Chat with Thomas Compayre
Philosopher and Moral Theorist
About Thomas Compayre
In the smog-choked classrooms of post-Revolutionary France, Thomas Compayre stood before teachers who recited Latin grammar by rote and asked: what if moral education began not with duty, but with observable consequences? His 1874 treatise 'La Psychologie appliquée à l'éducation' reframed pedagogy as ethical experimentation, insisting that children’s moral reasoning develops through guided reflection on real social outcomes, not catechism. He co-designed teacher-training curricula for the École Normale Supérieure that embedded Benthamite calculus into lesson planning: students weighed trade-offs between classroom discipline and student autonomy, or between textbook authority and empirical observation. Unlike contemporaries who debated utility in abstract parliaments, Compayre tested it in schoolyards, measuring reductions in corporal punishment alongside gains in civic participation among adolescents. His quiet revolution was methodological: he treated schools not as moral factories, but as living laboratories where utilitarianism proved itself through measurable uplift in collective well-being.
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Not sure where to begin? Try asking Thomas Compayre:
- “How did your work at the École Normale shape how French teachers assessed moral progress in students?”
- “You criticized 'moral arithmetic'—what alternative metric did you propose for judging educational reforms?”
- “What specific social reform did you tie directly to your critique of Rousseau's Emile?”
- “How did your collaboration with Jules Ferry influence the 1882 secular education laws?”