Louis Lavelle

Louis Lavelle

Louis Lavelle
Born July 15, 1883
Saint-Martin-de-Villeréal
Died September 1, 1951
Parranquet
Era 20th-century philosophy
Region Western philosophy
School Continental philosophy
French Spiritualism
Main interests
Metaphysics, Morality
Notable ideas
Classification of values, participation in the Absolute (participation à l'Absolu)

Louis Lavelle (July 15, 1883 – September 1, 1951) was a French philosopher. His magnum opus is La Dialectique de l'éternel présent (1922), a systematic metaphysical work. Lavelle's other principal works include De l'Être (1928), De l'Acte (1937), Du Temps et de l'Eternité (1945), and De l'Âme Humaine (1951).

Biography

From the inside dust jacket cover of his book Evil and Suffering:[2] "Louis Lavelle was born in France in 1883 and died there in 1951, one of the most prominent Christian Philosophers of our time. He was Professor at the College de France; at the Sorbonne; and lectured at German, Italian, Swiss, Belgian and Dutch universities. In 1947 he was recognized for his many philosophical and religious writings, and named to the Académie des sciences morales et politiques. Evil and Suffering is the first of his philosophical works to be published in this country."

Major publications

Original French

Lavelle's other writings include La dialectique du monde sensible: Lu perception visuelle de la profondeur (1921), La conscience de soi (1933), La présence totale (1934), L'Erreur de Narcisse (1939), Le Mal et la Souffrance (1940), La Parole et l'Écriture (1947), and Les puissances du Moi (1948).

Selected translations of works by Lavelle
Analyses and critiques in English
Analyses and critiques in French

See also

References

  1. Louis Lavelle, "Maine de Biran l'homme et la philosophie." In: Bulletin de l'Association Guillaume Budé, Paris, Dec. 1949, pp. 75–85.
  2. Louis Lavelle, Evil and Suffering, The Macmillan Company, New York, 1963. Originally published in 1940 as Le mal et la suffrance.
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