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Charron, Pierre
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Charron, Pierre (1541–1603)

French writer and preacher. A close friend of Montaigne, he is best known for his book De la Sagesse/Wisdom (1601), in which he argued for religious tolerance. The book's sceptical claim that it is impossible to know anything for certain – a view severely censured by the Sorbonne and leading figures in the Catholic Church – made him a forerunner of 17th-century deism.

Born in Paris, the son of a bookseller, he was one of a family of 25 children. After studying law at Orléans and Bourges he practised as an advocate, but became disenchanted with the profession. He turned to the church and enjoyed a distinguished career as a preacher, becoming chaplain-in-ordinary to Margaret of Valois, first wife of Henry of Navarre. In 1588 he returned to Paris determined to join a religious order, but, when none would accept him because of his age, he retired to Bordeaux where he became a close friend of Montaigne, whose scepticism he shared.

Charron published anonymously the treatise Les Trois vérités/The Three Truths (1593), which combined an apology for Catholicism with an attack on the Protestant religious leader Philippe du Plessis-Mornay.



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com ITEC France 55 Pierre Charron 75008 Paris-France Tel.
His reading of lessons from Theodor Zwinger's Theatrum vitae humanae--a work of clear Aristotelian influence--Justus Lipsius and Pierre Charron shows how the essayist alters the Aristotelian-Ciceronian definition of prudence centered on foresight by "reconceptualizing judgment in all its problematic necessity" (44).
Pierre Charron, Christian Chartier, Pierre Simoneau, Louis-Claude Trudel, Pierre Paquette and Robert Lorange.
 
 
 
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