Gustave Belot Explained

Gustave Belot (7 August 1859 – 21 December 1929) was a French philosopher and educational administrator.

Gustave Belot was born 7 August 1859 at Strasbourg,[1] the son of a professor in the faculty of letters at Lyons. He entered the École Normale Supérieure in 1878, taking the philosophy agrégation in 1881, and becoming a provincial philosophy instructor at Brest and elsewhere.[2] In 1899 he succeeded Lucien Lévy-Bruhl as professor of philosophy at the lycée Louis-le-Grand. In 1911 he was appointed Inspector of the Paris Academy, and in 1913 he became Inspector-General of Secondary Instruction.[3] He died in Paris on 21 December 1929.[1] Informed by Durkheimian sociology, he was a theorist of collectively-held 'lay morality', which was rational and based upon general interest.

Gustave Belot is the brother of Émile Belot (1857-1944), engineer, inventor and astronomer, and the great great uncle of Pierre Pincemaille (1956-2018), musician and organist.

Works

Notes and References

  1. Archives de psychologie, Vol. 23, 1932, p.77
  2. Mathias Gardet,Histoire des PEP: pupilles de l'école publique,Editions Beauchesne, 2008, p.175
  3. Cristina Chimisso, Writing the history of the mind: philosophy and science in France, 1900 to 1960s, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2008, p.43