- Jean Bodin
Jean Bodin (
1529 /1530 –1596)was born in Angers, France, and became a Frenchjurist and political philosopher, member of theParlement (not to be confused with the English "Parliament") ofParis and professor of Law inToulouse . He is best known for his theory ofsovereignty .Bodin lived during the
Reformation , writing against the background of religious and civil conflict—particularly that, in his native France, between the (Calvinist)Huguenots and the state-supported Catholic Church. He choose to convert toJudaism which was a very risky option at that time.His books divided opinion: some French writers were full of praise, while the later Scottish philosopher,
Francis Hutchinson was his detractor, criticising his methodology."De la République"
Jean Bodin's most famous work was written in 1576. The ideas in the "
Six Books on the State " (or "Les Six livres de la République") on the importance of climate in the shaping of a people's character was also quite influential, finding a prominent place in the work of contemporary Italian thinkerGiovanni Botero (1544-1617) and later in French philosopher the Baron deMontesquieu 's (1689-1755)climatic determinism .His Classical definition of sovereignty is: “la puissance absolue et perpetuelle d’une Republique” (Sovereignty is that absolute and perpetual power vested in a commonwealth). His main ideas about sovereignty are found in chapter VIII and X of Book I.Historian
In France, Bodin was most noted as a historian in his "Method for the Easy Understanding of History." He writes, "Of history, that is, the true narration of things, there are three kinds: human, natural and divine." As a historic politician, Bodin contributed to the restoration of France as a strong
nation-state .Finally, Bodin was among the first to recognize the interrelationship between the amount of goods and the amount of money in circulation. The boatloads of silver arriving in Spain from the Bolivian (then Peruvian) mine of Potosí were wreaking inflationary havoc at the time. Bodin laid the foundation for the "
quantity theory of money .""On Witchcraft" (La Démonomanie des Sorciers)
Bodin recommended
torture , even in cases of the disabled and children, to try to confirm guilt ofwitchcraft . He asserted that not even one witch could be erroneously condemned if the correct procedures were followed, suspicion being enough to torment the accused because rumours concerningwitch es were almost always true. Some scholars have attributed Bodin's attitude towards so-called witches as part of a populationist strategy typical for mercantilism. [Heinsohn, Gunnar and Otto Steiger. "Birth Control: The Political-Economic Rationale behind Jean Bodin's Démonomanie." History of Political Economy - Volume 31, Number 3, Fall 1999, pp. 423-448 [http://muse.jhu.edu/login?uri=/journals/history_of_political_economy/v031/31.3heinsohn.html] ]References
* Julian H. Franklin (ed.), "Jean Bodin". Aldershot, Ashgate, 2006 (International Library of Essays in the History of Social and Political Thought), 472 pp.
External links
*sep entry|bodin|Jean Bodin|Mario Turchetti|2006-12-12
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* [http://www.constitution.org/bodin/bodin_.htm Six Books of the Commonwealth] - English translation of "Six Books of the Commonwealth"
* [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Jean_Bodin "Encyclopædia Britannica" 11th ed. article]
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