Marie-Jean-Antoine-Nicolas de Caritat took his title Marquis de
Condorcet from the town of Condorcet in Dauphiné. He was
educated in Jesuit Colleges in Reims and at the Collège de
Navarre in Paris. He then studied at the Collège Mazarin in
Paris.
In 1765 Condorcet published Essai sur le calcul intégral.
He was elected to the Académie des Sciences in 1769. During
this period he produced several important works, including one in
1772 on the integral calculus which was described by Lagrange as:-
filled with sublime and fruitful ideas which could
have furnished material for several works.
Soon after the publication of his 1772 work, Condorcet met
Turgot, a French economist who became an administrator under Louis
XV. Turgot became Controller General of Finance in 1774 under Louis
XVI and he had Condorcet appointed Inspector General of the Mint.
Turgot was dismissed from his post in 1776 and Condorcet tended
his resignation. However Condorcet's resignation was refused and he
continued to fill this post until 1791.
In 1777 Condorcet was appointed Secretary of the Académie
des Sciences. He had been advised by Voltaire and by d'Alembert to
become an expert in writing obituaries in order to improve his
chances of getting the post. It certainly was good advice but it
severely curtailed his mathematical output.
His most important work was on probability and the philosophy of
mathematics. His most important treatise was Essay on the
Application of Analysis to the Probability of Majority Decisions
(1785). This is an extremely important work in the development of
the theory of probability.
He is known for the Condorcet Paradox which points out
that it is possible that a majority prefers option A over option B,
a majority prefers option B over option C, and yet a majority
prefers option C over option A. (Thus, "majority prefers"
is not transitive.)
Condorcet published Vie de M Turgot (1786) and Vie de
Voltaire (1789). In these biographies he showed that he favoured
Turgot's economic theories and agreed with Voltaire in his
opposition to the Church. Also in 1786 he again worked on his ideas
for the differential and integral calculus, giving a new treatment
of infinitesimals. However his treatise was never printed.
When the French Revolution broke out Condorcet championed the
liberal cause. He was elected as the Paris representative in the
Legislative Assembly and he became the secretary of the Assembly. He
drew up plans for a state education system which were adopted.
By 1792 Condorcet had become one of the leaders of the Republican
cause. He joined the moderate Girondists and argued strongly that
the King's life should be spared.
When the Girondists fell from favour and the Jacobins, a more
radical political group led by Robespierre, took over, Condorcet
argued strongly against the new, hurriedly written, constitution
which was drawn up to replace the one which he himself had been
chiefly responsible for drawing up. This showed a lack of sense and
he paid for it when a warrant was issued for his arrest.
Condorcet went into hiding and wrote a very interesting
philosophical work Esquisse d'un tableau historique des progrès
de l'esprit humain (1795). In March 1794 he thought that the
house in which he was hiding in Paris was being watched by his
enenies and he no longer felt safe. He fled from Paris and after
three days he was arrested and imprisoned on 27 March 1794. Two days
later he was found dead in his prison cell and it is not known if he
died from natural causes or whether he was murdered or took his own
life.
J Herival described Condorcet as follows:-
... Condorcet was no politician. His uncompromising
directness of manner and inability to suffer illogical windbags in
silence made him many enemies and few friends. His weak voice, lack
of oratorical powers, and tendency to bore the Convention by the
excessive height of his arguments was one of the tragedies of the
Revolution.
His life is summed up by H B Acton in [2] as follows:-
Wholly a man of the Enlightenment, an advocate of
economic freedom, religious toleration, legal and educational
reform, and the abolition of slavery, Condorcet sought to extend the
empire of reason to social affairs. Rather than elucidate human
behaviour, as had been done thus far, by recourse to either the
moral or physical sciences, he sought to explain it by a merger of
the two sciences that eventually became transmuted into the
discipline of sociology.