Also known as Félicité de Lamennais, Robert Félicité de Lamennais, Félicité Robert de Lamenais, Félicité Robert de Lamennais, Felicite Robert de Lamennais, L' Abbé de Lamennais
French priest, philosopher and political theorist (1782–1854)
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5 total works indexed
· 2020 · cited 34,734x
· 2007 · cited 30,848x
Félicité Robert de La Mennais (or Lamennais, French: [lamɛnɛ]; 19 June 1782 – 27 February 1854) was a French Catholic priest, philosopher and political theorist. He was one of the most influential intellectuals of Restoration France. Lamennais is also considered the forerunner of both liberal Catholicism and Modernism.
His opinions on matters of religion and government changed dramatically over the course of his life. He initially held rationalistic views, but in part due to the influence of his elder brother, Jean-Marie, came to see religion as an antidote for the anarchy and tyranny unleashed by revolution. He derided Napoleon, in part because of the Organic Articles, in which France acting unilaterally amended the Concordat of 1801 between France and the papacy. Lamennais vocally assailed both Gallicanism and Caesaropapism, views that demanded a completely subservient relationship by the Church to the State, and he was for a time a staunch defender of the independence of the Church.
· 2020 · cited 22,805x
· 2009 · cited 22,570x
· 2003 · cited 20,936x
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).