- The System of Nature
"The System of Nature" ("Système de la Nature") is a philosophical book by
Baron d'Holbach (Paul Henri Thiry, 1723-1789). It was originally published under the name ofJean-Baptiste de Mirabaud , a deceased member of theFrench Academy of Science . D'Holbach wrote this book (with the assistance ofDiderot ) anonymously in 1770, describing the universe in terms of philosophicalmaterialism (i.e., the mind is the same thing as the brain, there is no "soul" without a living body, etc.), strictdeterminism (free will is an illusion, and whatever happens, must), and especiallyatheism .The book was considered extremely radical in its day; even
Voltaire rebuked him for it. Though not a scientist himself, d'Holbach was scientifically literate and he developed his philosophy consistent with the known facts of nature and the scientific knowledge of the day.The book has been nicknamed "The Atheist's Bible". It makes a critical distinction between
mythology as a more or less benign way of bringing law ordered thought on society, nature and their powers to the masses andtheology . Theology which when it separates from mythology raises the power of nature above nature itself and thus alienates the two (i.e. "nature", all that actually exists, from its power, now personified in a being outside nature) is by contrast a pernicious force in human affairs without parallel.External links
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