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Pierre Guillaume Frédéric le Play

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Name
  
Pierre Frederic

Role
  
Engineer

Education
  
Ecole Polytechnique


Pierre Guillaume Frederic le Play httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Full Name
  
Pierre Guillaume Frederic le Play

Born
  
11 April 1806 (
1806-04-11
)
La Riviere-Saint-Sauveur, France

Institution
  
Ecole Polytechnique, Ecoles des mines

Influences
  
Joseph de Maistre, Louis de Bonald

Died
  
April 5, 1882, Paris, France

Books
  
Frederic Le Play on Family, Work, and Social Change

Influenced
  
Francois-Rene de La Tour du Pin, Chambly de La Charce

Influenced by
  
Joseph de Maistre, Louis Gabriel Ambroise de Bonald

Similar People
  
Edmond Demolins, Joseph de Maistre, Charles Maurras, Auguste Comte, Hippolyte Taine

Pierre Guillaume Frédéric le Play | Wikipedia audio article


Pierre Guillaume Frédéric Le Play ([lə.plɛ]; April 11, 1806 – April 5, 1882) was a French engineer, sociologist and economist.

Contents

Life

Pierre Guillaume Frédéric le Play httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonscc

The son of a custom-house official, Le Play was educated at the École Polytechnique and the École des Mines. In 1834, he was appointed chairman of the permanent committee of mining statistics. In 1840, he became engineer-in-chief and professor of metallurgy at the École des Mines, where he became inspector in 1848.

For nearly a quarter of a century Le Play travelled around Europe, collecting a vast amount of material bearing on the social and economic condition of the working classes. In 1855, he published Les Ouvriers Européens, a series of 36 monographs on the budgets of typical families selected from a wide range of industries. This work was crowned with the Montyon prize conferred by the Académie des Sciences. In 1856, Le Play founded the Société internationale des études pratiques d'économie sociale, which has devoted its energies principally to forwarding social studies on the lines laid down by its founder. The journal of the society, La Réforme Sociale, founded in 1881, is published fortnightly.

Napoleon III, who held him in high esteem, entrusted him with the organization of the Exhibition of 1855, and appointed him counsellor of state, commissioner general of the Exhibition of 1867, senator of the empire and Grand Officer of the Légion d'honneur.

Initially an atheist, Le Play gradually became convinced of the need for religion. In 1864, he published an essay defending Christianity against Darwinism and Scepticism. He converted to Roman Catholicism in 1879, three years before his death. Blum (2004) included Le Play in his anthology of French counter-revolutionary thinkers.

Works

  • (1864). La Réforme Sociale.
  • (1871). L'Organisation de la Famille.
  • (1875). La Constitution de l'Angleterre. (in collaboration with M. Delaire)
  • In English translation

  • (1872). The Organization of Labor in Accordance With Custom and the Law of the Decalogue. Philadelphia: Claxton, Remsen & Haffelfinger.
  • (1962). "Household Economy." In: Parsons, Talcott et al., editors, Theories of Society. The Free Press of Glencoe, Inc.
  • (1982). Frederic Le Play on Family, Work, and Social Change. Silver, Catherine Bodard, editor and translator, University of Chicago Press.
  • (2004). "Social Reform in France." In: Blum, Christopher Olaf, editor and translator, Critics of the Enlightenment. Wilmington DE: ISI Books, pp. 197–258.
  • References

    Pierre Guillaume Frédéric le Play Wikipedia