Frankly, fictional sarcastic optimism, written by many philosophers in the mid-1700s, following the "Human Paper" by Pope Alexander. Written by Francis-Marie Aruette's literary alias Voltaire, satire, including religion, wealthy people, love, even even this novel will even tease literature and art by giving a heady chapter headline . Almost all of Voltaire's content at Candide is doubtful about the unfairness of the real world.
Many critics on Candide Paper believe that Candide is not an enlightened piece, but Voltaire's satirical work perfectly reflects the lessons of philosophical morality and enlightenment. Voltaire greatly respected the political, social and religious views of the day, and emphasized the beliefs of the most enlightening thinkers and philosophers. Voltaire presented three different enlightenment ideas and perspectives to his work: anti-feudalism, optimism, and the hypocrisy of the Christian church ... the papers on humans and theorists during enlightenment, many philosophers are new I started thinking. For the philosopher Alexander, a philosopher of the article "Thesis", the Pope believes that "whatever it is, it is correct" (L. 294). Because God has power, everyone is part of God's larger design. Voltaire later questioned the belief that the God of Candida would not create order. Pope's position
Criticism against Voltaire seems to be directed almost entirely to Leibniz 's optimism. To be frank, Voltaire's contemporary Alexander did not laugh. Frankly speaking, I did not talk about the principle of the Pope's optimism that "everything is right," Leibniz said, "This is the best among all possible worlds." Regardless of the subtle differences between them, Candide obviously points out which is the theme. Voltaire's poem may be a more direct response to the Pope's theory, but some critics speculate that Voltaire does not respect the Pope. This work is similar to Candide in terms of the theme, but it is very different from the style. Poème reflects a more serious philosophical argument than Candide.