The Best of All Possible Worlds?
Publisher,Brill Academic Pub
Publication Date,
Format, Hardcover
Weight, 453.59 g
No. of Pages, 224
The reign of philosophical optimism, or the doctrine of the 'best of all possible worlds', in modern European philosophy began in 1710 with the publication of Leibniz's Theodicy, about God's goodness and wisdom, divine and human freedom, and the meaningof evil. It ended on November 1, 1755 with the Lisbon Earthquake, which was followed by numerous attacks against optimism, starting with Voltaire's Poâeme sur le dâesastre de Lisbonne and Candide. But the years between both events were intense. In this book, Hernâan D. Caro offers the first comprehensive survey of the criticisms of optimism before the infamous earthquake, a time when the foundations of what has been called the 'debacle of the perfect world' were first laid--