Jean Reynaud
Jean Ernest Reynaud (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ ɛʁnɛst ʁɛno]; February 14, 1806–July 28, 1863) was a French mining engineer and socialist philosopher.
He was a member of the Saint-Simonian community. He was a co-founder of the Encyclopédie nouvelle.
Life
[edit]He was born in Lyon on 4 February 1806. He graduated from the Polytechnic School in Lyon in 1827 and joined the School of Mines. In May 1829 he began a four month study tour of Germany including the Harz Mountains, Black Forest, Saxony, Hanover, Oldenbourg and Westphalia. He then spent a further two months studying mines in Belgium and the Netherlands. He graduated from the mining school in 1830.[1]
He was briefly imprisoned in the uprising of 1830. In 1854 he invented a new religious philosophy regarding the transmigration of souls which he saw as compatible both with traditional Christian views and modern ideas regarding reincarnation.[2]
He died in Paris on 28 June 1863 and was buried there in Pere Lachaise Cemetery.
Publications
[edit]- Minéralogie des Gens du Monde (1836)
- Histoire Élémentaire des Minéraux Usuels (1842)
- Terre et Ciel (1854)
References
[edit]- David Albert Griffiths, Jean Reynaud, encyclopédiste de l’époque romantique, d’après sa correspondance inédite, Paris : M. Rivière, 1965.
External links
[edit]- Biographical sketch (in Italian)
- 1806 births
- 1863 deaths
- People from Lyon
- Politicians from Lyon
- Moderate Republicans (France)
- Members of the 1848 Constituent Assembly
- 19th-century French philosophers
- Saint-Simonists
- French male writers
- 19th-century French male writers
- École Polytechnique alumni
- Burials at Père Lachaise Cemetery
- French academic biography stubs
- French philosopher stubs