tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4738926372330948783.post3356009644551538923..comments2014-04-03T10:19:52.980-04:00Comments on Liberté: in the Shadows of the 19th Century: Saint-Simon (and friends)Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4738926372330948783.post-20769640153232275542012-11-02T14:32:27.973-04:002012-11-02T14:32:27.973-04:00my only source is the same book by Booth which you...my only source is the same book by Booth which you cite in Vol. II of the reader; I'm going mostly from the first chapter on Saint Simon, and sometimes doing rough translation of Simon's statements. it definitely looks to me like the Saint-Simonists dramatically changed Simon's own ideas in practice. timhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12552742027849478787noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4738926372330948783.post-62121436240770562372012-11-02T13:37:30.730-04:002012-11-02T13:37:30.730-04:00Thanks Tim!
This is actually quite a bit more deta...Thanks Tim!<br />This is actually quite a bit more detail than I've been able to find anywhere--where's the website? The Socialism, Feminism, French Romanticism book has some good stuff on the Saint-Simonist organisation/s after 1830, but not a general overview, nor much of a full synopsis of Saint-Simonism generally. It seems like it didn't take long either before a lot of people started developing his theory in various ways, and I don't have a good idea how much they changed his theory, or in what ways...<br /><br />I knew that it was a technocracy with republican elements, but the emphasis here on the two 'levels' of the religion and the seeming e Saint-Simonists were operating in the 1830s--again though, only based on my limited information.<br /><br />There's a lot more to chew on even with this synopsis, much more ambivalent than I'd have expected to find... Olchar E. Lindsannhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17278644135599000538noreply@blogger.com