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Charles Bernard Renouvier

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Region
  
Western Philosophy

Role
  
Philosopher

Main interests
  
Metaphysics

Influenced
  
William James


Notable ideas
  
Neo-criticisme

Name
  
Charles Renouvier

Education
  
Ecole Polytechnique

Charles Bernard Renouvier httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons77

Born
  
January 1, 1815 (
1815-01-01
)
Montpellier

Era
  
19th-century philosophy

Died
  
September 1, 1903, Prades, France

Books
  
Uchronie (l'Utopie dans l'histoire)

Similar People
  
Immanuel Kant, William James, Hermann Lotze, Pierre Janet, Charles Sanders Peirce

Schools of thought
  
Continental philosophy

Charles Bernard Renouvier ([ʁənuvje]; January 1, 1815 – September 1, 1903) was a French philosopher.

Contents

Biography

Charles B. Renouvier was born in Montpellier and educated in Paris at the École Polytechnique. He took an early interest in politics. Renouvier never held public office, spending his time writing, away from public scrutiny.

Thought

Renouvier was the first Frenchman after Nicolas Malebranche to formulate a complete idealistic system, and had a vast influence on the development of French thought. His system is based on Immanuel Kant's , as his chosen term "néo-criticisme" indicates; but it is a transformation rather than a continuation of Kantianism.

The two leading ideas are the dislike of the "unknowable" in all its forms, and a reliance on the validity of personal experience. The former accounts for Renouvier's acceptance of Kant's phenomenalism, combined with rejection of the thing-in-itself. It accounts, too, for his polemic on the one hand against a Substantial Soul, a Buddhistic Absolute, an Infinite Spiritual Substance; on the other hand against the no less mysterious material or dynamic substratum by which naturalistic Monism explains the world. He holds that nothing exists except presentations, which are not merely sensational, and have an objective aspect no less than a subjective. To explain the formal organization of our experience he adopts a modified version of the Kantian categories.

The insistence on the validity of personal experience leads Renouvier to a yet more important divergence from Kant in his treatment of volition. Liberty, he says, in a much wider sense than Kant, is man's fundamental characteristic. Human freedom acts in the phenomenal, not in an imaginary noumenal sphere. Belief is not intellectual merely, but is determined by an act of will affirming what we hold to be morally good.

In his religious views Renouvier makes a considerable approximation to Gottfried Leibniz. He holds that we are rationally justified in affirming human immortality and the existence of a finite God who is to be a constitutional ruler, but not a despot, over the souls of men. He nevertheless regards atheism as preferable to a belief in an infinite Deity.

Renouvier's dislike of the unknowable also led him to take up arms against the notion of an actual infinite. He believed that an infinite sum must be a name for something incomplete. If one begins to count, "one, two, three ..." there never comes a time when one is entitled to shout "infinity"! Infinity is a project, never a fact, in the neocritical view.

Renouvier became an important influence upon the thought of American psychologist and philosopher William James. James wrote that "but for the decisive impression made on me in the 1870s by his masterly advocacy of pluralism, I might never have got free from the monistic superstition under which I had grown up."

Works

  • Essais de critique générale (1854–64)
  • Science de la morale (1869)
  • Uchronie (1876)
  • Comment je suis arrivé à cette conclusion (1885)
  • Esquisse d'une classification systématique des doctrines philosophiques (1885–86)
  • Philosophie analytique de l'histoire (1896–97)
  • La Nouvelle Monadologie (1899)
  • Histoire et solution des problèmes métaphysiques (1901)
  • Victor Hugo: Le Poète (1893)
  • Victor Hugo: Le Philosophe (1900)
  • Les Dilemmes de la métaphysique pure (1901)
  • Le Personnalisme (1903)
  • Critique de la doctrine de Kant (1906)
  • References

    Charles Bernard Renouvier Wikipedia