Voltair and Rousseau's Quest For Enlightenment.

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Brad Crane

September 24, 2002

English 202

Dr. Klimek

        Voltair and Rousseau's Quest For Enlightenment

        

        The Enlightenment was a period of social change in the 18th century in which people started to question previously accepted ideas and began to think for themselves.  In Voltaire's "Candide" and Rousseau's "Confessions", both authors wrote to encourage change in their society's.  While Voltaire uses a comedic short story to bring attention to the problems he has with society, Rousseau uses a detailed autobiography to criticize the way that authority figures wrongly influence young people in his society.

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        In "Candide", Voltaire pokes fun at many of the different parts of his society.  Voltaire uses the church, the government, philosophers, and war as examples of a greedy society with stubborn, out of date ideas.  When Candide asks the orator for food and the orator is not pleased with Candide's answer to his question, the orator replies, "Thou deservest not to eat or to drink" (p. 28).  Here, Voltaire is trying to show how corrupt the church was in his society.  Voltaire believed that the church was biased about who they helped and that this was wrong because the church ...

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