hmmm...
First, I have only read Rameau's Nephew at this time, saving D'Alembert's Dream for another bout of inspiration.
This piece of work is an interesting and fascinating Dialogue between I, presumably Diderot himself, and the character of study, Rameau, not to be confused with his more famous uncle Rameau, and hence the title of this narrative being conversely Rameau's Nephew, for which little other than some critique is Rameau's Uncle involved in the story.... ya, it took me a minute to figure that out myself.
The introduction to the work in the combined book left me, I can't find the direct quotes, but feeling that the literary world is at a loss in interpreting the meaning of this work - somewhere between Diderot throwing shade at his contemporary critics, or perhaps actual intent toward music, literary, and art critique, or perhaps a philosophical work on morality, among other possible purposes. I don't think it is that confusing at all, unless you are trying to make more of it than Diderot intended. For one, this was not published, and possibly not ever intended to be published in Diderot's time. And second, we tend to think much of Diderot's posthumous publications were somewhat intended for his posterity. Thus it would make no sense for an intelligent writer, for posterities purpose, to put much value in name dropping and critique of contemporary artists with any expectation that he would enjoy the fruits of his labor in his time.
In my view, this is purely a fascinating character study into the mind of a depraved, nihilistic, foolish, talented and manipulative genius, Rameau. Most of the dialogue between I and He is He, Rameau, ranting on justifying his socially inept, perhaps psychotic, approach to life. I am not capable nor qualified myself to make pathological sense of the mindset in a modern diagnostic interpretation, but found myself both nodding to his logic and then wondering, wait a minute... is that right? how can that be right? What is wrong with it? Am I right? Am I wrong? Is that a little bit of me in Rameau?, Rameau in me? more later....
But I wanted to say, on the experience of reading this.... You need to be focused, following along, paying attention to the thread, the stream of consciousness, the flow. If you lose the thread, you are lost. Back up and start again. Some of the ranting, ramblings are very subtle in their logic/purpose/gist....I don't even know how to say it.... Especially difficult is when the neatly broken dialogue between He and I, Rameau heads off to elucidate a story involving a dialog between other characters, not neatly partitioned by the speaker, and you need to follow the speaker transitions of a dialog within a dialog... pay attention.... or just skim those parts when you get lost and try to pick up again later.... To do this work true justice would require some slow and close reading - especially if you hope to understand all of the contemporary references to all the other players and events being discussed.... but again, if you are paying attention to the flow and the gist of the passage, I don't think the specifics of the contemporary context is important/essential.
Some snippets of interest:
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He: I would show you that evil has always come here below through some man of genius.... nothing was more useful to nations than lies and nothing more harmful than truth.
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I: if everything were excellent here below nothing would stand out as excellent.
He: The main thing is that you and I should exist and that we should be you and I... the best order of things ... is the one I was meant to be part of, and to hell with the most perfect of worlds. I would rather exists, even as an impudent argufier than not exist at all.
- seems a plea to our modern You be You, justifying his actions as him being his authentic self.
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He: At the last day, all are equally rich (after commenting that there is nothing better in life than a good dump every day)
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He: I can see countless good people who are not happy, and countless happy ones who are not good.
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He: why do we so often see the virtuous work hard, tiresome and unsociable? Because they have subjected themselves to a discipline that is not in their nature.
- again a jab at the value of authenticity. Rejecting the false lives lives by those yearning to constantly measure up to societal expectations.
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He: Rameau must be what he is: a thief happy to be among wealthy thieves and not a trumpeter of virtue...
- again his authenticity.
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He: Geniuses... are their own creators..... These rare men are formed by nature.
- His recognition that we are who and what we are. It is a wasted effort to strive to become what you are not.
He: with the great of this world there is no better part to play than a Jester..... in a matter as variable as behavior there is no such thing as the absolutely, essentially, universally, true or false, unless it is that one must be what self-interest dictates - good or bad, wise or foolish, serious or ridiculous, virtuous or vicious.... People wanted me to be ridiculous, and so I have made myself that way.
- perhaps straying away from his nature made authenticity... this is where perhaps his life has led him astray.
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He: There are two public prosecutors: one is always waiting and punishes crimes against society, the other is Nature. And this one knows about all the vices which escape the law.
- Karma?
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He: Of course there was something in heredity..... The paternal molecule must be hard and obtuse, and this wretched first molecule has affected everything else.... training being continually at cross purposes with the natural bent of the molecule.
- an early suggestion of genetic heredity, but deeming it responsible and inescapable for his and (in this context) his son's hopes of escaping his demise of mediocrity.
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I: There are people like me who don't consider wealth the most precious thing n the world - odd people.
He: Every living creature, man not excepted, seeks its own well-being at the expense of whoever is in possession of it.
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He: (on his attempts at writing) I had persuaded myself I was a genius, and at the end of the first line I can read that I'm a fool.
- much like my writing of these "book reviews".
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I: Whatever a man takes up, nature intended him for it.
He: Then she makes some strange blunders.
- back to his, and I think the common theme of this book/dialog.
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I: And yet there is one person free to do without pantomime, and that is the philosopher who has nothing and asks for nothing.
- perhaps Diderot's plug at the philosophical good life, though perhaps with a lean toward cynicism/stoicism.
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All in all, being a dialog, I found myself thinking this could be a masterpiece of a two person play, modernized to reflect on much of our own condition today. And as I thought about taking on the challenge of re-writing as a modern script, considered how inadequate I would be at figuring out how to transform this 18th century setting to a modern parallel. and then the challenge of finding an actor up to the merits of the role played by Rameau....
Someone up to the challenge? I imagine this has already been done.... kind of like Waiting For Godot.