Raymond Aron, a professor at the Collège de France and a political commentator (Figaro, Express, Commentary), on the threshold of seventy-two years after leaving Figaro, planned to write two volumes of books about Marx's Marxism, which he had starte ...
Raymond Aron, a professor at the Collège de France and a political commentator (Figaro, Express, Commentary), on the threshold of seventy-two years after leaving Figaro, planned to write two volumes of books about Marx's Marxism, which he had started in 1935 by writing an introduction to the philosophy of history. to close A sudden complication of a stroke in April 1977 prevented him from fulfilling this purpose. After a relative recovery, in the summer of 1979, in the first year of his leave from teaching, he wrote the first three chapters of the three books he had in his work program and said: "I saw that if I don't want to kill myself, I can do it alone in the time I have left." To write "memories" that required less physical and intellectual effort. "Memoirs of Raymond Aron" is not an autobiography in the usual sense of the word, but rather a summation of the fruitful scientific life of a sociological philosopher during half a century of active presence on the international scene in the age of ideologies. Most of the criticisms that have been written about Raymond Aron's memoirs in the last forty years can be summed up in one sentence: everything that others [Sartre and...] looked at and did not see, or saw and kept silent, Aron saw and loudly and He disclosed with an expressive pen.
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