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Summary by Causeur
In search of the French spirit "The French spirit?": a pleonasm; and it is a German who says so. Not the least: Emmanuel Kant, who, in his Anthropology (1798), reflects on the characters of the peoples. "The French nation is characterized by the taste of conversation; it is in this regard a model for other nations." "The French, he adds, is courteous, not out of interest [in contrast to English], but by an immediate requirement of its taste.
DisclaimerRead with caution - this story is only being covered by one news source that has a ‘low factuality’ rating, which means the outlet has a history of poor reporting practices. Learn more about factuality ratings here.

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In search of the French spirit "The French spirit?": a pleonasm; and it is a German who says so. Not the least: Emmanuel Kant, who, in his Anthropology (1798), reflects on the characters of the peoples. "The French nation is characterized by the taste of conversation; it is in this regard a model for other nations." "The French, he adds, is courteous, not out of interest [in contrast to English], but by an immediate requirement of its taste.

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Causeur broke the news in on Friday, July 25, 2025.
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