
Charles Fourier - Sein Leben und seine Theorien.
Von - A. Bebel
Stuttgart Verlag von J. H. W. Diek 1890
Vorrede.
Les fous
Die Narren
Skizze eines Phalanx-Gebäudes (Phlanstère)
Anmerkungen
The opening places the reader in the turbulent aftermath of the Reformation and the long reign of Louis XIV, showing how Europe’s political and social fabric was frayed before the eighteenth‑century surge of intellectual energy. Against this backdrop, a young Charles Fourier emerges as a restless thinker, driven by the promise of a new social order. The author sketches the climate of suppressed ideas and the yearning for renewal that shaped Fourier’s early years.
From there the narrative follows Fourier’s development of his visionary “phalanstery” model and his broader critique of industrial capitalism, presenting his ideas as both a product of and a challenge to the era’s optimism. The biography blends careful historical detail with clear explanations of his complex theories, making the often‑overlooked philosopher’s work accessible to modern ears. Listeners will gain insight into how his utopian schemes reflected the hopes and anxieties of a continent on the brink of transformation.
Language
de
Duration
~9 hours (551K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by richyfourtytwo, K.F. Greiner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2006-10-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1840–1913
A master speaker and organizer, he helped build Germany’s socialist movement from the ground up and became one of its best-known public voices. His life traced the rise of working-class politics in Europe during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
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