
audiobook
by G. W. (George William) Foote, J. M. (Joseph Mazzini) Wheeler
This compact biography offers a lively portrait of the French Enlightenment’s most outspoken champion of reason. Written as a tribute for the bicentenary of his birth, the authors present Voltaire through the eyes of a modern freethinker, highlighting his relentless fight against superstition, intolerance and the abuses of both church and state. Selections from his own writings are woven throughout, giving listeners a taste of his sharp wit and persuasive prose while situating his ideas within the broader currents of reform and democracy that still shape our world.
The narrative begins with the humble origins of François Marie Arouet, born in Paris in 1694, and follows his early education under the Jesuits. Even as a child he displayed an uncanny talent for poetry, and the influence of his cultured family and the salon of Ninon l’Enclos sparked his lifelong curiosity about the world beyond doctrine. These formative experiences set the stage for the brilliant, iconoclastic voice that would later challenge entrenched power and champion liberty for all.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (178K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2012-03-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1850–1915
A fierce Victorian freethinker, journalist, and campaigner for secularism, he became one of the best-known critics of organized religion in late 19th-century Britain. His writing mixed argument, satire, and a clear determination to defend free speech.
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1850–1898
A sharp, energetic voice in Victorian freethought, this English writer and journalist spent much of his career challenging Christian orthodoxy and documenting the history of unbelief. He is best remembered for his ambitious reference work on freethinkers across the ages and for his long association with the radical paper The Freethinker.
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