Was the philosopher
Rene Descartes (1596-1650), the man known as the father of Western philosophy,
murdered?
Descartes
officially died in Stockholm, Sweden, from pneumonia. Sweden was the most
powerful nation in Europe at the time, and its queen, Christiana,
collected everything imaginable, including academics and philosophers. In 1996,
based on a letter by the court physician, a German writer hypothesized that
Descartes may actually have been poisoned.
But the
natural causes for his death remained accepted.
In The
Irrationalist: The Tragic Murder of Rene Descartes, author Andrew
Pessin has written a fictional account of the philosopher’s death indeed
being murder. And Pessin constructs a fascinating murder mystery with a very
unlikely detective.
It’s a wonderfully
intriguing story.
Adrien
Baillet is sent from the Jesuit school where he serves the rector to Stockholm,
to represent the school with the Swedish government. Baillet is not a Jesuit;
in fact, he’s not much of anything except a servant to the rector. But the
school decides it is him who must be sent. When he arrives, he discovers that
his school’s most famous graduate, Rene Descartes, has died. The French
ambassador and the Swedish ambassador decide between them that Baillet must
investigate, to put the rumors about murder to rest.
And so
Baillet bumbles and stumbles his way through the investigation. And he’s told,
more than once, that he must know the dead man’s life to know how he died, and,
if it’s murder, why.
The story
unfolds in two primary narratives – the life of Descartes and the investigation
by Baillet. Eventually they converge, and Baillet indeed discovers that what
happened to Descartes is buried deep in the man’s past, a past that includes
his education, his becoming a soldier, the Thirty Years War,
and the contemporary politics of Europe, Sweden, and France in 1650.
Andrew Pessin |
And the
murder investigator may just discover some of his own history. Baillet will
find himself attacked, his rooms ransacked, and more than one knife at his
throat. The stakes are high in the most powerful monarchy in Europe, and
someone, perhaps more than just one, is playing for keeps. The tension continues
to build until the very end.
Pessin,
a professor of philosophy at Connecticut College, is also the author of The
60-Second Philosopher, Uncommon
Sense: The Strangest Ideas from the Smartest Philosophers, The
God Question: What Famous Thinkers from Plato to Dawkins have said about the
Divine,
and other works. The Irrationalist is
his first work of fiction.
Well
research and including real people as many of the characters, it’s a story that
never flags. Here’s hoping Professor Pessin continues to write historical fiction.
Top photograph: Rene Descartes.
No comments:
Post a Comment