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Combating this cheerless view of the human condition was far more difficult for Diderot than it might appear. The notion that humans were debased creatures who carried the burden of original sin was, for most people, a foundational reality of existence, not only endorsed by Saint Augustine and the Jansenists, but inculcated in most Christians from a tender age in church, during catechism and confession.
Diderot and the Art of Thinking Freely
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