André Pierre Le Guay de Prémontval was a French mathematician and philosopher. He was born in
Charenton-le-Pont on 16 February 1716 and died in Berlin on 2 September 1764.[1]
In 1744, he was forced to flee France to Switzerland due to his criticism of Catholic doctrines,[2][3] accompanied by his student
Marie Anne Victoire Pigeon; on 30 June 1746, they married.[4] Prémontval had been raised Roman Catholic, but had spent some time as an atheist and then deist; in Switzerland, Prémontval and his wife converted to Protestantism.[5]
Prémontval criticised the empiricist theory of the self, arguing that there is a real distinction between an individual's personality and soul that is often ignored, and that our possession of the later is our justification for our interest in the former.[7]
Discours sur diverses notions préliminaires à l'étude des mathématiques [Discourse on diverse notions preliminary to the study of mathematics], 1743. (
Scanned copy at Google Books)
Discours sur la nature des quantités que les mathématiques ont pour objet, 1742. (
Scanned copy at Google Books)
Discours sur la qualité du nombre, 1743.
Discours sur l'utilité des mathématiques, 1742.
L'esprit de Fontenelle on Recueil de pensées tirées de ses ouvrages, 1744, 1755, 1767.
Le hasard sous l'empire de la Providence, 1754.
Lettres contre le dogme de l'eucharistie tel qu'il est enseigné par l'Église romaine adressées en 1735 au fameux P. Tournemine jésuite.
Préservatifs contre la corruption de la langue française en Allemagne, 1761.
Vues philosophiques ou Protestations et déclarations sur les principaux objets des connaissances humaines, 1757, 1761.
References
^Lifschitz, AS; (2009) "Prémontval, André Pierre le Guay". In: Stammerjohann, H, (ed.) Lexicon Grammaticorum: A Bio-Bibliographical Companion to the History of Linguistics. (pp. 1209-1211). Max Niemeyer Verlag: Tübingen.
ISBN978-3-484-73068-7
^Strickland, Lloyd (2018). Proofs of God in Early Modern Europe: An Anthology. Waco, Texas: Baylor University Press. p. xiv.
ISBN978-1-4813-0931-8. ...André-Pierre Le Guay de Prémontval, who was, by his own admission, an atheist for a time in his youth before becoming a deist and then converting to an unspecified form of Protestantism at the age of thirty.