On 7 February 1752, after the second volume of the
Encyclopédie was published, Joly de Fleury charged in a decree presented to the Grand Conseil that "these two volumes...insert several maxims tending to destroy Royal Authority, to institute the spirit of independence and revolt, and, in obscure and ambiguous words, to erect the foundations of error, of the corruption of morals, of irreligion and unbelief". The resulting controversy was only settled when the editors agreed that all future volumes were to be reviewed by censors personally appointed by
Bishop Boyer, the
Dauphin's
preceptor. On 23 January 1759, following the publication of the seventh volume of the
Encyclopedie, with its controversial article on
Geneva, Joly de Fleury condemned it again, together with
Helvetius' De l’Esprit and six other books to the Paris Parlement. His opening statement was ‘Society, the State and Religion present themselves today at the tribunal of justice… their rights have been violated, their laws disregarded. Impiety walks with head held high…. Humanity shudders, the citizenry is alarmed.’ These evils he blamed on ‘a sect of so-called Philosophers (the
Philosophes)… who imagined a project… to destroy the basic truths engraved in our hearts by the hand of the Creator, to abolish his cult and his ministers, and to establish instead Materialism and Deism.’ As a result of his speech the Parlement banned the publishers of the Encyclopedie from selling any more copies, and established a commission of enquiry to look in detail at the content of the seven published volumes. In March 1759 Parlement revoked the Encyclopedie's permission to publish altogether. After this ban, work on the remaining volumes of the Encyclopedie had to continue underground.
De L’Esprit and seven other publications were ordered to be lacerated and burned in front of the Palais de Justice on 10 February. In 1765 Joly de Fleury further demanded, and secured, a condemnation by Parlement of Voltaire's
Dictionnaire philosophique. ==Opposition to the Jesuits==