Innate goodness
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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- | [[Camille Paglia]] considers [[Sade]]'s ''[[The 120 Days of Sodom]]'' a "satirical response to [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]]" in particular, and the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] concept of man's [[innate goodness]] in general. Much of the sexual violence in the book draws from the notorious historical cases of [[Gilles de Rais]] and [[Elizabeth Báthory]]. | + | |
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- | In his 1988 ''[[Political Theory and Modernity]]'', [[William E. Connolly]] analyzes Sade's ''[[Philosophy in the Bedroom]]'' as an argument against earlier political philosophers, notably [[Rousseau]] and [[Hobbes]], and their attempts to reconcile nature, reason and virtue as basis of ordered society. | + | |
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- | * [[Friedrich Melchior, Baron von Grimm]] | + | |
- | * [[Baron d'Holbach]] | + | |
- | * [[Epinay]] | + | |
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Revision as of 14:01, 27 March 2010
- redirectNoble savage