99 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
99 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
Sebastien Faure
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Twelve Proofs of the Non-Existence of God
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Introduction
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Sebastien Faure was a leading member of the French anarchist movement for half a
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century, and one of the most effective of all anarchist propagandists, though he
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is little known outside France
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Auguste Louis Sebastien Faure was born in 1858 into a middle-class Catholic
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family in Saint-Etienne (near Lyon in central France). He was very well educated
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at Jesuit schools and intended for the priesthood, but after his father's death
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he went into the insurance business. After military service, he spent a year in
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England. He married and moved to Bordeaux (in south-western France). He soon
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lost his faith and became a socialist. He stood unsuccessfully as a candidate of
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the Parti Ouvrier (the Marxist Workers Party) in the Gironde in the 1885
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election, but under the influence of Peter Kropotkin, Elis,e Reclus and Joseph
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Tortelier he moved towards anarchism.
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In 1888 he broke with the socialists, settled in Paris, and devoted the rest of
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his life to a career as a full-time propagandist for anarchism. He and his wife
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separated, though they were reconciled many years later. He became a very active
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writer and speaker, earning a living from giving lectures all over the country.
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He never pretended to be an original thinker, but he was an effective
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populariser of other people's ideas. He took a moderate line in the movement,
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and advocated an eclectic approach which attempted to unite all tendencies. He
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wasn't convinced by the new syndicalist movement of the late 1890s, but was an
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active trade unionist himself. He wasn't an individualist, but took
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individualism seriously. He didn't support violent methods, but sympathised with
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those who used them. He was by no means a mere armchair theorist, but was
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frequently searched, arrested or prosecuted and occasionally imprisoned for his
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activities.
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At first he was closely associated with Louise Michel, but he soon became a
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major figure in his own right, and one of the best-known anarchists in the
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country. In 1894 he was one of the defendants in the Trial of the Thirty, when
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the French authorities tried unsuccessfully to suppress the anarchist movement
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by implicating its leaders in criminal conspiracies, and was acquitted. He was
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involved in several papers at various times in several parts of France, the most
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important of which was Le Libertaire (The Libertarian), which he started with
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Louise Michel in November 1895 and which appeared weekly on and off until June
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1914. He was active in the Dreyfusard movement, replacing Le Libertaire with the
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daily Journal du Peuple during 1899. He also produced Le Quotidien (The Daily)
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in Lyon during 1901-1902. From 1903 he was active in the birth-control movement.
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From 1904 to 1917 he ran a libertarian school called La Ruche (The Beehive) at
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Rambouillet (near Paris).
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He was a moderate opponent of the First World War, and issued a manifesto Vers
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la Paix (Towards Peace) at the end of 1914. He produced a general left-wing
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weekly Ce qu'il faut dire (What Must Be Said) from April 1916 to December 1917.
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In 1918 and 1921 he served short prison sentences for sexual offences involving
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young girls; this damaged but didn't destroy his career.
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After the war he revived Le Libertaire, which continued from 1919 until 1939. In
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1921 he led the reaction in the French anarchist movement against the growing
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Communist dictatorship in the Soviet Union. In January 1922 he began La Revue
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Anarchiste (Anarchist Review), the leading monthly magazine of the French
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anarchist movement between the world wars. In the late 1920s he opposed the
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sectarianism both of the authoritarian Platformists and of their critics, and
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advocated what he called an `Anarchist Synthesis' in which individualism,
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libertarian communism and anarcho-syndicalism could co-exist. In 1927 he led a
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secession from the national Union Anarchiste, and in 1928 he helped to found the
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Association des F,d,ralistes Anarchistes and to begin its paper, La Voix
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Libertaire (Libertarian Voice), which lasted from 1928 until 1939. He was
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reconciled with the national organisation and Le Libertaire in 1934. During the
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1930s he took part in the peace movement as a prominent member of the
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International League of Fighters for Peace. In 1940 he took refuge from the war
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in Royan (near Bordeaux), where he died in 1942.
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Apart from innumerable articles and lectures (many of which were printed as
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pamphlets and some of which were collected as books), several anarchist and
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atheist pamphlets (a few of which were translated into English), and accounts of
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La Ruche, his main work was an ambitious trilogy of books La Douleur
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universelle: Philosophie libertaire (Universal Sorrow: Libertarian Philosophy),
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an account of the problems caused by authority, which was published in 1895;
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Medicastres: Philosophie libertaire (Quacks: Libertarian Philosophy), an account
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of false solutions to the problems caused by authority, which was not published;
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and Mon communisme: Le bonheur universel (My Communism: Universal Happiness), a
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fictional account of libertarian revolution, which was published in 1921. In
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1923 he published L'Imposture religieuse (Religious Imposture), a full-length
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attack on religion (of which a revised edition appeared in 1948). In 1926 he
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began his most ambitious project the preparation of the
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Encyclopedie Anarchiste, one of the most impressive and valuable libertarian
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publications ever produced. This appeared from 1927 as a series of separate
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parts and then in 1932 in a set of massive volumes. The whole work, containing
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nearly 3,000 large pages, consisted of a general alphabetical reference-book
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with entries contributed by leading anarchist writers from all over the world.
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Faure was the editor-in-chief, and also the author of many of the most important
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articles.
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* * *
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The pamphlet Douze preuves de l'inexistence de Dieu, which was based on a
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lecture he gave many times, was first published in Paris in 1914. It was
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frequently reprinted, and also occasionally translated. Just before his death a
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translation by Aurora Alleva and D. S. Menico was published in the United States
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as Does God Exist?. The present translation has been made by Nicolas Walter. As
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will be seen, Faure directs his arguments against the God of the theologians,
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especially the Roman Catholic fathers and doctors of the Church, rather than
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against the God of the philosophers, and his case was fitted to his audience of
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French working people a century ago.
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