Claude Henri de Rouvroy, comte de Saint Simon

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Claude Henri de Rouvroy de Saint Simon

Дата рождения:
Место рождения: Paris, Paris, Île-de-France, France (Франция)
Смерть: 19 мая 1825 (64)
Paris, Paris, Île-de-France, France (Франция)
Место погребения: Paris, Paris, Île-de-France, France
Ближайшие родственники:

Сын Balthasar Henri de Rouvroy de Saint Simon, comte de Sandricourt и Blanche Elisabeth de Rouvroy de Saint Simon
Бывший муж Alexandrine Sophie Goury de Champgrand
Брат Adélaïde De Rouvroy De Saint-Simon De Sandricourt; Claude-Henri De Rouvroy De Saint-Simon De Sandricourt; Marie-Louise De Rouvroy De Saint-Simon De Sandricourt; Adrienne De Rouvroy De Saint-Simon De Sandricourt; Louis De Rouvroy De Saint-Simon De Sandricourt и ещё 3

Менеджер: George J. Homs
Последнее обновление:

About Claude Henri de Rouvroy, comte de Saint Simon

  • Claude Henri de Rouvroy, comte de Saint Simon - Wikipedia - Français
  • Claude Henri de Rouvroy, comte de Saint Simon (1760-1825) est le fondateur du Saint-Simonisme. Économiste et philosophe français, ses idées ont eu une postérité et une influence sur la plupart des philosophes du XIXe siècle. Il est le penseur de la société industrielle française, qui était en train de remplacer l'ancien régime. L'historien André Piettre le décrit par la formule : «le dernier des gentilhommes et le premier des socialistes» .
  • Accessoirement, il est le cousin éloigné du duc de Saint-Simon, célèbre mémorialiste de la cour de Louis XIV et de la Régence.

Claude Henri de Rouvroy, comte de Saint-Simon

He is often referred to as Henri de Saint-Simon (17 October 1760, Paris – 19 May 1825, Paris) was a French early socialist theorist whose thought influenced the foundations of various 19th century philosophies; perhaps most notably Marxism, positivism and the discipline of sociology. He was born an aristocrat; the political ideologies he adopted in later life, however, do not fall into the aristocratic category.

In opposition to the feudal and military system he advocated a form of state-technocratic socialism, an arrangement where industrialists would lead society and found a national community based upon cooperation and technological progress, which would be capable of eliminating poverty of the lower classes. In place of the church, he felt the direction of society should fall to the men of science. Men who are fitted to organize society for productive labour are entitled to rule it.

Early years

Saint-Simon was born in Paris as a French aristocrat. Although he was born an aristocrat, the political ideologies he adopted in his later life do not fall into the category that people today consider aristocratic. He belonged to a younger branch of the family of the duc de Saint-Simon. "When he was a young man, being of a restless disposition...he went to America where he entered into American service and took part in the siege of Yorktown under General Washington."

From his youth, Saint-Simon was highly ambitious. He ordered his valet to wake him every morning with, "Remember, monsieur le comte, that you have great things to do." Among his early schemes was one to connect the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans by a canal, and another to construct a canal from Madrid to the sea.

At the beginning of the French Revolution in 1789, Saint-Simon quickly endorsed the revolutionary ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity. In the early years of the revolution, Saint-Simon devoted himself to organize a big industrial structure, in order to found a scientific school of improvement. He needed to raise some funds to achieve his objectives, which he did by land speculation. That was only possible in the first few years of the revolution, because of the growing instability of political situation in France, which prevented him to continue his financial activities and, more than that, put his own life at risk. During the Terror period, Saint-Simon was made prisoner for being suspect of counter-revolution activities. He was released in 1794, by the fall of Robespierre's reign of Terror. After he recovered his freedom, Saint-Simon constructed a fortune, which was stolen by his business partner. Then, he decided to devote himself to political studies and research

Career

When he was nearly 40 he went through a varied course of study and experiment to enlarge and clarify his view of things. One of these experiments was an unhappy marriage, undertaken so that he might have a salon. After a year's duration the marriage was dissolved by mutual consent. The result of his experiments was that he found himself completely impoverished, and lived in penury for the remainder of his life. The first of his numerous writings, Lettres d'un habitant de Genève, appeared in 1802; but his early writings were mostly scientific and political. In 1817 he began in a treatise entitled L'Industrie to propound his socialistic views, which he further developed in L'Organisateur (1819), a periodical on which Augustin Thierry and Auguste Comte collaborated.

The first publication caused a sensation, though one that brought few converts. A couple of years later in his writer career, Saint-Simon found himself ruined, and was forced to work for subsistence. After a few attempts of taking back his money from his partner, the French philosopher received financial support from Diard, a former employee, and could publish his second book in 1807: Introduction aux travaux scientifiques du XIX siècle. Diard died in 1810 and Saint-Simon found him self poor again, and also sick at this time. He was even sent to a sanatorium in 1813, but at the same year received help from relatives, which gave him time to recover his health and obtain some intellectual recognition in Europe. In 1821 appeared Du système industriel, and in 1823–1824 Catéchisme des industriels. In 1823, disappointed with the absence of the expected results of his writing (that would guide society to the social improvement), he attempted suicide in despair by remarkably shooting himself in the head six times, losing his sight in one eye. Only very late in his career did he link up with a few ardent disciples. The last and most important expression of his views is the Nouveau Christianisme (1825), which he left unfinished.

He was buried in Le Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, France.

Ideas

See also: Saint-Simonianism

Politics

Politics have a central role in his whole studies, because he considers that as the emergence of a new society (industrial society) happens, new politics would be just as needed. Saint-Simon believed that the emergence of the industrial society would bring to light new politics, which would be founded above the neutralization of the power by itself, from its dispersion. New politics, the "non-power politics", linked to the industrialization, the science and even to a new religion, would bring the social improvement, that would culminate in the utopian socialist society, imagined by Saint-Simon.

In "Eighth Letter", at L'Industrie, the Saint-Simon wonders about the existence of a general principle of politics. He establishes seven statements that considers the more general and certain assertions of political science, such as: the production of useful things is the only reasonable objective that industries can propose to itself, the government will always affect the industry when it acts outside limits; producers, for being the ones who pay taxes, are the only useful men to society and, therefore, the only ones who can vote, men can never fight each other without decreasing production; the desire to subjugate other people is harmful because it reduces the production, as the industries improve, moral is improved, men should consider themselves a society of workers. From such considerations, Saint-Simon concludes that political science can only be understood and synthesized as the "science of production".

Early Socialism

Heavily influenced by the absence of social privilege he saw in the early United States, Saint-Simon renounced his aristocratic title and came to favor a form of meritocracy, becoming convinced that science was the key to progress and that it would be possible to develop a society based on objective principles. As a thinker Saint-Simon was not particularly systematic, but his great influence on modern thought is undeniable, both as the historic founder of French socialism, which influenced the thought of Karl Marx, and as suggesting much of Auguste Comte's theory of industrial progress, which in turn influenced Émile Durkheim. Apart from the details of his socialist teaching, which are vague and unsystematic, the ideas of Saint-Simon as to the reconstruction of society are very simple.

One of these ideas is "the Hand of Greed", the image Saint-Simon uses to describe the basic avarice of human beings. In the simplest forms of society, human beings try to survive. All people therefore have the motivation to try to gain a higher place in society, no matter how insignificant the higher statuses at which they aim may be. To create this form of utopian socialism, society must, through education, eradicate this way of thinking and behaviour over time. His opinions were conditioned by the French Revolution, and by the feudal and military system still prevalent in France. The key focus of Saint-Simon's socialism was on administrative efficiency and industrialism, and a belief that science was the key to progress. In opposition to the destructive liberalism of the Revolution, he insisted on the necessity of a new and positive reorganization of society. So far was he from advocating fresh social revolt that he appealed to Louis XVIII to begin building the new order.

Saint-Simon is considered to be a utopian socialist. For this doctrine, industrial society was divided into working people and non-working people (whom he called "thieves"). However, social improvement in his ideal society would depend on full employment on the one hand, and on the other hand on the absence of exploitation of individuals by each other. Society would be subdivided into three classes: owners, workers, and the wise and artists (who would rule society).

Feudalism and Aristocracy

In opposition to the feudal and military system–the former aspect of which had been strengthened by the restoration–he advocated a form of technocratic socialism, an arrangement whereby industrial chiefs should control society. In place of the medieval church, spiritual direction of society should fall to the men of science. Men who are fitted to organize society for productive labour are entitled to rule it. The conflict between labour and capital emphasized by later socialism is not present in Saint-Simon's work, but it is assumed that the industrial chiefs, to whom the control of production is to fall, shall rule in the interest of society. Later on the cause of the poor receives greater attention, until in his greatest work, The New Christianity, it takes on the form of a religion. This development of his ideas occasioned his final quarrel with Comte.

Religious Views

Prior to the publication of the Nouveau Christianisme, Saint-Simon had not concerned himself with theology. In this work he starts from a belief in God, and his object in the treatise is to reduce Christianity to its simple and essential elements. He does this by clearing it of the dogmas and other excrescences and defects that he says gathered round the Catholic and Protestant forms of it. He propounds as the comprehensive formula of the new Christianity this precept: "The whole of society ought to strive towards the amelioration of the moral and physical existence of the poorest class; society ought to organize itself in the way best adapted for attaining this end." This principle became the watchword of the entire Saint-Simon school of thought.

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Хронология Claude Henri de Rouvroy, comte de Saint Simon

1760
17 октября 1760
Paris, Paris, Île-de-France, France (Франция)
1825
19 мая 1825
Возраст 64
Paris, Paris, Île-de-France, France (Франция)
????
Cimetière Père-Lachaise, Paris, Paris, Île-de-France, France (Франция)