
In Our Time Condorcet
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Feb 8, 2024 Rachel Hammersley, a Professor of Intellectual History, Richard Whatmore, a Professor of Modern History, and Tom Hopkins, a Senior Teaching Associate, dive into the life and ideas of Nicolas de Condorcet, a prominent figure of the French Enlightenment. They discuss Condorcet's unwavering commitment to social progress, equal rights, and the abolition of slavery. His ambitious visions of human perfectibility and republican governance amid the chaos of the French Revolution reveal the powerful influence his work continues to have on modern thought.
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Condorcet's Mathematical Pursuits
- Condorcet pursued mathematics against his family's wishes; they wanted him to be a soldier.
- He presented papers on integral calculus and the three-body problem in Paris.
Condorcet's Early Political Views
- In the 1770s-80s, Condorcet opposed revolutionary ideas, seeing a corrupt French court and church.
- He believed in defining a shared public good and enacting laws to guide people towards it.
Sophie de Grouchy and Women's Rights
- Sophie de Grouchy, Condorcet's wife, translated Adam Smith but also critiqued his ideas.
- Condorcet advocated for women's political rights, arguing their rationality justifies it.





