Abstract
La Mettrie's materialist and monistic philosophy is that of a military doctor, knowing what dysentery did to his own mind, watching his regiment destroyed at Fontenoy, running French field hospitals in Flanders. He learned brain science in the injuries of his fellows. He knew pain and that man's main positive drive was sex. He despised the prudish hypocrisies of feeble materialists like Diderot and Voltaire. His brutal military life and his hedonism made him the most coherent monist against Cartesian dualism. His study of vertigo is sound clinical medicine, which well accords with one trend in today's medical practice.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Hacking, I. (2009). La Mettrie’s soul: vertigo, fever, massacre, and The Natural History. Canadian Bulletin of Medical History = Bulletin Canadien d’histoire de La Médecine, 26(1), 179–202. https://doi.org/10.3138/cbmh.26.1.179
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