The
encyclopédistes were a group of 18th-century writers in
France who compiled and wrote the
Encyclopédie, edited by
Denis Diderot and
Jean le Rond d'Alembert. More than a hundred encyclopédistes have been identified. Many were part of the intellectual group known as the
philosophes. They promoted the advancement of science and secular thought and supported tolerance, rationality, and open-mindedness of the
Enlightenment. Still, as Frank Kafker has shown, the encyclopédistes were not a unified group, neither in ideology nor social class.