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Encyclopedia > Julien Offray de La Mettrie

Julien Offray de La Mettrie (December 25, 1709 - November 11, 1751) was a French physician and philosopher, the earliest of the materialist writers of the Enlightenment. He has been claimed as a founder of cognitive science.


Life and work

He was born at Saint-Malo. After studying theology in the Jansenist schools for some years, he suddenly decided to adopt the profession of medicine. In 1733 he went to Leiden to study under Boerhaave, and in 1742 returned to Paris, where he obtained the appointment of surgeon to the guards. During an attack of fever he made observations on himself with reference to the action of quickened circulation upon thought, which led him to the conclusion that psychical phenomena were to be accounted for as the effects of organic changes in the brain and nervous system. This conclusion he worked out in his earliest philosophical work, the Histoire naturelle de l'âme (1745). So great was the outcry caused by its publication that La Mettrie was forced to take refuge in Leiden, where he developed his doctrines still more boldly and completely, and with great originality, in L'Homme machine (Eng. trans., London, 1750; ed. with introd. and notes, J. Asszat, 1865), and L'Homme plante, treatises based upon principles of the most consistently materialistic character. The ethics of these principles were worked out in Discours sur le bonheur, La Volupté, and L'Art de jouir, in which the end of life is found in the pleasures of the senses, and virtue is reduced to self-love. Atheism is the only means of ensuring the happiness of the world, which has been rendered impossible by the wars brought about by theologians. The soul is only the thinking part of the body, and with the body it passes away. When death comes, the farce is over (la farce est jouée), therefore let us take our pleasure while we can. La Mettrie has been called the Aristippus of modern materialism. So strong was the feeling against him that in 1748 he was compelled to quit Holland for Berlin, where Frederick the Great not only allowed him to practise as a physician, but appointed him court reader. There La Mettrie wrote his major book "Discours sur le bonheur" (1748), which caused the "ban" by leading enlightenment thinkers as Voltaire, Diderot, D'Holbach. His collected Oeuvres philosophiques appeared after his death in several editions, published in London, Berlin and Amsterdam respectively.


Selected bibliography

The chief authority for his life is the Eloge written by Frederick the Great (printed in Asszat's ed. of Homme machine). In modern times La Mettrie has been judged less severely; see F.A. Lange, Geschichte des Materialismus (Eng. trans. by E. C. Thomas, ii. 1880); Nre Qupat (i.e. Ren Paquet), La Mettrie, sa vie et ses oeuvres (1873, with complete history of his works); J.E. Poritzky, J.O. de Lamettrie. Sein Leben und seine Werke (1900); F. Picavet, "La Mettrie et la critique allemande", in Compte rendu des séances de l'Acad. des Sciences morales et politiques, xxxii. (1889), a reply to German rehabilitations of La Mettrie.


External links

  • La Mettrie within «LSR - a paraphilosophical project» (http://www.lsr-projekt.de/poly/enlm.html) (mostly in German)

This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Julien Offray de La Mettrie Summary (1356 words)
The son of a tradesman, Julien de La Mettrie was born in Saint-Malo in Brittany on Dec. 25, 1709.
La Mettrie taught that atheism was the only road to happiness and that the purpose of human life was to experience the pleasures of the senses.
Julien Offray de La Mettrie (December 25, 1709 - November 11,1751) was a French physician and philosopher, the earliest of the materialist writers of the Enlightenment.
Julien Offray de La Mettrie - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (536 words)
Julien Offray de La Mettrie (December 25, 1709 - November 11, 1751) was a French physician and philosopher, the earliest of the materialist writers of the Enlightenment.
During an attack of fever he made observations on himself with reference to the action of quickened circulation upon thought, which led him to the conclusion that psychical phenomena were to be accounted for as the effects of organic changes in the brain and nervous system.
Sein Leben und seine Werke (1900); F. Picavet, "La Mettrie et la critique allemande", in Compte rendu des séances de l'Acad.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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