Elme Marie Caro Explained

Elme Marie Caro
Birth Date:4 March 1826
Occupation:professor
Language:French
Nationality:French
Alma Mater:Collège Stanislas de Paris
Academic Advisors:Jules Simon, Émile Saisset[1]
Genres:-->
Subjects:-->
Notablework:-->
Spouse:Pauline Cassin
Partners:-->

Elme Marie Caro (4 March 1826, Poitiers, Vienne13 July 1887, Paris) was a French philosopher.

Life

His father, a professor of philosophy, gave him an education at the Stanislas College and the École Normale, where he graduated in 1848. After being professor of philosophy at several provincial universities, he received the degree of doctor in 1852 on the subject of Louis Claude de Saint-Martin, and came to Paris in 1858 as master of conferences at the École Normale.[2]

In 1861 he became inspector of the Academy of Paris, in 1864 professor of philosophy to the Faculty of Letters, and in 1874 a member of the Académie Française. He married Pauline Cassin, the author of Le Péché de Madeleine and other well-known novels.

In his philosophy, he was mainly concerned to defend Christianity against modern Positivism. The philosophy of Victor Cousin influenced him strongly, but his strength lay in exposition and criticism rather than in original thought.

He wrote important contributions to La France and the Revue des deux Mondes.

Selected publications

Notes and References

  1. Book: Caro . E. . Essai sur la vie et la doctrine de Saint-Martin, le philosophe inconnu . 1852 . Hachette . 978-0-7905-7562-9 . 9 December 2023.
  2. Bonnefon . Paul . Les débuts d'Elme Caro . Revue d'Histoire littéraire de la France . 1916 . 23 . 3/4 . 441–481 . 0035-2411.
  3. Review of Madame de Staël by Abel Stevens and La fin du dix-huitième siècle par E. Caro. The Quarterly Review. July 1881. 152. 1–49.