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Paperback Treatise on Tolerance: New Translation Book

ISBN: B0FKB5YKCD

ISBN13: 9798294510831

Treatise on Tolerance: New Translation

March 10, 1762: In Toulouse, Jean Calas-a sixty-eight-year-old Protestant merchant-is broken on the wheel for allegedly murdering his son to prevent Catholic conversion. The evidence: none. The verdict: determined by religious hatred.

Voltaire transforms this atrocity into history's first modern human rights campaign. His Treatise on Tolerance, published 1763, secures Calas's posthumous exoneration while constructing one of the Enlightenment's most powerful arguments for religious freedom.

Using the Calas case as lens, Voltaire demonstrates through historical evidence how intolerance produces disaster-economic decline, social chaos, political instability. Holland and England, permitting religious diversity, enjoy prosperity and peace. France, enforcing uniformity through violence, drives productive citizens into exile while breeding the very rebellions it claims to prevent. "If there were only one religion in England, there would be danger of tyranny; if there were two, they would cut each other's throats; but there are thirty, and they live happily together in peace."

At the work's heart lies philosophical humility: human reason, while precious, remains limited and fallible. We cannot achieve absolute certainty about ultimate truth-therefore we have no right to persecute those who believe differently. Voltaire shows how ancient Greeks and Romans practiced greater tolerance than Christian Europe. He demonstrates that Hebrew scriptures reveal more pluralism than later interpreters acknowledged. Most audaciously, he claims Jesus himself for the tolerant cause: "If you wish to resemble Jesus, be martyrs, not executioners."

The Treatise concludes with the famous "Prayer to God"-a universal appeal addressing deity acceptable to believer and skeptic alike, asking that humanity's superficial differences not become "triggers of hatred and persecution."

Voltaire's genius appears in his tactical approach: he appeals to enlightened self-interest rather than altruism alone, grounds philosophical principles in verifiable evidence, and maintains perfect balance between emotional power and rational argument. His prose combines wit with seriousness, accessibility with sophistication, making complex arguments comprehensible to general readers while rewarding close analysis.

Written for eighteenth-century France, the Treatise remains urgently relevant. In 2015, following the Charlie Hebdo massacre, it became a French bestseller more than 250 years after original publication. Wherever dogmatic certainty combines with institutional power to persecute dissent, Voltaire's arguments apply with undiminished force.

A masterpiece of Enlightenment thought demonstrating how clear thinking, moral conviction, and strategic advocacy can challenge injustice and advance human freedom.

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