Hiérarchie des esprits et esprit fort : le discours médical

Did the mind have a gender during the Early Modern period? According to Londa Schiebinger (The Mind Has No Sex?, 1989), Cartesian philosophy caused an abrupt change within the medical tradition by rendering the link between gender and temperament obsolete. Poullain de la Barre’s On the Equality of t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Isabelle Moreau
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Groupe de Recherches Interdisciplinaires sur l'Histoire du Littéraire 2010-05-01
Series:Les Dossiers du GRIHL
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/dossiersgrihl/4001
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850129238490873856
author Isabelle Moreau
author_facet Isabelle Moreau
author_sort Isabelle Moreau
collection DOAJ
description Did the mind have a gender during the Early Modern period? According to Londa Schiebinger (The Mind Has No Sex?, 1989), Cartesian philosophy caused an abrupt change within the medical tradition by rendering the link between gender and temperament obsolete. Poullain de la Barre’s On the Equality of the Sexes, published in 1673, is a good example of this shift. It is in the light of this thesis that I intend to assess the Libertine authors and examine the question of the supposed link between male gender on the one hand, and incredulity and scepticism toward superstitions on the other. As far as La Mothe Le Vayer, Naudé or Cyrano are concerned, an ‘asexual’ and universal rationality does not exist. These Libertine authors reject Cartesian dualism and dismiss the very notion of ‘common sense’. Instead these writers promote a faculty of ‘good thinking’ (or “Ingenium”), directly inherited from Pierre Charron. To understand the masculinity of the ‘free-thinker’, one must consider the medical origins of the supposed hierarchy between the minds. This was constructed from the ancient theory of humours and temperaments, derived from Hippocrates, Aristotle and Galen, which was revived by Huarte in 1575 and re-appropriated by Charron and his Libertine successors. By re-examining the medical and philosophical discourses which made up the masculinity of the ‘free thinker’, I will argue that this male ideal is built upon a model of monological masculinity (with inevitable nuances and variations), rather than by opposition to the Female.
format Article
id doaj-art-2737e33e39ae49298b7baea301ec31bb
institution OA Journals
issn 1958-9247
language fra
publishDate 2010-05-01
publisher Groupe de Recherches Interdisciplinaires sur l'Histoire du Littéraire
record_format Article
series Les Dossiers du GRIHL
spelling doaj-art-2737e33e39ae49298b7baea301ec31bb2025-08-20T02:33:04ZfraGroupe de Recherches Interdisciplinaires sur l'Histoire du LittéraireLes Dossiers du GRIHL1958-92472010-05-01410.4000/dossiersgrihl.4001Hiérarchie des esprits et esprit fort : le discours médicalIsabelle MoreauDid the mind have a gender during the Early Modern period? According to Londa Schiebinger (The Mind Has No Sex?, 1989), Cartesian philosophy caused an abrupt change within the medical tradition by rendering the link between gender and temperament obsolete. Poullain de la Barre’s On the Equality of the Sexes, published in 1673, is a good example of this shift. It is in the light of this thesis that I intend to assess the Libertine authors and examine the question of the supposed link between male gender on the one hand, and incredulity and scepticism toward superstitions on the other. As far as La Mothe Le Vayer, Naudé or Cyrano are concerned, an ‘asexual’ and universal rationality does not exist. These Libertine authors reject Cartesian dualism and dismiss the very notion of ‘common sense’. Instead these writers promote a faculty of ‘good thinking’ (or “Ingenium”), directly inherited from Pierre Charron. To understand the masculinity of the ‘free-thinker’, one must consider the medical origins of the supposed hierarchy between the minds. This was constructed from the ancient theory of humours and temperaments, derived from Hippocrates, Aristotle and Galen, which was revived by Huarte in 1575 and re-appropriated by Charron and his Libertine successors. By re-examining the medical and philosophical discourses which made up the masculinity of the ‘free thinker’, I will argue that this male ideal is built upon a model of monological masculinity (with inevitable nuances and variations), rather than by opposition to the Female.https://journals.openedition.org/dossiersgrihl/4001libertineDescartesmasculinityHierarchy between the mindstemperamentLa Mothe Le Vayer
spellingShingle Isabelle Moreau
Hiérarchie des esprits et esprit fort : le discours médical
Les Dossiers du GRIHL
libertine
Descartes
masculinity
Hierarchy between the minds
temperament
La Mothe Le Vayer
title Hiérarchie des esprits et esprit fort : le discours médical
title_full Hiérarchie des esprits et esprit fort : le discours médical
title_fullStr Hiérarchie des esprits et esprit fort : le discours médical
title_full_unstemmed Hiérarchie des esprits et esprit fort : le discours médical
title_short Hiérarchie des esprits et esprit fort : le discours médical
title_sort hierarchie des esprits et esprit fort le discours medical
topic libertine
Descartes
masculinity
Hierarchy between the minds
temperament
La Mothe Le Vayer
url https://journals.openedition.org/dossiersgrihl/4001
work_keys_str_mv AT isabellemoreau hierarchiedesespritsetespritfortlediscoursmedical