Jean-Baptiste Bordas-Dumoulin

From BiblePortal Wikipedia

Jean-Baptiste Bordas-Dumoulin [1]

a French philosopher, and stanch advocate of the rights and liberties of the Gallican Church, was born, Feb. 18, 1798, at Montagnac-la-Crempse, and died 1859. He endeavored to reconcile all the political and social consequences of the French Revolution with the religious traditions of Gallicanism. His principal works are:

1. Lettres Sur L'Eclectisme Et Le Doctrinarisme (Paris, 1833):

2. Le Cartesuanisme, Ou La Veritable Renovation Des Sciences (Paris, 1843, 2 vols.), a prize essay, which was declared by the French Academy of Moral and Political Sciences one of the most remarkable philosophical writings of the age :

3. Melanges Philosophiques Et Religeux (Paris, 1846), containing also an Eloge De Pascal, to which a prize had been awarded (in 1842) by the French Academy:

4. Essais De Reforme Catholique (Paris, 1856), in which he severely attacks the condition of the Roman Church in the nineteenth century.-Huet, Hist. De La Vie Et Des Ouvrages De B.-D. (Paris, 1860).

References