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Simone Weil and the Need for Roots
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15029 |
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Section : |
MODERN THOUGHT
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9 / 1988 |
4,140 Words |
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Maura A. Daly Maura A. Daly is a former French professor at the University
of Notre Dame |
Genius, holiness, and martyrdom do not characterize most twentieth-century intellectuals, but they define Simone Weil. Even in the august company of greats like Camus, Sartre, and Gide, she stands out. The brilliance of her thought equals theirs, but the intensity of her character and the quality of her witness dwarf those of most of her contemporaries.
This is not to say that she shared no common ground with them. Like them, she offered a searing critique of modernity, which she believed cut man off from his roots, his family, his culture, and himself. She deplored the dehumanization of workers in mechanistic jobs and feared the threat of totalitarianism. But for Weil, these pressing issues can be resolved only by finding the correct answers to the great existentialist questions: "What is truth?" and "What is meaning?"
Unlike the existentialists, however, she believed that these questions can be answered only by asking two others: "What is man?" and "How does he find God?"
Perhaps her insistence on asking these difficult unfashionable questions accounts for her lack of popularity, even though her work has been hailed by many of the most important intellectuals of our time. As Albert Camus, Simone de Beauvoir, Jacques Maritain, Georges Bernanos, and T.S. Eliot freely acknowledged, hers was a mind of the highest caliber. Both brilliant and prolific, her work speaks for itself. Her output and range--more than sixteen volumes composed in thirty-four short years, including articles on religion, history, mathematics, literature, and philosophy--are
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