Prix Condorcet was instituted in 1993, by the Mouvement laïque québécois to honour a public personality who had worked for the defense of secularity and freedom of thought. The name honours the Marquis de Condorcet, a philosopher of the Age of Enlightenment and one of the writers of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen.
- 1993: Micheline Trudel, voluntary.
 - 1994: Henry Morgentaler, defender of the right to abortion in Canada.
 - 1995: Centrale des syndicats du Québec, trade union of teachers.
 - 1996: Louise Laurin, founder of the Coalition for the deconfessionnalisation of the school system.
 - 1997: Institut canadien de Montréal, liberal and anticlerical organization (1844-1880).
 - 1998: All signatories of Refus Global.
 - 1999: Duplessis Orphans Association.
 - 2000: Jacques Hébert, senator and humanist of secularity.
 - 2001: Pierre Bourgault, founder of Rassemblement pour l'Indépendance Nationale and free-thinker.
 - 2002: Jacques Godbout and Jacques Mackay, former presidents of the Mouvement laïque de langue Française (MLF).
 - 2003: Janette Bertrand, playwright.
 - 2004: Rodrigue Tremblay, economist, politician and humanist.
 - 2005: Paul Bégin, deputy and republican partisan.
 - 2006: Daniel Baril, journalist and anthropologist, founder member and former president of the MLQ.
 - 2007: Yolande Geadah, essayist, public debater over immigration and religious issues.
 
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