Bernard Le Bovier de Fontenelle
Fontenelle, Bernard Le Bovier de (1657-1757). French polymath whose career stretched from the middle of the reign of Louis XIV to the middle of the publication of the Encyclopédie. In his long life (he died just short of 100), he wrote many works in many genres, from pastoral poetry to scientific treatise. Perhaps none of them is an undoubted classic, but together they make of him a figure of great importance, the first philosophe, an example of critical modernity.
He was born in Rouen, a nephew of the Corneille brothers—he championed Pierre against Racine and was much helped by Thomas, whose scientific work he continued. With a Jesuit education and a degree in law behind him, he settled in Paris and was quickly involved in literary life in circles round the Mercure galant. He was elected to the Académie Française in 1691, and in 1697 was appointed Secrétaire Perpétuel of the Académie des Sciences, a post he occupied for nearly half a century. He frequented the salons, in particular that of Madame de Lambert, and received patronage from the Regent (a pension and a lodging in the Palais-Royal). He never married.
For him poetry was a frivolous activity associated with the childhood of humanity. But he wrote many poems, tragedies, comedies, and pastorals. These have sunk without trace; his tragedy Aspar (1680) was such a flop that its performance was maliciously described as the origin of the whistle of derision in the French theatre. His writings on literature are those of a rationalist, for whom the agreeable effects of poetry can be explained and codified. The Histoire du théâtre français (published 1742) shows an unexpected curiosity about medieval poetry, while the Digression sur les Anciens et les Modernes (1688), coming down on the side of the modernes, shows little respect for Homer and the primitive Greeks [see Querelle].
Fontenelle's important work was done in prose genres marginal to mainstream literature. The Nouveaux dialogues des morts (1683) modernize Lucian to express through paradox a sceptical and mocking assessment of humanity. The Entretiens sur la pluralité des mondes (1686) was a highly influential piece of scientific popularization; it expounds the Copernican world system and the mechanistic physics of Descartes in elegant dialogues between a philosopher and a lady, speculating about the inhabitants of other planets and relativizing the importance of our own. The Histoire des oracles (1687) is a lesson in critical method; its demolition of unfounded notions about pagan oracles extends by implication to all irrational beliefs, including Christianity. The interest in the history of human error is taken further in the caustic De l'origine des fables (published 1724), where the follies of mythology are explained historically, and the anti-Christian line is pursued in the notorious brief allegory, Relation de l'île de Bornéo (1686).
In the second half of his life Fontenelle's main work was scientific. He published work of his own, but his principal contribution was his Histoire de l'Académie des Sciences, an annual summary of the work of the Academy, with prefaces, the first of which, in 1702, concerns ‘l'utilité des mathématiques et de la physique’. He also published (in 1733) a volume devoted to the earlier history of the Academy, and virtually invented a new genre in writing over 60
Fontenelle was a man of great gifts and equable temperament. Portraits, including that by Madame de Lambert, tend to show him as a cold fish, not given to enthusiasm or devotion. A famous anecdote recounts him saying that if he had a hand full of truths, he would not open it. He was indeed a prudent writer at a time when intellectual daring was dangerous, but he worked long and hard to discredit false authority and promote rational thinking; ‘penser juste’ was humanity's great triumph. Cynicism about science and humanity in his youthful Dialogues gave way to a measured belief in progress; in his wary way, he was a committed modernist. As such he was revered by the philosophes, even though they had doubts about his caution, mocked his flowery wit, and regretted his obstinate refusal to accept Newtonian physics.
[Peter France]
Bibliography
- R. Shackleton (ed.), Entretiens sur la pluralité des mondes (1955)
- A. Niderst, Fontenelle à la recherche de lui-même (1971) and (ed.), Fontenelle. Actes du colloque de Rouen, 1987 (1989)




