until the next day to decide 43 During her stay in the Aragon front Weil sent some chronicles to the French publication Le Libertaire and on returning to Paris Weil continued to write essays on labour on management war and peace 44 Encounter with mysticism Edit The Basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli in Assisi where Simone had one of three spiritual encounters that really counted leading to her conversion to Christianity 45 Weil was born into a secular household and raised in complete agnosticism 46 47 As a teenager she considered the existence of God for herself and decided nothing could be known either way In her Spiritual Autobiography however Weil records that she always had a Christian outlook taking to heart from her earliest childhood the idea of loving one s neighbour Weil became attracted to the Christian faith beginning in 1935 the first of three pivotal experiences for her being when she was moved by the beauty of villagers singing hymns in a procession she stumbled across while on holiday to Portugal in Povoa de Varzim 48 49 While in Assisi in the spring of 1937 Weil experienced a religious ecstasy in the Basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli the same church in which Saint Francis of Assisi had prayed She was led to pray for the first time in her life as Lawrence A Cunningham relates Below the town is the beautiful church and convent of San Damiano where Saint Clare once lived Near that spot is the place purported to be where Saint Francis composed the larger part of his Canticle of Brother Sun Below the town in the valley is the ugliest church in the entire environs the massive baroque basilica of Saint Mary of the Angels finished in the seventeenth century and rebuilt in the nineteenth century which houses a rare treasure a tiny Romanesque chapel that stood in the days of Saint Francis the Little Portion where he would gather his brethren It was in that tiny chapel that the great mystic Simone Weil first felt compelled to kneel down and pray 50 Weil had another more powerful revelation a year later while reciting George Herbert s poem Love III after which Christ himself came down and took possession of me 51 and from 1938 on her writings became more mystical and spiritual while retaining their focus on social and political issues She was attracted to Catholicism but declined to be baptized at that time preferring to remain outside due to the love of those things that are outside Christianity 52 53 54 During World War II she lived for a time in Marseille receiving spiritual direction from Joseph Marie Perrin 55 a Dominican Friar Around this time she met the French Catholic author Gustave Thibon who later edited some of her work Weil did not limit her curiosity to Christianity She was interested in other religious traditions especially the Greek and Egyptian mysteries Hinduism especially the Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita and Mahayana Buddhism She believed that all these and other traditions contained elements of genuine revelation 56 writing Greece Egypt ancient India the beauty of the world the pure and authentic reflection of this beauty in art and science these things have done as much as the visibly Christian ones to deliver me into Christ s hands as his captive I think I might even say more 57 Nevertheless Weil was opposed to religious syncretism claiming that it effaced the particularity of the individual traditions Each religion is alone true that is to say that at the moment we are thinking of it we must bring as much attention to bear on it as if there were nothing else A synthesis of religion implies a lower quality of attention 58 Later years Edit A commemorative plaque on the exterior of the apartment building on Riverside Drive in New York City where Weil lived in 1942 In 1942 Weil travelled to the United States with her family She had been reluctant to leave France but agreed to do so as she wanted to see her parents to safety and knew they would not leave without her She was also encouraged by the fact that it would be relatively easy for her to reach Britain from the United States where she could join the French Resistance She had hopes of being sent back to France as a covert agent 59 Older biographies suggest Weil made no further progress in achieving her desire to return to France as an agent she was limited to desk work in London although this did give her time to write one of her largest and best known works The Need for Roots 60 Yet there is now evidence that Weil was recruited by the Special Operations Executive with a view to sending her back to France as a clandestine wireless operator In May 1943 plans were underway to send her to Thame Park in Oxfordshire for training but were cancelled soon after as her failing health became known 61 62 Weil s grave in Bybrook Cemetery Ashford Kent August 2012 The rigorous work routine she assumed soon took a heavy toll In 1943 Weil was diagnosed with tuberculosis and instructed to rest and eat well However she refused special treatment because of her long standing political idealism and her detachment from material things Instead she limited her food intake to what she believed residents of German occupied France ate She most likely ate even less as she refused food on most occasions It is probable that she was baptized during this period 63 Her condition quickly deteriorated and she was moved to a sanatorium in Ashford Kent 26 After a lifetime of battling illness and frailty Weil died in August 1943 from cardiac failure at the age of 34 The coroner s report said that the deceased did kill and slay herself by refusing to eat whilst the balance of her mind was disturbed 64 The exact cause of her death remains a subject of debate Some claim that her refusal to eat came from her desire to express some form of solidarity toward the victims of the war Others think that Weil s self starvation occurred after her study of Arthur Schopenhauer 65 In his chapters on Christian saintly asceticism and salvation Schopenhauer had described self starvation as a preferred method of self denial However Simone Petrement 66 one of Weil s first and most significant biographers regards the coroner s report as simply mistaken Basing her opinion on letters written by the personnel of the sanatorium at which Simone Weil was treated Petrement affirms that Weil asked for food on different occasions while she was hospitalized and even ate a little bit a few days before her death according to her it is in fact Weil s poor health condition that eventually made her unable to eat 67 Weil s first English biographer Richard Rees offers several possible explanations for her death citing her compassion for the suffering of her countrymen in occupied France and her love for and close imitation of Christ Rees sums up by saying As for her death whatever explanation one may give of it will amount in the end to saying that she died of love 68 Philosophy EditAbsence Edit Absence is the key image for her metaphysics cosmology cosmogony and theodicy She believed that God created by an act of self delimitation in other words she argued that because God is conceived as utter fullness a perfect being no creature can exist except where God is not Thus creation occurred only when God withdrew in part This idea mirrors tzimtzum a central notion in the Jewish Kabbalah creation narrative This is for Weil an original kenosis emptiness preceding the corrective kenosis of Christ s incarnation Thus according to her humans are born in a damned position not because of original sin but because to be created at all they must be what God is not in other words they must be inherently unholy in some sense This idea fits more broadly into apophatic theology This notion of creation is a cornerstone of her theodicy for if creation is conceived this way as necessarily entailing evil then there is no problem of the entrance of evil into a perfect world Nor does the presence of evil constitute a limitation of God s omnipotence under Weil s notion according to her evil is present not because God could not create a perfect world but because the act of creation in its very essence implies the impossibility of perfection However this explanation of the essentiality of evil does not imply that humans are simply originally and continually doomed on the contrary Weil claims that evil is the form which God s mercy takes in this world 69 Weil believed that evil and its consequent affliction serve the role of driving humans towards God writing The extreme affliction which overtakes human beings does not create human misery it merely reveals it 70 Affliction Edit Weil s concept of affliction French malheur goes beyond simple suffering though it certainly includes it According to her only some souls are capable of experiencing the full depth of affliction the same souls that are also most able to experience spiritual joy Weil s notion of affliction is a sort of suffering plus which transcends both body and mind a physical and mental anguish that scourges the very soul 71 War and oppression were the most intense cases of affliction within her reach to experience it she turned to the life of a factory worker while to understand it she turned to Homer s Iliad Her essay The Iliad or the Poem of Force first translated by Mary McCarthy is a piece of Homeric literary criticism Affliction was associated both with necessity and with chance it was fraught with necessity because it was hard wired into existence itself and thus imposed itself upon the sufferer with the full force of the inescapable but it was also subject to chance inasmuch as chance too is an inescapable part of the nature of existence The element of chance was essential to the unjust character of affliction in other words my affliction should not usually let alone always follow from my sin as per traditional Christian theodicy but should be visited upon me for no special reason The better we are able to conceive of the fullness of joy the purer and more intense will be our suffering in affliction and our compassion for others Suffering and enjoyment as sources of knowledge The serpent offered knowledge to Adam and Eve The sirens offered knowledge to Ulysses These stories teach that the soul is lost through seeking knowledge in pleasure Why Pleasure is perhaps innocent on condition that we do not seek knowledge in it It is permissible to seek that only in suffering Simone Weil Gravity and Grace chpt 16 Affliction Metaxu Every separation is a link Edit The concept of metaxu which Weil borrowed from Plato is that which both separates and connects e g as a wall separates two prisoners but can be used to tap messages This idea of connecting distance was of the first importance for Weil s understanding of the created realm The world as a whole along with any of its components including our physical bodies is to be regarded as serving the same function for us in relation to God that a blind man s stick serves for him in relation to the world about him They do not afford direct insight but can be used experimentally to bring the mind into practical contact with reality This metaphor allows any absence to be interpreted as a presence and is a further component in Weil s theodicy Beauty EditFor Weil The beautiful is the experiential proof that the incarnation is possible The beauty which is inherent in the form of the world this inherency is proven for her in geometry and expressed in all good art is the proof that the world points to something beyond itself it establishes the essentially telic character of all that exists Her concept of beauty extends throughout the universe W e must have faith that the universe is beautiful on all levels and that it has a fullness of beauty in relation to the bodily and psychic structure of each of the thinking beings that actually do exist and of all those that are possible It is this very agreement of an infinity of perfect beauties that gives a transcendent character to the beauty of the world He Christ is really present in the universal beauty The love of this beauty proceeds from God dwelling in our souls and goes out to God present in the universe 72 She also wrote that The beauty of this world is Christ s tender smile coming to us through matter 73 Beauty also served a soteriological function for Weil Beauty captivates the flesh in order to obtain permission to pass right to the soul It constitutes then another way in which the divine reality behind the world invades our lives Where affliction conquers us with brute force beauty sneaks in and topples the empire of the self from within Philosophy in Waiting for God Edit Attention Edit As Simone Weil explains in her book Waiting for God attention consists of suspending or emptying one s thought such that one is ready to receive to be penetrated by the object to which one turns one s gaze be that object one s neighbor or ultimately God 74 As Weil explains one can love God by praying to God and attention is the very substance of prayer when one prays one empties oneself fixes one s whole gaze towards God and becomes ready to receive God 75 Similarly for Weil people can love their neighbors by emptying themselves becoming ready to receive their neighbor in all his or her naked truth asking their neighbor What are you going through 76 Three Forms of the Implicit Love of God Edit In Waiting for God Simone Weil explains that the three forms of implicit love of God are 1 love of neighbor 2 love of the beauty of the world and 3 love of religious ceremonies 77 As Weil writes by loving these three objects neighbor world s beauty and religious ceremonies one indirectly loves God before God comes in person to take the hand of his future bride since prior to God s arrival one s soul cannot yet directly love God as the object 78 Love of neighbor occurs i when the strong treat the weak as equals 79 ii when people give personal attention to those that otherwise seem invisible anonymous or non existent 80 and iii when we look at and listen to the afflicted as they are without explicitly thinking about God i e Weil writes when God in us loves the afflicted rather than we loving them in God 81 Second Weil explains love of the world s beauty occurs when humans imitate God s love for the cosmos just as God creatively renounced his command over the world letting it be ruled by human autonomy and matter s blind necessity humans give up their imaginary command over the world seeing the world no longer as if they were the world s center 82 Finally Weil explains love of religious ceremonies occurs as an implicit love of God when religious practices are pure 83 Weil writes that purity in religion is seen when faith and love do not fail and most absolutely in the Eucharist 84 Works EditAccording to Lissa McCullough Weil would likely have been intensely displeased by the attention paid to her life rather than her works She believed it was her writings that embodied the best of her not her actions and definitely not her personality Weil had similar views about others saying that if one looks at the lives of great figures in separation from their works it necessarily ends up revealing their pettiness above all as it s in their works that they have put the best of themselves 85 Weil s most famous works were published posthumously In the decades since her death her writings have been assembled annotated criticized discussed disputed and praised Along with some twenty volumes of her works publishers have issued more than thirty biographies including Simone Weil A Modern Pilgrimage by Robert Coles Harvard s Pulitzer winning professor who calls Weil a giant of reflection 86 dd The Need for Roots Edit Weil s book The Need for Roots was written in early 1943 immediately before her death later that year She was in London working for the French Resistance and trying to convince its leader Charles de Gaulle to form a contingent of nurses who would serve at the front lines The Need for Roots has an ambitious plan It sets out to address the past and to set out a road map for the future of France after World War II She painstakingly analyzes the spiritual and ethical milieu that led to France s defeat by the German army and then addresses these issues with the prospect of eventual French victory Gravity and Grace Edit While Gravity and Grace French La Pesanteur et la Grace is one of the books most associated with Simone Weil the work was not intended to be a book at all Rather the work consists of various passages selected from Weil s notebooks and arranged topically by her friend Gustave Thibon Weil had given Thibon some of her notebooks written before May 1942 but not with any intent to publish them Hence the resulting selections organization and editing of Gravity and Grace were much influenced by Thibon a devout Catholic see Thibon s introduction to Gravity and Grace Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1952 for more details Legacy Edit Simone Weil Avenue a section of the A28 road which runs close to her grave in Ashford was named in honour of the philosopher in 1983 During her lifetime Weil was only known to relatively narrow circles and even in France her essays were mostly read only by those interested in radical politics During the first decade after her death Weil rapidly became famous attracting attention throughout the West For the third quarter of the 20th century she was widely regarded as the most influential person in the world on new work concerning religious and spiritual matters 87 Her philosophical 88 social and political thought also became popular although not to the same degree as her religious work 89 As well as influencing fields of study Weil deeply affected the personal lives of numerous individuals Pope Paul VI said that Weil was one of his three greatest influences 90 Weil s popularity began to decline in the late 1960s and 1970s However more of her work was gradually published leading to many thousands of new secondary works by Weil scholars some of whom focused on achieving a deeper understanding of her religious philosophical and political work Others broadened the scope of Weil scholarship to investigate her applicability to fields like classical studies cultural studies education and even technical fields like ergonomics 49 Many commentators who have assessed Weil as a person were highly positive many described her as a saint some even as the greatest saint of the twentieth century including T S Eliot Dwight Macdonald Leslie Fiedler and Robert Coles 91 After they met at age 18 Simone de Beauvoir wroteː I envied her for having a heart that could beat right across the world 92 Weil biographer Gabriella Fiori writes that Weil was a moral genius in the orbit of ethics a genius of immense revolutionary range 93 Maurice Schumann said that since her death there was hardly a day when the thought of her life did not positively influence his own and serve as a moral guide 92 In 1951 Albert Camus wrote that she was the only great spirit of our times 29 Foolish though she may have appeared at times dropping a suitcase full of French resistance papers all over the sidewalk and scrambling to gather them up her deep engagement with both the theory and practice of caritas in all its myriad forms functions as the unifying force of her life and thought Gustave Thibon the French philosopher and close friend recounts their last meeting not long before her death I will only say that I had the impression of being in the presence of an absolutely transparent soul which was ready to be reabsorbed into original light 94 Street art image of Simone Weil in Berlin Kreuzberg 2019 Weil has however been criticised even by those who otherwise deeply admired her such as Eliot for being excessively prone to divide the world into good and evil and for her sometimes intemperate judgments Weil was a harsh critic of the influence of Judaism on Western civilisation 56 However her niece Sylvie Weil and biographer Thomas R Nevin argued that Weil did not reject Judaism and was heavily influenced by its precepts 95 Weil was an even harsher critic of the Roman Empire in which she refused to see any value at all 96 On the other hand according to Eliot she held up the Cathars as exemplars of goodness despite there being in his view little concrete evidence on which to base such an assessment 56 According to Petrement she idolised Lawrence of Arabia considering him to be a Saint 97 A few critics have taken an overall negative view Several Jewish writers including Susan Sontag accused her of antisemitism although this was far from a universal shared perspective 98 A small minority of commentators have judged her to be psychologically unbalanced or sexually obsessed 29 General Charles de Gaulle her ultimate boss while she worked for the French Resistance considered her insane 99 although even he was influenced by her and repeated some of her sayings for years after her death 29 49 A meta study from the University of Calgary found that between 1995 and 2012 over 2 500 new scholarly works had been published about her 15 Portrayal in film and onstage EditWeil was the subject of a 2010 documentary by Julia Haslett An encounter with Simone Weil Haslett noted that Weil had become a little known figure practically forgotten in her native France and rarely taught in universities or secondary schools 100 Weil was also the subject of Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho s La Passion de Simone 2008 written with librettist Amin Maalouf Of the piece music critic Olivia Giovetti wrote Framing her soprano soloist as Simone s imaginary sister Literal Metaphorical Does it matter the narrative arc becomes a struggle to understand the dichotomy of Simone Wrapped in this dramatic mystery Saariaho s musical textures haunting and moribund create a meditative state To go back to Bach s St Matthew Passion if that work written for his time serves to reinforce the then revolutionary system of the Protestant church then La Passion de Simone written for our time questions the mystery of faith to reinforce the inexplicable experience of being human 101 Bibliography EditPrimary sources Edit Works in French Edit Simone Weil Œuvres completes Paris Gallimard 1989 2006 6 vols Reflexions sur la guerre La Critique sociale no 10 November 1933 Chronicles from the Spanish Civil War in Le Libertaire an anarchistic magazine 1936 La Pesanteur et la grace Paris Plon 1947 L enracinement Prelude a une declaration des devoirs envers l etre humain Gallimard Espoir 1949 Attente de Dieu 1950 La connaissance surnaturelle Gallimard Espoir 1950 La Condition ouvriere Gallimard Espoir 1951 Lettre a un religieux Gallimard Espoir 1951 Les Intuitions pre chretiennes Paris Les Editions de la Colombe 1951 La Source grecque Gallimard Espoir 1953 Oppression et liberte Gallimard Espoir 1955 Venice sauvee Tragedie en trois actes Gallimard 1955 Ecrits de Londres et dernieres lettres Gallimard Espoir 1957 Ecrits historiques et politiques Gallimard Espoir 1960 Pensees sans ordre concernant l amour de Dieu Gallimard Espoir 1962 Sur la science Gallimard Espoir 1966 Poemes suivi de Venice sauvee Gallimard Espoir 1968 Note sur la suppression generale des partis politiques Paris Editions Gallimard 1957 Climats 2006 Works in English translation Edit Awaiting God A New Translation of Attente de Dieu and Lettre a un Religieux Introduction by Sylvie Weil Translation by Bradley Jersak Fresh Wind Press 2012 ISBN 978 1 927512 03 6 First and Last Notebooks Supernatural Knowledge Translated by Richard Rees Eugene OR Wipf amp Stock 2015 Formative Writings 1929 1941 1987 Dorothy Tuck McFarland amp Wilhelmina Van Ness eds University of Massachusetts Press The Iliad or the Poem of Force Pendle Hill Pamphlet Mary McCarthy trans Intimations of Christianity among the Ancient Greeks Translated by Elisabeth Chase Geissbuhler New York Routledge 1998 Lectures on Philosophy Translated by Hugh Price Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1978 Letter to a Priest Translated by Arthur Willis New York Routledge 2002 The Need for Roots Prelude to a Declaration of Duties Towards Mankind Translated by Arthur Willis New York Routledge 2002 Gravity and Grace Edited by Gustave Thibon Translated by Arthur Willis Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1997 The Notebooks of Simone Weil Routledge paperback 1984 ISBN 0 7100 8522 2 Routledge 2004 ISBN 978 0 415 32771 8 On Science Necessity amp The Love of God London Oxford University Press 1968 Richard Rees trans On the Abolition of All Political Parties Translated by Simon Leys New York The New York Review of Books 2013 Oppression and Liberty Edited by Albert Camus Translated by Arthur Willis and John Petrie Amherst University of Massachusetts Press 1973 Selected Essays 1934 1943 Historical Political and Moral Writings Edited and translated by Richard Rees Eugene OR Wipf amp Stock 2015 Seventy Letters Personal and Intellectual Windows on a Thinker Translated by Richard Rees Eugene OR Wipf amp Stock 2015 Simone Weil s The Iliad or Poem of Force A Critical Edition James P Holoka ed amp trans Peter Lang 2005 Simone Weil An Anthology Sian Miles editor Virago Press 1986 The Simone Weil Reader A Legendary Spiritual Odyssey of Our Time George A Panichas editor David McKay Co 1981 Two Moral Essays by Simone Weil Draft for a Statement of Human Obligations amp Human Personality Ronald Hathaway ed Pendle Hill Pamphlet Richard Rhees trans Venice Saved Translated by Silvia Panizza and Philip Wilson New York Bloomsbury 2019 Waiting on God Routledge Kegan Paul 1951 Emma Craufurd trans Waiting for God Translated by Emma Craufurd New York HarperPerennial 2009 Online journal Edit Attention a bi monthly online journal free dedicated to exploring the life and legacy of Simone Weil Secondary sources Edit Allen Diogenes 2006 Three Outsiders Pascal Kierkegaard Simone Weil Eugene OR Wipf and Stock Bell Richard H 1998 Simone Weil Rowman amp Littlefield editor 1993 Simone Weil s Philosophy of Culture Readings Toward a Divine Humanity Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 43263 4 Bourgault Sophie amp Daigle Julie Eds 2020 Simone Weil Beyond Ideology Palgrave Macmillan Castelli Alberto The Peace Discourse in Europe 1900 1945 Routledge 2019 Cha Yoon Sook 2017 Decreation and the Ethical Bind Simone Weil and the Claim of the Other Fordham University Press Chenavier Robert 2012 Simone Weil Attention to the Real trans Bernard E Doering Notre Dame IN University of Notre Dame Davies Grahame 2007 Everything Must Change Seren ISBN 9781854114518 Dietz Mary 1988 Between the Human and the Divine The Political Thought of Simone Weil Rowman amp Littlefield Doering E Jane 2010 Simone Weil and the Specter of Self Perpetuating Force University of Notre Dame Press Doering E Jane and Eric O Springsted eds 2004 The Christian Platonism of Simone Weil University of Notre Dame Press Esposito Roberto 2017 The Origin of the Political Hannah Arendt or Simone Weil V Binetti amp G Williams Trans Fordham University Press Finch Henry Leroy 1999 Simone Weil and the Intellect of Grace ed Martin Andic Continuum International Gabellieri Emmanuel 2003 Etre et don L unite et l enjeu de la pensee de Simone Weil Paris Peeters Goldschlager Alain 1982 Simone Weil et Spinoza Essai d interpretation Quebec Naaman Guilherme Alexandre and Morgan W John 2018 Simone Weil 1909 1943 dialogue as an instrument of power Chapter 7 in Philosophy Dialogue and Education Nine modern European philosophers Routledge London and New York pp 109 126 ISBN 978 1 138 83149 0 Irwin Alexander 2002 Saints of the Impossible Bataille Weil and the Politics of the Sacred Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press McCullough Lissa 2014 The Religious Philosophy of Simone Weil London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1780767963 Morgan Vance G 2005 Weaving the World Simone Weil on Science Mathematics and Love University of Notre Dame Press ISBN 0 268 03486 9 Morgan W John 2019 Simone Weil s Lectures on Philosophy A comment RUDN Journal of Philosophy 23 4 420 429 DOI 10 22363 2313 2302 2019 23 4 420 429 Morgan W John 2020 Simone Weil s Reflections on the Right Use of School Studies with a View to the Love of God A Comment RUDN Journal of Philosophy 24 3 398 409 DOI 10 22363 2313 2302 2020 24 3 398 409 Moulakis Athanasios 1998 Simone Weil and the Politics of Self Denial trans Ruth Hein University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0 8262 1162 0 Panizza Silvia Caprioglio 2022 The Ethics of Attention Engaging the Real with Iris Murdoch and Simone Weil Routledge Plant Stephen 2007 Simone Weil A Brief Introduction Orbis ISBN 978 1 57075 753 2 2007 The SPCK Introduction to Simone Weil SPCK ISBN 978 0 281 05938 6 Radzins Inese Astra 2006 Thinking Nothing Simone Weil s Cosmology ProQuest UMI Rhees Rush 2000 Discussions of Simone Weil State University of New York Press Rozelle Stone A Rebecca Ed 2019 Simone Weil and Continental Philosophy Rowman amp Littlefield Rozelle Stone A Rebecca and Lucian Stone 2013 Simone Weil and Theology New York Bloomsbury T amp T Clark eds 2009 Relevance of the Radical Simone Weil 100 Years Later New York T amp T Clark Springsted Eric O 2010 Simone Weil and the Suffering of Love Wipf amp Stock 2021 Simone Weil for the Twenty First Century University of Notre Dame Press Veto Miklos 1994 The Religious Metaphysics of Simone Weil trans Joan Dargan State University of New York Press von der Ruhr Mario 2006 Simone Weil An Apprenticeship in Attention London Continuum Winch Peter 1989 Simone Weil The Just Balance Cambridge University Press Winchell James 2000 Semantics of the Unspeakable Six Sentences by Simone Weil in Trajectories of Mysticism in Theory and Literature Philip Leonard ed London Macmillan 72 93 ISBN 0 333 72290 6 Zaretsky Robert 2021 The Subversive Simone Weil A Life in Five Ideas University of Chicago Press 2020 The Logic of the Rebel On Simone Weil and Albert Camus Los Angeles Review of Books 2018 What We Owe to Others Simone Weil s Radical Reminder New York Times Biographies Edit Anderson David 1971 Simone Weil SCM Press Cabaud Jacques 1964 Simone Weil Channel Press Robert Coles 1989 Simone Weil A Modern Pilgrimage Addison Wesley 2001 ed Skylight Paths Publishing Fiori Gabriella 1989 Simone Weil An Intellectual Biography translated by Joseph R Berrigan University of Georgia Press ISBN 0 8203 1102 2 1991 Simone Weil Una donna assoluta La Tartaruga Saggistica ISBN 88 7738 075 6 1993 Simone Weil Une Femme Absolue Diffuseur SODIS ISBN 2 86645 148 1 Gray Francine Du Plessix 2001 Simone Weil Viking Press McLellan David 1990 Utopian Pessimist The Life and Thought of Simone Weil New York Poseidon Press Nevin Thomas R 1991 Simone Weil Portrait of a Self Exiled Jew Chapel Hill Perrin J B amp Thibon G 1953 Simone Weil as We Knew Her Routledge amp Kegan Paul Petrement Simone 1976 Simone Weil A Life New York Schocken Books 1988 edition Plessix Gray Francine du 2001 Simone Weil Penguin Rexroth Kenneth 1957 Simone Weil http www bopsecrets org rexroth essays simone weil htm Guia Risari 2014 Il taccuino di Simone Weil RueBallu 2014 Palermo ISBN 978 88 95689 15 9 Sogos Wiquel Giorgia 2022 Simone Weil Private Uberlegungen Bonn Free Pen Verlag ISBN 978 3 945177 95 2 Terry Megan 1973 Approaching Simone A Play The Feminist Press White George A ed 1981 Simone Weil Interpretations of a Life University of Massachusetts Press Yourgrau Palle 2011 Simone Weil Critical Lives series London Reaktion Weil Sylvie 2010 At home with Andre and Simone Weil Evanston Northwestern Simone Weil A Saint for Our Time Magazine article by Jillian Becker New Criterion Vol 20 March 2002 Audio recordings Edit David Cayley Enlightened by Love The Thought of Simone Weil CBC Audio 2002 In Our Time documentary on Weil BBC Radio 4 2015 102 See also Edit Anarchism portal Christianity portal Judaism portalEdith Stein Dietrich Bonhoeffer Simone de BeauvoirNotes and references Edit At the time the ENS was part of the University of Paris according to the decree of 10 November 1903 Avec Simone Weil et George Orwell Le Comptoir George Andrew Panichas 1999 Growing wings to overcome gravity Mercer University Press p 63 Thomas R Nevin 1991 Simone Weil Portrait of a Self exiled Jew The University of North Carolina Press p 198 Doering E Jane and Eric O Springsted eds 2004 The Christian Platonism of Simone Weil University of Notre Dame Press p 29 Course Catalogue The Philosophy of Simone Weil PHIL10161 Drps ed ac uk Retrieved 17 December 2017 Primary source Simone Weil First and Last Notebooks Oxford University Press 1970 pp 211 213 and 217 Commentary on the primary source Richard H Bell Simone Weil s Philosophy of Culture Readings Toward a Divine Humanity Cambridge University Press 1993 p 27 Simone Weil 2004 Gravity and Grace London Routledge p 32 Dietz Mary 1988 Between the Human and the Divine The Political Thought of Simone Weil Rowman amp Littlefield p 188 Athanasios Moulakis Simone Weil and the Politics of Self denial University of Missouri Press 1998 p 141 KAHN Gilbert Dir Simone Weil Philosophe historienne et mystique Paris Aubier 1978 p 121 l auditeur demande si Simone Weil a connu Guenon M M Davy repond SOURISSE Simone Weil et Rene Guenon 1997 Sontag Susan Simone Weil nybooks com Weil Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary a b Saundra Lipton and Debra Jensen 3 March 2012 Simone Weil Bibliography University of Calgary Retrieved 16 April 2012 a b Sheldrake Philip 2007 A Brief History of Spirituality Oxford Blackwell pp 180 182 ISBN 978 1 4051 1770 8 Especially philosophy and theology also political and social science feminism science education and classical studies O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Simone Weil MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Weil family MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews Nevin Thomas R 1991 Simone Weil Portrait of a Self exiled Jew ISBN 9780807819999 Pekonen O Chez les Weil Andre and Simone by Sylvie Weil and At home with Andre and Simone Weil translated from the French by Benjamin Ivry Math Intelligencer 34 76 78 2012 The Weil Conjectures by Karen Olsson review maths and mysticism The Guardian 2 August 2019 Retrieved 11 March 2021 Simone Petrement 1988 pp 4 7 According to Fogelman Cole and others various studies have found that a common formative experience for marked altruists is to suffer a hurtful loss and then to receive strong support from loving carers Eva Fogelman 23 March 2012 Friday Film Simone Weil s Mission of Empathy The Jewish Daily Forward Archived from the original on 9 July 2013 Retrieved 6 September 2012 a b Robert Coles 2001 Simone Weil A Modern Pilgrimage Skylight Lives SkyLight Paths ISBN 978 1893361348 According to Petrement 1988 p 14 family friends would refer to Simone and Andre as the genius and the beauty Simone Petrement 1988 pp 4 7 194 a b c d John Hellman 1983 Simone Weil An Introduction to Her Thought Wilfrid Laurier University Press pp 1 23 ISBN 978 0 88920 121 7 Simone Petrement 1988 pp 27 29 Hellman John 1982 Simone Weil An Introduction to her Thought Wilrid Laurier University Press a b Liukkonen Petri Simone Weil Books and Writers kirjasto sci fi Finland Kuusankoski Public Library Archived from the original on 24 April 2007 Alain Journal unpublished Cited in Petrement Weil 1 6 Schrift Alan D 2006 Twentieth century French Philosophy Key Themes and Thinkers Blackwell Publishing p 186 ISBN 978 1 4051 3217 6 Andre Chervel Les agreges de l enseignement secondaire Repertoire 1809 1950 Laboratoire de recherche historique Rhone Alpes Retrieved 23 June 2014 Simone Petrement 1988 pp 189 191 a b Simone Petrement 1988 p 176 Simone Petrement 1988 p 178 McLellan David 1990 Utopian Pessimist The Life and Thought of Simone Weil Poseidon Press ISBN 9780671685218 p121 Simone Petrement 1988 p 271 Simone Petrement 1988 p 272 Simone Petrement 1988 p 278 Beevor Antony The Battle for Spain The Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 Hachette UK 2012 Simone Petrement 1988 pp 280 330 S Weil Spiritual Autobiography S Weil What is a Jew cited by Panichas George A Panichas 1977 Simone Weil Reader Moyer Bell p 8 ISBN 978 0 918825 01 8 George A Panichas 1977 Simone Weil Reader Moyer Bell pp xxxviii ISBN 978 0 918825 01 8 a b c Simone Weil 2005 Sian Miles ed An Anthology Penguin Book pp 28 29 ISBN 978 0 14 118819 5 Cunningham Lawrence 2004 Francis of Assisi performing the Gospel life Illustrated edition Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 0 8028 2762 4 ISBN 978 0 8028 2762 3 Source 1 accessed September 15 2010 p 118 cited by Panichas and other Weil scholars S Weil Spiritual Autobiography cited by Panichas and Plant George A Panichas 1977 Simone Weil Reader Moyer Bell p 9 ISBN 978 0 918825 01 8 Stephen Plant 1997 Great Christian Thinkers Simone Weil Liguori Publications pp xv xvi ISBN 978 0764801167 Weil Simone 1966 Attente de Dieu Fayard a b c Simone Weil 2002 The Need for Roots Routledge p xi preface by T S Eliot ISBN 978 0 415 27102 8 Letter to Father Perrin 26 May 1942 Notebooks of Simone Weil volume 1 Simone Petrement 1988 chpt 15 Marseilles II see esp pp 462 463 This was originally a lengthy report on options for regenerating France after an allied victory though it was later published as a book Simone Weil by Nigel Perrin Archived 2012 12 10 at archive today Simone Weil Personal File ref HS 9 1570 1 National Archives Kew Eric O Springsted The Baptism of Simone Weil in Spirit Nature and Community Issues in the Thought of Simone Weil Albany State University of New York Press 1994 https sunypress edu Books S Spirit Nature and Community McLellan David 1990 Utopian Pessimist The Life and Thought of Simone Weil Poseidon Press ISBN 9780671685218 Inquest verdict quoted on p 266 McLellan David 1990 Utopian Pessimist The Life and Thought of Simone Weil Poseidon Press p 30 Petrement Simone 1988 Simone Weil A life Schocken 592 pp Simone Petrement 1988 chpt 17 London see esp pp 530 539 Richard Rees 1966 Simone Weil A Sketch for a Portrait Oxford University Press p 191 ISBN 978 0 19 211163 0 Gravity and Grace Metaxu page 132 Weil Simone Gravity and Grace Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1952 This notion of Weil s bears a strong resemblance to the Asian notion of han which has received attention in recent Korean theology for instance in the work of Andrew Park Like affliction han is more destructive to the whole person than ordinary suffering Weil Simone Waiting For God Harper Torchbooks 1973 pp 164 165 Weil Simone Waiting For God Harper Torchbooks 1973 pp 164 165 Weil Simone 1909 1943 1973 Waiting for God 1st Harper colophon ed New York Harper amp Row pp 111 112 ISBN 0 06 090295 7 OCLC 620927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weil Simone 1909 1943 1973 Waiting for God 1st Harper colophon ed New York Harper amp Row p 105 ISBN 0 06 090295 7 OCLC 620927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weil Simone 1909 1943 1973 Waiting for God 1st Harper colophon ed New York Harper amp Row pp 114 115 ISBN 0 06 090295 7 OCLC 620927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weil Simone 1909 1943 1973 Waiting for God 1st Harper colophon ed New York Harper amp Row pp 137 199 ISBN 0 06 090295 7 OCLC 620927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weil Simone 1909 1943 1973 Waiting for God 1st Harper colophon ed New York Harper amp Row p 137 ISBN 0 06 090295 7 OCLC 620927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weil Simone 1909 1943 1973 Waiting for God 1st Harper colophon ed New York Harper amp Row pp 143 144 ISBN 0 06 090295 7 OCLC 620927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weil Simone 1909 1943 1973 Waiting for God 1st Harper colophon ed New York Harper amp Row p 149 ISBN 0 06 090295 7 OCLC 620927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weil Simone 1909 1943 1973 Waiting for God 1st Harper colophon ed New York Harper amp Row pp 150 151 ISBN 0 06 090295 7 OCLC 620927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weil Simone 1909 1943 1973 Waiting for God 1st Harper colophon ed New York Harper amp Row pp 158 160 ISBN 0 06 090295 7 OCLC 620927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weil Simone 1909 1943 1973 Waiting for God 1st Harper colophon ed New York Harper amp Row p 181 ISBN 0 06 090295 7 OCLC 620927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weil Simone 1909 1943 1973 Waiting for God 1st Harper colophon ed New York Harper amp Row p 187 ISBN 0 06 090295 7 OCLC 620927 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lissa McCullough 2014 The Religious Philosophy of Simone Weil An Introduction I B Tauris pp 1 3 ISBN 978 1780767963 Alonzo L McDonald from the forward Wrestling with God An Introduction to Simone Weil by The Trinity Forum c 2008 Even some of her critics conceded this see Hellman 1982 p 4 5 Note however that while Weil s philosophical work received much popular attention including by intellectuals she was relatively little studied by professional philosophers especially in the English speaking world despite philosophy being the subject in which she was professionally trained See for example the Introduction of Simone Weil The Just Balance by Peter Winch This is an excellent source for a philosophical discussion of her ideas especially for those interested in the overlap between her work and that of Wittgenstein Various scholars have listed her among the top five French political writers of the first half of the twentieth century see Hellman 1982 p 4 5 The other two being Pascal and Georges Bernanos see Hellman 1982 p 1 See Hellman 1982 for a list her biographers who portrayed her as a saint a b Weil H Bell 1998 The Way of Justice as Compassion Rowman amp Littlefield p xxii ISBN 0 8476 9080 6 The Lonely Pilgrimage of Simone Weil The Washington Post Erica DaCosta June 2004 The Four Simone Weils PDF Retrieved 7 May 2013 Ivry Benjamin 30 March 2009 Simone Weil s Rediscovered Jewish Inspiration The Jewish Daily Forward She even disliked Romans who are normally admired by progressives like Virgil Marcus Aurelius and Tacitus reserving moderate praise only for the Gracchi Simone Petrement 1988 p 329 334 Several of her most ardent admirers have also been Jewish Wladimir Rabi a contemporary French intellectual for example called her the greatest French spiritual writer of the first half the twentieth century See Hellman 1982 p 2 Elle est folle See Malcolm Muggeridge The Infernal Grove Fontana Glasgow pbk 1975 p 210 Doris Toumarkine 23 March 2012 Film Review An Encounter with Simone Weil Film Journal International Retrieved 31 August 2012 Deep Listen Kaija Saariaho VAN Magazine VAN Magazine 1 March 2018 Retrieved 20 September 2020 BBC website link Further reading EditWeil Simone 1952 Part II Uprootedness The Need for Roots Prelude to a Declaration of Duties towards Mankind London Routledge and Kegan Paul pp 40 180 Archived from the original on 18 January 2017 Retrieved 14 January 2017 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Simone Weil Wikimedia Commons has media related to Simone Weil Lynch Tony Simone Weil Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy A Rebecca Rozelle Stone Benjamin P Davis 2018 Simone Weil Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Works by or about Simone Weil in libraries WorldCat catalog O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Weil family MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews American Weil Society and 2009 Colloquy Website for 2009 Colloquy at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville Simone Weil on Labor hosted at the Center for Global Justice simoneweil net biographical notes photos amp bilingual quotes that illustrate key concepts including force necessity attention and le malheur Works by Simone Weil public domain in Canada An Encounter with Simone Weil Documentary on Weil by Julia Haslett premiered in Amsterdam in November 2010 Radio broadcast on Weil as part of BBC s In our Time series 2012 Simone Weil s texts Catalan translation Philosophical Investigations Special Issue on Simone Weil 1909 1943 January April 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Simone Weil amp oldid 1129678774, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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