Étienne-Gabriel Morelly
Étienne-Gabriel Morelly | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1717 |
| Died | 1778 |
| Philosophical work | |
| Era | 18th-century philosophy |
| Region | Western Philosophy |
| School | Utopian socialism |
| Main interests | Political philosophy |
Étienne-Gabriel Morelly (French: [etjɛn gabʁjɛl mɔʁɛli]; 1717–1778) was a French utopian thinker, philosopher and novelist. An otherwise "obscure tax official", and teacher, Morelly wrote two books on education, a critique of Montesquieu and The Code of Nature, which was published anonymously in France in 1755. This book, initially attributed to philosophes including Rousseau and Diderot, criticised contemporary society, postulated a social order without avarice, and proposed a constitution intended to lead to an egalitarian society without property, marriage, church or police.