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Without God

Page 22

by Louis Betty


  Houellebecq’s denial of the materialist label, 23

  Houellebecq’s relationship with Catholicism as a young man, 45

  quantum physics, 23–26, 87

  application to human biology, 15

  Copenhagen Interpretation, 24, 26, 144 n. 3

  Hilbert Space, 28–29

  Uncertainty Principle, 26, 144 n. 3

  Realism

  and Flaubert, 22

  and Lovecraft, 117

  depressive realism, 5

  issue of realism in Houellebecq’s novels, 6, 110, 112

  literary, 143 n. 1

  Retté, Adolphe, 101–2

  Robespierre, 3, 14–16, 126

  and atheism, 79. See also atheism

  contrast with Houellebecq, 79

  Cult of the Supreme Being, 78–79, 90, 146 n. 3

  Romanticism, 139–40

  Rousseau, 78

  Rushdie, Salman, 123

  Russell, Bertrand, 22

  sacredness, 7, 104

  postmodern sacred, 7

  sacred and the profane, the 59, 63–64. See also Durkheim

  sacred canopy, 15

  Saint-Simon, Claude-Henri de, 16, 77–78, 95–97

  critique of Christianity, 86–87

  individualism and decline of Christianity, 88–89. See also Christianity

  on metaphysics, 87

  nouveau christianisme, 77, 86, 89

  Schopenhauer

  moral philosophy, 93, 146 n. 8

  on suicide, 144 n. 7. See also suicide

  and the Supreme Sister, 69

  on writing and style, 8

  science fiction, 146 n. 3

  secularization theory, 32–33, 42–43, 140

  Berger on, 32

  Houellebecq’s novels as mise-en-scène of, 4, 15, 20

  Spinoza 71, 78

  Stalin, 76

  Submission

  Annelise, 126–27

  Aurélie, 125

  Bruno, 126–27

  conversion: and Huysmans, 129–30, 132; and sexuality, 148 n. 11; meaning of François’ conversion to Islam, 140–41; Submission as conversion narrative, 129; to Catholicism, 129–30 (See also Catholicism); to Islam, 132, 135–37 (See also Islam)

  Gopnik on, 123, 141

  Hollande, remarks by, 123

  Lilla on, 124

  Muslim Brotherhood, 127–29, 131–32, 141; and education, 132; and liberalism, 129; and women, 127–28

  Myriam, 125–26

  Pegida, 123, 147 n. 2

  polygamy, 136–38

  Rediger, 134–37, 139, 141; conversion to Islam, 13 (See also Islam); on intelligent design, 136; on polygamy, 137; on the suicide of Europe, 135 (See also suicide)

  Rocamadour, 67, 132, 135, 139

  Ten Questions About Islam, 136, 139

  Valls on, 147 n. 2

  suicide

  of Annabelle, 21, 38, 40, 45

  of Annick, 21, 38–40

  of Christiane, 37, 39

  and clones, 42

  of Daniel, 55

  of Djerzinski, 39

  and Elohimism, 64

  of Europe, 135

  François, 130

  link with materialism, 42. See also materialism

  of Martin, Jean-Pierre, 41–42

  Schopenhauer on, 144 n. 7. See also Schopenhauer

  utopia

  failure of, 92, 95–97

  materialist utopia, 100

  posthuman utopia, 12, 27

  repudiation of, 13

  sexual utopia, 81–82, 97

  socialist utopians, 77

  utopian socialism, 14, 16

  utopian socialists, 96

  van Wesemael, Sabine, on, 28

  Vienna Circle, 22

  Voltaire, 136

  Whatever

  animal fictions, 106, 108

  Bardot, Brigitte, 106, 108–10, 112

  Buvet, 31, 43–44. See also Catholicism

  Catholic priests, 43–45. See also Catholicism

  “Dialogues Between a Dachshund and a Poodle,” 83

  instances of materialist horror, 105–9. See also materialism

  Lechardoy, 106, 108, 110

  sexual pauperization, 9, 106, 110

  Tisserand, 81, 106–8, 110, 112

  Viard on, 2, 80

  Wittgenstein, 22

  Zemmour, Éric, 147 n. 2

  Zola, 3, 5–6, 22

  and Naturalism, 22. See also Naturalism

 

 

 


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