Candide Essay

1001 Words3 Pages

The idea of a “damsel in distress” being saved by her “knight in shining armor” is one we are well familiar with. Voltaire, a philosopher from the Age of Enlightenment (a time of questioning tradition and religion, looking to science and reason) uses this same concept to satire love, in his novel Candide. Voltaire satirizes not only love, but other subjects under question during the Age of Enlightenment, such as religion and the military. Exposing there corruption, Voltaire satirizes his main focus in Candide, Leibniz’s theory of Optimism. Leibniz was another philosopher from the Age of Enlightenment, who’s beliefs differed from Voltaire's. An example of this is Leibniz’s theory of Optimism, which states that we live in the best of all possible worlds. The military, religion and love were all elements used in Candide to satirize this theory of Optimism.
Candide’s travels begin when he is banished from the castle of Westphalia and separated from his beloved Cunegonde. In Westphalia Candide was sheltered from the outside world and was a disciple of the philosopher Pangloss. When he leaves Westphalia, naïve Candide encounters two uniformed men who deceive him into joining the military. Candide soon realizes that the military was not what the men had promised. Voltaire satires the military by showing that men do not have freewill. Candide, believing that it is the right of men and animals to uses there legs freely, goes on a walk without permission and was severely punished. Four “heroes” captured him and dragged him to the dungeon, Candide was then asked, “which he would like the best, to be whipped six-and-thirty times through all the regiment, or to receive at once twelve balls of lead in his brain. He vainly said that human wil...

... middle of paper ...

...Lust) that we are all well familiar with as evidence that the theory of Optimism is ridiculous.
Leibnz’s theory of Optimism was ridiculed and satired through Candide’s experiences love, religion and military. Through his travels Candide realized the corruption in the world he lives. Candide learned that men in the military had no free will and brutally murdered people. Anabaptist James taught Candide through his actions, that religion did not determine the kind of person you were. Candide also revealed to us something about love. Despite the many challenges he faced, and the years he spent searching for her, in the end Candide had no desire to marry Cunegonde. She was no longer physically attractive. All these experiences that Candide went through made it clear that we most likely do not live in the best of all possible worlds.

Works Cited

Candide by Voltaire

Open Document