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Intro | French philosopher | ||||||
Places | France | ||||||
was | Philosopher | ||||||
Work field | Philosophy | ||||||
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Religion: | Catholic church | ||||||
Birth | 14 March 1903, Cherbourg, France | ||||||
Death | 1961South Bend, USA (aged 57 years) | ||||||
Star sign | Pisces | ||||||
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Biography
Yves René Marie Simon (March 14, 1903 – May 11, 1961) was a French Catholic political philosopher.
Life
Simon studied under Jacques Maritain at the Institut Catholique de Paris. He taught at the Institut Catholique de Lille from 1930 to 1938. In 1938, he came to the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, as a visiting professor. He was unable to return to France because of World War II, and after the war he remained as a professor at Notre Dame until 1948. He then joined the Committee on Social Thought, at the University of Chicago. He remained at the University of Chicago until retiring in 1958 due to illness. He died of cancer in South Bend, Indiana on May 11, 1961. In 1975, Maurice Cranston called him one of the world's "most original and distinguished political theorists."
Simon left many materials unfinished at his death, and many of his publications have only appeared after his death. His son, Anthony O. Simon, has taken on the role of director of the Yves R. Simon Institute, which contributes to the effort to publish such materials. Simon's papers are at the University of Notre Dame.
Scholarship
Simon trained to work in the realm of Thomism or scholastic philosophy. (But he was perhaps more open-minded than some neo-scholastics: according to John Dawson's biography of Gödel, Simon attended Kurt Gödel's logic lectures at Notre Dame in the late 1930s.) Thus, in 1955, he was one of several contributors to the translating of John of St. Thomas into English.
However, he is better known for his work in moral and political philosophy. There, he defended the traditional Thomistic account of moral action and the virtues. He was an ardent defender of the proposition that this traditional account was compatible with liberal democracy in the West, arguing that French Catholics had erred in holding that the Catholic faith supported their adherence to monarchy, à la Action Française.