Ferdinand Vincent-de-Paul Marie Brunetière (; 19 July 1849 – 9 December 1906) was a French writer and critic.

Personal and public life

Early years

Ferdinand Vincent-de-Paul Marie Brunetière was born in Toulon, Var, Provence. After school at Marseille, he studied in Paris at the Lycée Louis-le-Grand. Desiring a teaching career, he entered for examination at the École Normale Supérieure, but failed, and the outbreak of war in 1870 prevented him trying again. He turned to private tuition and literary criticism. After the publication of successful articles in the Revue Bleue, he became connected with the Revue des Deux Mondes, first as contributor, then as secretary and sub-editor, and finally, in 1893, as principal editor.

Career

In 1886 Brunetière was appointed professor of French language and literature at the École Normale,

Personal views

Before 1895 Brunetière was widely known as a rationalist, freethinking scholar. That year, however, he published an article, (After a Visit to the Vatican), in which he argued that science was incapable of providing a convincing social morality and that faith alone could achieve that result.

This work introduced the metaphor of the "bankruptcy of science".

Shortly afterwards, Brunetière converted to Roman Catholicism. As a Catholic, he was orthodox and his political sympathies were conservative. He authored the article on "Literary and Theological Appreciation of Bossuet" for the Catholic Encyclopedia.