
"Freethinker's Library" Series London: W. Stewart & Co. A Translation Of Baron D'holbach's "Le Bon Sens"
PUBLISHER'S NOTE
THE AUTHOR'S PREFACE
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This translation brings the radical voice of an 18th‑century thinker into today's listening landscape, inviting you to explore a bold attack on superstition and organized faith. With crisp, articulate prose, the work argues that human morality and social order need not rely on divine command, but can arise from reason, natural law, and the shared pursuit of virtue. It surveys the origins of religious belief, exposing how fear, tradition, and the ambitions of clergy have shaped doctrines that many accept without question.
The author systematically dismantles theological claims, from the existence of a benevolent deity to the notion of providence, proposing instead that matter and natural causes drive the universe. By confronting familiar arguments about God, free will, and the nature of good and evil, the book challenges listeners to reconsider the foundations of their own convictions. Engaging and thought‑provoking, it offers a compelling invitation to think critically about faith, authority, and the power of human reason.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (346K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Freethought Archives, and David Widger
Release date
2005-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1723–1789
A bold voice of the French Enlightenment, he used philosophy to challenge religious authority and argue for a fully material view of nature. His writing helped make radical ideas about reason, freedom, and society impossible to ignore.
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