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The controversial origins of the Encyclopedia - Addison Anderson

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    Denis Diderot left a dungeon
    outside Paris on November 3, 1749.
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    He'd had his writing
    burned in public before,
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    but this time, he'd gotten locked up
    under royal order
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    for an essay about a philosopher's
    death bed rejection of God.
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    To free himself, Denis promised
    never to write things like that again.
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    So he got back to work
    on something a little like that,
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    only way worse,
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    and much bigger.
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    In 1745, publisher André le Breton
    had hired Diderot
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    to adapt the English cyclopedia,
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    or a universal dictionary
    of arts and sciences
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    for French subscribers.
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    A broke writer, Diderot survived
    by translating,
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    tutoring,
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    and authoring sermons for priests,
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    and a pornographic novel once.
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    Le Breton paired him with co-editor
    Jean le Rond d'Alembert,
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    a math genius found
    on a church doorstep as a baby.
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    Technical dictionaries,
    like the cyclopedia, weren't new,
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    but no one had attempted one publication
    covering all knowledge,
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    so they did.
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    The two men organized
    the French Enlightenment's brightest stars
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    to produce the first encyclopedia,
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    or rational dictionary of the arts,
    sciences, and crafts.
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    Assembling every essential fact
    and principle in, as it turned out,
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    over 70,000 entries,
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    20,000,000 words
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    in 35 volumes of text and illustrations
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    created over three decades
    of researching,
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    writing,
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    arguging,
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    smuggling,
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    backstabbing,
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    law-breaking,
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    and alphabetizing.
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    To organize the work,
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    Diderot adapted Francis Bacon's
    "Classification of Knowledge"
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    into a three-part system based
    on the mind's approaches to reality:
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    memory,
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    reason,
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    and imagination.
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    He also emphasized the importance
    of commerce,
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    technology,
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    and crafts,
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    poking around shops to study the tools
    and techniques of Parisian laborers.
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    To spotlight a few of the nearly
    150 philosoph contributers,
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    Jean Jacques Rousseau,
    Diderot's close friend,
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    wrote much of the music section
    in three months,
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    and was never reimbursed for copy fees.
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    His entry on political economy holds ideas
    he'd later develop further
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    in "The Social Contract."
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    D'Alembert wrote
    the famous preliminary discourse,
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    a key statement
    of the French Enlightenment,
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    championing independent
    investigative reasoning
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    as the path to progress.
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    Louis de Jaucourt wrote a quarter
    of the encyclopedia,
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    18,000 articles,
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    5,000,000 words,
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    unpaid.
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    Louis once spent 20 years writing a book
    on anatomy,
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    shipped it to Amsterdam
    to be published uncensored,
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    and the ship sank.
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    Voltaire contributed entries,
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    among them history,
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    elegance,
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    and fire.
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    Diderot's entries sometimes
    exhibit slight bias.
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    In "political authority," he dismantled
    the divine right of kings.
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    Under "citizen,"
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    he argued a state was strongest
    without great disparity in wealth.
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    Not surprising from the guy who wrote
    poetry about mankind strangling its kings
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    with the entrails of a priest.
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    So Diderot's masterpiece wasn't a hit
    with the king or highest priest.
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    Upon release of the first two volumes,
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    Louie XV banned the whole thing
    but enjoyed his own copy.
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    Pope Clement XIII ordered it burned.
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    It was "dangerous,"
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    "reprehensible,"
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    as well as "written in French,"
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    and in "the most seductive style."
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    He declared readers excommunicated
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    and wanted Diderot arrested on sight.
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    But Diderot kept a step ahead
    of being shut down,
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    smuggling proofs outside France
    for publication,
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    and getting help from allies
    in the French Regime,
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    including the King's mistress,
    Madame de Pompadour,
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    and the royal librarian and censor,
    Malesherbes,
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    who tipped Diderot off to impending raids,
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    and even hid Diderot's papers
    at his dad's house.
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    Still, he faced years of difficulty.
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    D'Alembert dropped out.
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    Rousseau broke off his friendship
    over a line in a play.
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    Worse yet, his publisher secretly
    edited some proofs
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    to read less radically.
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    The uncensored pages reappeared
    in Russia in 1933,
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    long after Diderot had considered
    the work finished
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    and died at lunch.
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    The encyclopedia he left behind
    is many things:
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    a cornerstone of the Enlightenment,
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    a testament
    to France's crisis of authority,
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    evidence of popular opinions migration
    from pulpit and pew
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    to cafe, salon, and press.
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    It even has recipes.
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    It's also irrepressibly human,
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    as you can tell from Diderot's entry
    about a plant named aguaxima.
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    Read it yourself, preferably out loud
    in a French accent.
Title:
The controversial origins of the Encyclopedia - Addison Anderson
Description:

View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-controversial-origins-of-the-encyclopedia-addison-anderson

The first encyclopedia contained 70,000 entries and over 20,000,000 words. It was broken into 35 volumes written over the course of 3 decades. It was also banned by Louis XV and Pope Clement XIII. But why was this encyclopedia so controversial, and who wrote it in the first place? Addison Anderson recounts the controversial origins of the first encyclopedia.

Lesson by Addison Anderson, animation by Patrick Smith.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:21

English subtitles

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