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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: HEG-HIG |
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HELVETII ('El ouipeot, 'EXI3ilrriol) , a Celtic people, whose original
1 Some of the delegates, especially Bucer, were anxious to effect a union of the Reformed and Lutheran Churches. There was also a desire to lay the Confession before the council summoned at Mantua by Pope Paul III.March at Geneva and to advance through the territory of the provided for, he proceeded to enjoy life to the utmost, with Allobroges. They were overtaken, however, by Caesar at Bibracte
Under Augustus
original
chief
Augustus
chief
See L. von Haller, Helvetien unter den Romern (Bern, 181 I); T. Momntsen, Die Schweiz in romischer Zeit (Zurich, 1854) ; J. Brosi, Die Kelten and Althelvetier (Solothurn, 1851); L. Hug and R. Stead, " Switzerland " in Story of the Nations, xxvl.; C. Dandliker, Geschichte der Schweiz (1892-1895), and English translation (of a shorter history by the same) by E. Salisbury (1899); Die Schweiz unto den Remern (anonymous) published by the Historischer Verein of St Gall (Scheitlin and Zollikofer, St Gall, 1862); and G. Wyss, "t)ber das romische Helvetien " in Archie file schweizerische Geschichte, vii. (1851). For Caesar's campaign against the Helvetii, see T. R. Holmes, Caesar's Conquest of Gaul (1899) and Mommsen, Hist. of Rome (Eng. trans.), bk. v. ch. 7; ancient authorities in A. Holder, Altkeltischer Sprachschatz (1896), S.C. Elvetii. HELV$TIUS, CLAUDE ADRIEN (1715-1771), French philosopher and litterateur, was born in Paris in January 1715. He was descended from a family of physicians, whose original name was Schweitzer (latinized as Helvetius). His grandfather introduced the use of ipecacuanha; his father was first physician to Queen Marie Leczinska of France. Claude Adrien was trained for a financial career, but he occupied his spare time with writing verses. At the age of twenty-three, at the queen's request, he was appointed farmer-general, a post of great responsibility and dignity worth a ioo,000 crowns a year. Thus the help of his wealth and liberality, his literary and artistic tastes. As he grew older, however, his social successes ceased, and he began to dream of more lasting distinctions, stimulated by the success of Maupertuis as a mathematician, of Voltaire as a poet, of Montesquieu as a philosopher. The mathematical dream seems to have produced nothing; his poetical ambitions resulted in the poem called Le Bonheur (published posthumously, with an account of Helvetius's life and works, by C. F. de Saint-Lambert, 1773), in which he develops the idea that true happiness is only to be found in making the interest
secret ; Madame de Graffigny averred that all the good things in the book had been picked up in her own salon. In 1764 Helvetius visited England, and the next year, on the invitation of Frederick II., he went to Berlin, where the king paid him marked attention. He then returned to his country estate and passed the remainder of his life in perfect tranquillity. He died on the 26th of December 1771.His philosophy belongs to the utilitarian school. The four discussions of which his book consists have been thus summed up: (1) All man's faculties may be reduced to physical sensation, even'memory, comparison, judgment; our only difference from the lower animals lies in our external organization. (2) Self- interest
spring of judgment, action, affection; self-sacrifice is prompted by the fact that the sensation of pleasure outweighs the accompanying pain; it is thus the result of deliberate calculation; we have no liberty of choice between good and evil; there is no such thing as absolute rightideas of justice and injustice change according to customs. (3) All intellects are equal; their apparent inequalities do not depend on a more or less perfect organization, but have their cause in the unequal desire for instruction, and this desire springs from passions, of which all men commonly well organized are susceptible to the same degree; and we can, therefore, all love glory
that public ethics has a utilitarian basis, and he insisted strongly on the importance of culture in national development. A sort of supplement to the De l'esprit, called De 1'homme, de ses facultes intellectuelles et de son education (Eng. trans. by W. Hooper, 1777), found among his manuscripts, was published after his death, but created little interest. There is a complete edition of the works of Helvetius, published at Paris, 1818. For an estimate of his work and his place among the philosophers of the 18th century see Victor Cousin's Philosophie sensualiste (1863); P. L. Lezaud, Resumes philosophiques (1853); F. D. Maurice, in his Modern Philosophy (1862), pp. 537 seq.; J. Morley, Diderot and the Encyclopaedists (London, 1878) ; D. G. Mostratos, Die Padagogik des Helvetius (Berlin, 1891) ; A. Guillois, Le Salon de Madame Helvetius (1894) ; A. Piazzi, Le Idee filosofche specialmente pedagogiche de C. A. Helvetius (Milan, 1889); G. Plekhanov, Beitrage zur Geschichte des Materialismus (Stuttgart, 1896) ; L. Limentani, Le Teorie psicologiche di C. A. Helvetius (Verona, 1902) ; A. Keim, Helvetius, sa vie et son leuvre (1907). End of Article: HELVETII ('El ouipeot, 'EXI3ilrriol) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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