Edouard Le Roy

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Édouard Louis Emmanuel Julien Le Roy (June 18, 1870 - November 10, 1954 ) was a French philosopher and mathematician.

Le Roy was received at the École Normale Supérieure (ENS) in 1892, and at the agrégation in mathematics in 1895. He became Doctor in Sciences in 1898, taught in several high schools, and became in 1909 professor of mathematics at the Lycée Saint-Louis in Paris.

From then on, Le Roy took an important interest in philosophy and metaphysics. A friend of Teilhard de Chardin and Henri Bergson's closer disciple, he succeeded to him at the College of France (1922) and, in 1945, at the Académie française. In 1919, Le Roy was also elected member of the Académie des Sciences morales et politiques.

Le Roy especially interested himself to the relations between science and morality. Along with Henri Poincaré and Pierre Duhem, he supported a conventionalist thesis on the foundation of mathematics. Although a fervent Catholic, he extended this conventionalist theory to revealed truths, which did not, according to him, withdraw any of their strength. He rejected in the domain of religion dogmas, abstract reasonings and speculative theology in favor of instinctive faith, heart and sentiment. He was one of those close to Bergson who encouraged him to turn to the study of mysticism, explored in his later works. His conventionalism led his works, charged of modernism, to be put to the Index by the Vatican.

[edit] Works

  • What Is a Dogma?
  • L'Exigence Idealiste Et Le Fait De L'Evolution (1927)
  • Les Origines Humaines Et L'Evolution De L'Intelligence (1928)
  • La Pensee Intuitive (1929)
  • Discours De Reception De M Edouard Le Roy (1946)
  • Essai D'Une Philosophie Premiere (1956)
  • Bergson Et Bergsonisme (1947)
  • A New Philosophy: Henri Bergson

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