He invented the essay to ask a single question of everything: what do I know? His honest answer was, almost nothing for certain.
Retiring to a tower on his estate near Bordeaux, Montaigne began writing what he called essais, attempts, turning his attention on himself with unprecedented candor. What do I know, he asked, and found that the more he examined his certainties the more they dissolved, leaving custom, fear, and habit where he had expected reason. His revived skepticism became a school of tolerance and self-knowledge: suspend your confidence, watch your own mind, and judge others gently. Descartes set out to defeat the doubt Montaigne had made fashionable, and modern prose has never stopped imitating his voice.
“What do I know?”
Born at the family estate near Bordeaux, raised at first to speak only Latin.
Withdrew to his library to write the Essays, inventing a form built around a single question: what do I know?
The rediscovery of Sextus in the sixteenth century handed Montaigne the skeptical arguments behind his question, what do I know?
Montaigne quarried Plutarch endlessly; the Essays are steeped in his Lives and his morals.