| Frontispiece | ||
| Prologue | ||
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Chapter I | Voltaire and the Encyclopedists |
| Chapter II | The Hegelians | |
| Chapter III | Heaven on Earth | |
| Chapter IV | Empire of the Czars | |
| Chapter V | Llano Estacado | |
| Chapter VI | Dawn of the New Age | |
| Chapter VII | Man of Steel | |
| Chapter VIII | Wolves are Closing In | |
| Chapter IX | Roman à clef | |
| Chapter X | Shifting Alliances | |
| Chapter XI | Cold War | |
| Chapter XII | Lost Empire | |
| Chapter XIII | Apre le Deluge | |
| Chapter XIV | Paper Centerfolds | |
| Postscript |
Voltaire and the Encyclopedists
The memories of Utopias were located in the minds of the philosophers of the Enlightenment, crystallized in the mind of Voltaire, materialized in the mind of Karl Marx, and realized by Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin. Ideals of the Enlightenment were Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite. Its apostle, primus inter pares, was Voltaire.
![]() Voltaire (1694-1778) |
Voltaire disliked monarchical theocracies with their prisons of the body and the orthodox religions with their prisons of the mind and had the courage to stand up against the powerful secular rulers and vindictive orthodox ideologues. His motto was
'Courage to doubt, to investigate, and to understand'
which gained him numerous imprisonments and enemies. Voltaire is best known for his sharp, facetious sentences, such as
'Common sense is not so common,'
perspicuity embedded in sentences such as
'What more beautiful rule of conduct then Confucius'
has ever been given to
humankind since the world began?'
and far-sighted insights into the grim reality of the nuclear age, such as that
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the particularistic religious precepts of Judaism may |
When he was queried about the origins of religion, Voltaire answered that
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'religion began when the cretin met the con-man.' |
Among the Voltaire's maxims are:
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'Think for yourself, and let others enjoy the privilege to do so, too.'
'As for myself, all I ask is freedom of mind,
'I disapprove of what you say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say
it' |
Voltaire disliked monarchical theocracies with their prisons of the body and the orthodox religions with their prisons of the mind and had the courage to stand up against the powerful secular rulers and vindictive orthodox ideologues.
![]() Land of Desolation |
Voltaire's opus magnum is
Dictionnaire Philosophique
(1764), a compendium of his main ideas. Its 'Religion' entry is excerpted here
as follows:
Last night I was absorbed in contemplation when one of those genii who fill the
intermundane spaces came down to me and transported me into a desert all covered
with piled up bones. I asked
“Where have you brought me?"
"To the land of desolation,"
he answered. "Come and see for yourself, but first, you must weep." He pointed
the piles of bones and said
These are the twenty-three thousand Jews who danced before a calf, with the
twenty-four thousand who were killed while lying with Midianitish women. The
number of those massacred for such errors and offences amounts to nearly three
hundred thousand.
These are the bones of the Christians slaughtered by each other for metaphysical
disputes. They are divided into several heaps of four centuries each. One heap
would have mounted right to the sky; they had to be divided.
Here, said the spirit, are the
twelve million of North American Indians killed in their country because they
had not been baptized.
"Since you wish to instruct me," I said, “tell me if there have been peoples
other than the Christians and the Jews in whom zeal and religion transformed
into fanaticism, have inspired so many horrible cruelties." Yes," he said. “The
Muslims.
As for the other nations there has not been one right from the existence of the
world which has ever made a purely religious war.
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Enlightenment and the French Revolution
In France, Voltaire's Dictionnaire Philosophique (1764) is associated with the story of Chevalier de La Barre. Jean-Francois de La Barre was born in 1745, orphaned at an early age and raised by his aunt, the abbess of Willancourt. On August 9, 1765, the wooden crucifix on the Pont-Neuf was defaced. Priests harangued parishioners to reveal all that they could know of this sacrilege. One parishioner recalled that Jean-Francois de La Barre did not greet the religious procession at the time of the last Corpus Christi. While searching his room at the abbey of Willancourt, Voltaire's Philosophical Dictionary was found. Jean-Francois de La Barre was tortured and on July 1, 1766 decapitated. His body was thrown to the flames, together with the seized Voltaire's Dictionnaire Philosophique. He was 19 years old.
![]() John Adams (1797-1801) |
![]() Thomas Jefferson (1801-1809) |
Enlightenment and the American Republic
In the history of the United States, up
to now, there were only two father-son presidential successions: the Adams and
the Bush dynasties, both philo-Semitic, pro-British, and anti-French. In a
letter criticizing Voltaire, Adams wrote:
'How is it possible Voltaire should represent the Hebrews in such a contemptible
light? They are the most glorious nation that ever inhabited this Earth. The
Romans and their Empire were but a Bauble in comparison of the Jews. They have
given religion to three quarters of the Globe and have influenced the affairs of
Mankind more, and more happily, than any other Nation ancient or modern. I
believe that once restored to an independent government, the Jews would wear
away some of the asperities and peculiarities of their character and become
liberal Unitarian Christians for their Jeh-vah is our Jeh-vah and their G-d of
Abraham Isaac and Jacob is our G-d.'
Like President Bush I, President Adams I was a single-term President. Like the
Bush's I son George W. Bush who lost the popular vote and was not elected but
nominated by the Supreme Court, Adams' son John Quincy Adams lost the popular
vote and was nominated by the House of Representatives. During his
administration, President Adams I rhetoric provoked a virulent frenzy of the
anti-Gallicism. Congress appropriated large sums of money for the Army and the
Navy, and passed the Alien and Sedition acts, bearing resemblance to the PATRIOT
legislation passed during the Bush II administration 200 years later.
The United States Navy initiated hostilities against the French shipping, but
before the naval encounters escalated into a war, Adams lost election to Thomas
Jefferson, the former American legate to the French government, who had no
inclination to continue Adams' warmongering and, together with James Madison
(1809-1817) maintained our neutrality during the early stages of the Napoleonic
Wars (1804-1815) and extended help to France in 1812. This lead to the British
invasion of the United States, burning of Washington in 1914, and their defeat
by the United States Armed Forces under General Andrew Jackson in 1815.
Both Jefferson and Madison were the principal framers of our Constitution.
Thomas Jefferson was instrumental in drafting the Declaration of Independence
where he told the British, a nation that initiated more wars than any other and
subjugated millions that we, the Americans, do not wish to be a part of their
Empire that at that time spanned the Earth. James Madison who at his time was
called 'The Father of the Constitution,' was the framer of the Bill of Rights
which opens with the statement that
'Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or
the press ...'
In a letter to Alexander Smyth (1822) Thomas Jefferson wrote:
'It is between fifty and sixty years since I read the Book Of Revelation, and I
then considered it as merely the ravings of a maniac, no more worthy nor capable
of explanation than the incoherencies of our own nightly dreams... What has no
meaning admits no explanation.'
Thomas Jefferson was the enemy of the religious right, of the people who at his
time as in ours want the church be the state established religion as it is in
England and Israel. They want to subvert our Constitution based on ideals of the
philosophers of the Enlightenment and convert our government to a theocracy. In
this context, discussing new European laws against the freedom of speech, Nick
Herbert, author of Quantum Reality: Beyond the New Physics says:
'I say the truth does not need the protection of legislation--only falsehoods do--something I might have stolen from Thomas Jefferson who said: "I swear eternal enmity against any tyranny over the mind of men." The freedom to say what you think is the heart of all good science and is the heart of what it used to mean to be a good American.'