JOINT SESSION
17.00-18.30
Massey Room, Balliol College
Mara van der Lugt (Corpus Christi College)
Of faux savants and faux Philosophes: quarrels and morals in Bayle’s Dictionnaire Historique et Critique
Pierre Bayle (1647-1706)
Abstract
Even a cursory glance at the history of the
production of Pierre Bayle’s famous Dictionnaire Historique et Critique will
show that the vital years of its initial genesis (1689-1696) ran parallel to
the hottest years of controversy between Bayle and his friend-turned-enemy
Pierre Jurieu: 1690-1697. This was only partly a coincidence: for although the
idea of a dictionary was born independently of the Jurieu-debate, the work
itself was deeply influenced by the years of conflict during which it was
created, and each of the editions still bears the imprint of these years. Most
importantly, before the polemic with Jurieu Bayle had emphasised the irenic
side of the Republic of Letters in his scholarly journal Nouvelles de la
République des Lettres: in the Dictionnaire he reframed the ideal of this
Republic in a way that stressed its polemical side while attempting to install
an ethics of scholarly debate.
This paper will argue that the polemic with Jurieu,
which strongly informed Bayle’s thought on the Republic of Letters and on
scholarly ‘warfare’, is a crucial context for the elaboration of the
Dictionnaire, and therefore essential for understanding some of its central
themes. It will trace the way in which Bayle throughout the Dictionnaire is
attempting to construct an ethics for the Republic of Letters through
reconstructing its practice in the lives of ancient and modern scholars and
philosophers: building morals on the basis of quarrels. Finally, it will examine
how this ethical-polemical undertone introduced several tensions into the
project of the dictionary that would remain unresolved; and how the ghost of
Jurieu came back to haunt the author of the Dictionnaire.
Mara van der Lugt studied Philosophy at Erasmus
University in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, and as part of the Erasmus Research
Master in Early Modern Intellectual History spent 6 months in Oxford to write
an extended thesis on the Irish philosopher John Toland's views on religion.
Based in Corpus Christi College, Oxford, she is now in the 2nd year of a DPhil
in History on the 17th-century French philosopher Pierre Bayle, focusing
especially on how to interpret his ‘Dictionnaire Historique et Critique’. She
is supervised by Professor Laurence Brockliss (History) and Dr Kate Tunstall
(Modern Languages).
Helena Taylor (St Anne's College)
Narratives of the disgraced poet: Ovid, Exile and the Court of Louis XIV
Frontispiece, C. Dassoucy, L’Ovide en belle humeur
(Paris: Pépingué, 1653) 2nd éd.
Helena is in the second year of her DPhil in French at St Anne’s College. Her thesis, provisionally entitled ‘Lives of Ovid in French Writing: 1666-1713’ looks at the representations and uses of Ovid in late seventeenth/early eighteenth-century French writing. She did her BA in Latin and French and her MA in French literature at Worcester College.
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