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  1. François de La Mothe-Le-Vayer, también conocido por el pseudónimo póstumo de Orosius Tubero (París, 1 de agosto de 1588-íd., 9 de mayo de 1672) fue un escritor y pensador "libertino" o "pirrónico" (escéptico, en el lenguaje de la época) francés, miembro junto a sus amigos Pierre Gassendi, Élie Diodati y Gabriel Naudé de ...

  2. François de La Mothe Le Vayer (French: [də la mɔt lə veje], August 1588 – 9 May 1672), was a French writer who was known to use the pseudonym Orosius Tubero. He was admitted to the Académie française in 1639, and was the tutor of Louis XIV.

  3. François de La Mothe Le Vayer, né le 1 er août 1588 [1] à Paris où il est mort le 9 mai 1672, est un philosophe, philologue et historien français, et l'un des principaux représentants de la pensée dite libertine [2] au XVII e siècle.

  4. François de La Mothe Le Vayer (born 1588, Paris—died 1672, Paris) was an independent French thinker and writer who developed a philosophy of Skepticism more radical than that of Michel de Montaigne but less absolute than that of Pierre Bayle.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. La Mothe Le Vayer is considered as a skeptical philosopher as well as a representative of the religious and moral heterodoxy of his time, and we are entitled to ask how both considerations can work together: is the skepticism he boasts in most of his works the mere rhetorical disguise of his libertinism, i.e. a desacralisation of Christian values?

    • sylvia.giocanti@univ-montp3.fr
  6. François de La Mothe-Le-Vayer, también conocido por el pseudónimo póstumo de Orosius Tubero fue un escritor y pensador "libertino" o "pirrónico" francés, miembro junto a sus amigos Pierre Gassendi, Élie Diodati y Gabriel Naudé de la llamada Tétrada libertina de los eruditos.

  7. (1588–1672) Fran ç ois de La Mothe Le Vayer, a French skeptical philosopher, was born in Paris, the son of a government official. He acquired his father's post when the latter died in 1625. His wife was the daughter of a Scottish intellectual, Adam Blackwood. During his early years La Mothe Le Vayer traveled widely in Europe.