Raymond Aron

Raymond Claude Ferdinand Aron was a French liberal intellectual who was active in the turbulent 20th century. He is considered one of the greatest intellectuals in France in the 20 th century, and is the pride of the liberal conservative journalist Le Figaro.

Political position
After World War II, the French intellectual community divided into two groups: left-wing pro-communist socialists(ex. Jean-Paul Sartre) and center-right anti-communist liberals who criticized them.

Aron was an avid anti-communist and advocate of liberalism and the free world. He received much support from American capitalists such as the Ford Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation.

He believed that communism necessarily brought totalitarianism, that it should be viewed as fascism, and he consequently took an anti-totalitarian stance. This position was criticized by many college students and left-wing intellectuals, as Marxism was popular in the French intellectual community at that time.

Totalitarianism
In his book Democracy and Totalitarianism (1967), Aaron listed what he believed to be the five main elements of totalitarianism:
 * The totalitarian phenomenon occurs in a one-party system regime.
 * The monopolistic party is animated or armed with an ideology it confers absolute authority on as the official truth of the state.
 * To impose this official truth, the state reserves for itself, in turn, a double monopoly, the monopoly of the means of coercion and the means of persuasion. The means of communication, radio, television, press, are directed and commanded by the state and its representatives.
 * Most economic and professional activities are subject to the state and become, in a way, part of the state itself. As the state is inseparable from its ideology, these activities become colored with the official truth.
 * As all activity is subject to the state ideology, errors in these fields are ideological faults. There is a politicization and ideological transfiguration of every possible crime of individuals and in the police and ideological terrorism.

Relationship with Jean-Paul Sartre
Raymond Arron and Jean-Paul Sartre were born in 1905 and graduated from the same "Grandes écoles" university. Jean-Paul Sartre wrote in the then left-wing daily Libération, while Raymond Arron wrote in the liberal-conservative daily Le Figaro. He is best known as Jean-Paul Sartre's intellectual opponent.

His main books

 * Introduction à la philosophie de l'histoire (1938)
 * Le Grand schisme (1948)
 * L'Opium des intellectuels (1957)
 * Démocratie et totalitarisme (1965)
 * Le spectateur engagé (1981)