Difference between revisions of "Age of Enlightenment" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
(→‎References: better wiki version link)
 
(94 intermediate revisions by 12 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Images OK}}{{Contracted}}{{Submitted}}
+
{{Ebcompleted}}{{Copyedited}}{{Paid}}{{Approved}}{{Images OK}}{{Submitted}}{{2Copyedited}}
 +
[[File:Encyclopedie frontispice full.jpg|thumb|225px|An engraving from the 1772 edition of the ''Encyclopédie''; Truth, in the top center, is surrounded by light and unveiled by the figures to the right, Philosophy and Reason.]]
 +
The '''Age of Enlightenment,''' sometimes called the '''Age of Reason,''' refers to the time of the guiding intellectual movement, called '''The Enlightenment.''' It covers about a century and a half in Europe, beginning with the publication of [[Francis Bacon]]'s ''Novum Organum'' (1620) and ending with [[Immanuel Kant]]'s ''Critique of Pure Reason'' (1781). From the perspective of socio-political phenomena, the period is considered to have begun with the close of the [[Thirty Years' War]] (1648) and ended with the [[French Revolution]] (1789).
  
The '''Age of Enlightenment''' refers to either the eighteenth century in European philosophy, or the longer period including the seventeenth century and the Age of Reason. It can more narrowly refer to the historical intellectual movement ''The Enlightenment'', which advocated Reason as a means to establishing an authoritative system of aesthetics, ethics, [[government]], and [[logic]], which, they supposed, would allow human beings to obtain objective truth about the universe. Emboldened by the revolution in [[physics]] commenced by [[Isaac Newton|Newton]]ian kinematics, Enlightenment thinkers argued that the same kind of systematic thinking could apply to all forms of human activity.  
+
The Enlightenment advocated [[reason]] as a means to establishing an authoritative system of [[aesthetics]], [[ethics]], [[government]], and even [[religion]], which would allow [[human being]]s to obtain objective truth about the whole of reality. Emboldened by the revolution in [[physics]] commenced by [[Isaac Newton|Newton]]ian kinematics, Enlightenment thinkers argued that reason could free humankind from superstition and religious authoritarianism that had brought suffering and death to millions in religious wars. Also, the wide availability of knowledge was made possible through the production of [[encyclopedia]]s, serving the Enlightenment cause of educating the human race.
  
The intellectual leaders regarded themselves as a courageous elite who would lead the world into progress from a long period of doubtful tradition, irrationality, superstition, and tyranny, which they imputed to the ''[[Dark Ages]]''. The movement helped create the intellectual framework for the [[American Revolution|American]] and [[French Revolution]]s, the Latin American revolutions, and the Polish Constitution of May 3; and led to the rise of [[liberalism]] and [[capitalism]].  It is matched with the high [[baroque]] and classical eras in music, and the neo-classical period in the arts; it receives contemporary attention as being one of the central models for many movements in the modern period. The wide availability of knowledge through the production of [[encyclopedia]]s served the Enlightenment cause of educating citizens to be capable of democracy.  
+
The age of Enlightenment is considered to have ended with the French Revolution, which had a violent aspect that discredited it in the eyes of many. Also, [[Immanuel Kant]] (1724-1804), who referred to ''Sapere aude!'' (Dare to know!) as the motto of the Enlightenment, ended up criticizing the Enlightenment confidence on the power of reason. [[Romanticism]], with its emphasis upon imagination, spontaneity, and passion, emerged also as a reaction against the dry intellectualism of rationalists. Criticism of the Enlightenment has expressed itself in a variety of forms, such as religious conservatism, [[postmodernism]], and [[feminism]].
 +
{{toc}}
 +
The legacy of the Enlightenment has been of enormous consequence for the modern world. The general decline of the church, the growth of secular humanism and political and economic liberalism, the belief in progress, and the development of science are among its fruits. Its political thought developed by [[Thomas Hobbes]] (1588-1679), [[John Locke]] (1632-1704), [[Voltaire]] (1694-1778) and [[Rousseau]] (1712-1788) created the modern world. It helped create the intellectual framework not only for the [[American Revolutionary War]] and [[liberalism]], [[democracy]] and [[capitalism]] but also the [[French Revolution]], [[racism]], [[nationalism]], [[secularism]], [[fascism]], and [[communism]].  
  
Towards the end of the period, the German philosopher [[Immanuel Kant]] (1724-1804) offered ''sapere aude'' as the motto of the Enlightenment - dare to know, suggesting that man had come of age, could now think for him/her-self free of the limitation of dogma that had previosuly hindered progress. Kant remained a theist but for many atheism was a direct result of the Enlightenment; religion was banished from the public square, becomming a private, domestic option. The Church increasingly also withdrew from the public square.  Morality had to find a new ground on which to stand, apart from God.  Many posited that values were self-eveident truths but others suggested that without any ethical source, morals were merely human opinions, which could change. Critics of the Enlightenemt say that virtue lost moral ground; no longer was it possible to move from a statement of fact to a judement about value, from what 'is' to 'ought' (Newbigin, 1986: 36). On the one hand, the confidence and energy that post-Enlightenment humanity has invested in scientific, medical and technological progress been hugely beneficial. Many cures and inventions have enhanced and saved million of lives.  Many scientists do want to improve human life. On the other hand, science and technology has often disregarded ethics in terms of end-purpose, regarding progress as a good in and of itself regardless of utility. Nobody wants to turn the clock back but many want to return value to the center.
+
==Enlightenment thought==
 +
The intellectual leaders of the Enlightenment regarded themselves as a courageous elite who would lead the world into progress from a long period of doubtful tradition and ecclesiastical tyranny, which had resulted in the bloody Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) and the [[English Civil War]] (1642-1651). This dogmatism took three forms:
 +
# [[Protestant scholasticism]] by Lutheran and Calvinist divines,<ref>Arthur Cushman McGiffert, ''Protestant Thought Before Kant'' (London: Duckworth & Co., 1911).</ref>
 +
# "Jesuit scholasticism" (sometimes called the "second scholasticism") by the [[Counter-Reformation]], and  
 +
# the theory of the [[divine right of kings]] in the Church of England.  
 +
(A later, religious reaction against the church's dogmatic outlook was the [[Pietism|Pietist]] movement of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.)
  
==History of Enlightenment philosophy==
+
Enlightenment thinkers reduced religion to those essentials which could only be "rationally" defended, i.e., certain basic moral principles and a few universally held beliefs about God. Aside from these universal principles and beliefs, religions in their particularity were largely banished from the public square. Taken to its logical extreme, the Enlightenment resulted in [[atheism]].  
Another important movement in seventeenth century philosophy, closely related to it, focused on belief and piety. Some of its proponents, such as [[George Berkeley]], attempted to demonstrate rationally the existence of a supreme being. Piety and belief in this period were integral to the exploration of [[natural philosophy]] and [[ethics]], in addition to [[politics|political]] theories of the age. However, prominent Enlightenment philosophers such as [[Thomas Paine]], [[Voltaire]], [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]], and [[David Hume]] questioned and attacked the existing institutions of both [[Church]] and State.
 
  
The eighteenth century also saw a continued rise of [[empiricism|empirical]] philosophical ideas, and their application to [[political economy]], [[government]] and sciences such as [[physics]], [[chemistry]] and [[biology]].  
+
===Philosophy===
I am more enlightened than you
+
In the seventeenth century, [[Francis Bacon]] (1561-1626) pointed out intellectual fallacies of the older tradition, and [[René Descartes]] (1596-1650) made doubting the first principle of philosophy; and these set much of the agenda as well as much of the methodology for those who came after them. The age of Enlightenment is typified in Europe by the great system-builders—philosophers who present unified systems of [[epistemology]], [[metaphysics]], [[logic]], and [[ethics]]. [[Immanuel Kant]] later classified his predecessors into two schools: The [[rationalism|rationalists]] and the [[empiricism|empiricists]]. This division may be an oversimplification, but it has continued to be used to this day, especially when writing about the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The three main rationalists are normally taken to have been René Descartes, [[Baruch Spinoza]] (1632-1677), and [[Gottfried Leibniz]] (1646-1716). Building upon their English predecessors Francis Bacon and [[Thomas Hobbes]] (1588-1679), the three main empiricists were [[John Locke]] (1632-1704), [[George Berkeley]] (1685-1753), and [[David Hume]] (1711-1776). The former were distinguished by the belief that, in principle (though not in practice), all knowledge can be gained by the power of reason alone; the latter rejected this, believing that all knowledge has to come through the senses, from experience. Thus the rationalists took [[mathematics]] as their model for knowledge, and the empiricists took the physical sciences.
  
The Enlightenment (if thought of as a short period) was preceded by the Age of Reason or (if thought of as a long period) by the [[Renaissance]] and the [[Protestant Reformation|Reformation]]. It was followed by [[Romanticism]].
+
===Enlightenment religion===
[[Image:Newton-WilliamBlake.jpg|thumb|right|225px|[[William Blake]]'s ''Newton'' as a divine geometer (1795)]]
+
The spirit of the Age of Reason also affected [[Christianity]]. Depending on how much it affected Christianity, there occurred two distinguishable schools in the [[religion]] of the Enlightenment: Rational supernaturalism and [[Deism]].  
  
The boundaries of the Enlightenment cover much of the seventeenth century as well, though others term the previous era "The Age of Reason." For the present purposes, these two eras are [[lumpers/splitters|split]]; however, it is equally acceptable to think of them conjoined as one long period.
+
Rational supernaturalists included William Chillingworth (1602-1644), John Tillotson (1630-1694), and John Locke. While they understood the unique role of [[revelation]] and differentiated between what could and what could not be rationally established, they were convinced that revelation could still be defended by reason. For them, while revelation may be above reason, it is not contradictory to reason. In his ''The Reasonableness of Christianity as Delivered in the Scriptures'' (1695), Locke argued that while the [[miracle]]s recorded in the [[Bible]] can indicate their divine origin, reason has the last word in explaining and accepting them. Rational supernaturalists also believed that Christian revelation can be reduced to a few doctrinal essentials about God, which can provide the divine sanctions for [[morality]].  
  
Europe had been ravaged by religious wars; when peace in the political situation had been restored, after the [[Peace of Westphalia]] and the [[English Civil War]], an intellectual upheaval overturned the accepted belief that mysticism and revelation are the primary sources of knowledge and wisdom&mdash;which was blamed for fomenting political instability. Instead, (according to those that split the two periods), the Age of Reason sought to establish axiomatic philosophy and absolutism as foundations for knowledge and stability. Epistemology, in the writings of [[Michel de Montaigne]] and [[René Descartes]], was based on extreme skepticism and inquiry into the nature of "knowledge." The goal of a philosophy based on self-evident axioms reached its height with [[Baruch Spinoza|Baruch (Benedictus de) Spinoza]]'s Ethics, which expounded a pantheistic view of the universe where God and Nature were one. This idea then became central to the Enlightenment from Newton through to Jefferson.
+
More radical than rational supernaturalism was Deism, which denied the necessity of revelation, by maintaining that after creating the universe, God does not interfere in its day-to-day runnings. Deists included [[John Toland]] (1670-1722) and Matthew Tindall (1655-1733) in England, [[Voltaire]] (1694-1778) in France, and [[Hermann Samuel Reimarus]] (1694-1768) and [[Gotthold Ephraim Lessing]] (1729-1781) in Germany. In his ''Christianity Not Mysterious'' (1696), Toland asserted that God's revelation is not above reason, and attributed the mysteries of the Christian [[faith]], allegedly originated from revelation, to priestcraft and [[paganism]]. Tindall's ''Christianity as Old as the Creation'' (1730), which was regarded as the "Bible" of deism in the eighteenth century, argued that the universal "religion of nature" was already perfect and unalterable from the beginning when the world was created, like God is always perfect and unchangeable, and that historical revelation adds nothing to this religion. Tindall this way critiqued what he thought to be the unnecessary "superstitions" of the Bible and the church. Voltaire's early deism was more quietly philosophical, but later in his life a few critical events, such as the execution of a [[Huguenot]] in 1762, led him to more polemically attack the institutionalized fanaticism of Christianity. In place of Christianity, he envisioned a new, practical deistic religion, according to which one has only to believe in one just God without any [[ritual]] and to practice virtue. Reimarus subjected the whole biblical history and Christianity to critical analysis based upon reason. In Germany, [[Johann Gottfried von Herder]] (1744-1803) reasserted the idea from Greek antiquity that language had a decisive influence on cognition and thought, and that the meaning of a particular book or text such as the Bible was open to deeper exploration based on deeper connections, an idea now called [[hermeneutics]].
The ideas of [[Blaise Pascal|Pascal]], [[Gottfried Leibniz|Leibniz]], [[Galileo Galilei|Galileo]] and other philosophers of the previous period also contributed to and greatly influenced the Enlightenment; for instance, according to E. Cassirer, Leibniz’s treatise On Wisdom ". . . identified the central concept of the Enlightenment and sketched its theoretical programme" (Cassirer 1979: 121–123). There was a wave of change across European thinking, exemplified by Newton's natural philosophy, which combined mathematics of axiomatic proof with mechanics of physical observation, a coherent system of verifiable predictions, which set the tone for what followed Newton's ''Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica'' in the century after. VAGINA
 
  
The Age of Enlightenment is also prominent in the history of Judaism, perhaps because of its conjunction with the political and social emancipation of many of Western Europe's Jews.
+
So-called ''philosophes'' (French for philosophers), many of whom contributed articles to the ''Encyclopédie,'' were mainly Deists.
  
==The Scottish Enlightenment==
+
===Science===
Scotand benefitted economically from the expansion of trade and commercial of the British Empire in the seventeenth through to the twentieth centuries.  Many Scots served overseas in the colonial service as well as engaging in commerce.  Traditionally close ties to France from the pre-Union with England period helped to forge intellectual links with French thought.  Scotland's Universities were less subject to ecclesiastical control than Oxford and Cambridge were and a type of humanism flourished in the Scottish academy. Several writers, such Herman (2001) and Buchan (2003) point to the high level of Scotish contributions to Enlightenment thought, represented by such thinkers as Francis Hutcheson (1694-1746), [[David Hume]] (1711-1776) and [[Adam Smith]] (1723-1790). The concept of 'free trade', the mainstay of [[globalization]] as well as much of what came to be known as 'scientific method' developed within the Scottish Enlightenment. Herman explores how Scotland's 1707 union with England transformed the country from one of the poorest in Europe to an affluent and highly educated society, giving birth to the Scottish Enlightenment.
+
The heliocentric theory of [[Nicolaus Copernicus]] (1473-1543) started what historians call the "[[scientific revolution]]." This scientific revolution, based on experimentation and reason, questioned previously held truths and searched for new answers. It modified the medieval view of the world and human beings' relation to it. It thus helped shape the Enlightenment.
  
==Key conflicts within Enlightenment-period philosophy==
+
[[Galileo Galilei]] (1564-1642) made the first systematic studies of uniformly accelerated motion and improved astronomical observations, which helped to support Copernicanism. [[Edmond Halley]] (1656-1742) discovered the proper motion of [[star]]s and the periodicity of [[comet]]s. Other significant scientific advances were made by [[Johannes Kepler]] (1571-1630), [[Blaise Pascal]] (1623-1662), [[Christiaan Huygens]] (1629-1695), [[Robert Hooke]] (1635-1703), and [[Gottfried Leibniz]].  
As with theology became a source of partisan debate, with different schools attempting to develop rationales for their viewpoints, which then, in turn, became generally accepted. Thus philosophers such as [[Baruch Spinoza|Spinoza]] searched for a metaphysics of ethics. This trend later influenced [[pietism]] and eventually transcendental searches such as those by [[Immanuel Kant]].
+
 
 +
[[Isaac Newton]] (1643-1727) combined [[mathematics]] of axiomatic proof with mechanics of physical observation and established a coherent system of verifiable predictions in his ''Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica'' (1687). His greatest claim to prominence came from a systematic application of [[algebra]] to [[geometry]], which synthesized a workable [[calculus]] applicable to scientific problems. The integration of algebraic thinking, acquired from the [[Islam|Islamic]] world over the previous two centuries, and geometric thinking which had dominated Western mathematics and philosophy since at least [[Eudoxus of Cnidus|Eudoxus]], precipitated a scientific and mathematical revolution.  
  
Religion was linked to another concept which inspired a great amount of Enlightenment thought, namely the rise of the Nation-state. In medieval and Renaissance periods, the state was restricted by the need to work through a host of intermediaries. This system existed because of poor communication, where localism thrived in return for loyalty to some central organization. With the improvements in transportation, organization, navigation and finally the influx of gold and silver from trade and conquest, however, the state assumed more and more authority and power. Intellectuals responded with a series of theories on the purpose of, and limits of state power. Therefore, during The Enlightenment absolutism was cemented and a string of philosophers reacted by advocating limitation, from [[John Locke]] forward, who influenced both [[Voltaire]] and [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]]. Enlightenment ideas influenced organisations seeking to effect state and social development, such as the [[Freemasons]] and [[Illuminati]]. And they ultimately had a profound effect on the actions of politically active individuals worldwide.
+
The Enlightenment was a time when the [[solar system]] was truly discovered: With the accurate calculation of orbits, such as [[Halley's comet]], the discovery of the first [[planet]] since antiquity, [[Uranus]] by [[William Herschel]] (1738-1822), and the calculation of the mass of the [[Sun]] using Newton's theory of universal gravitation. These series of discoveries had a momentous effect on both pragmatic commerce and philosophy. The excitement engendered by creating a new and orderly vision of the world, as well as the need for a philosophy of science which could encompass the new discoveries, greatly influenced both religious and secular ideas. If Newton could order the cosmos with natural philosophy, so, many argued, could political philosophy order the body politic.
  
Within the period of the Enlightenment, these issues began to be explored in the question of what constituted the proper relationship of the citizen to the monarch or the state. The idea that [[social contract|society is a contract]] between individual and some larger entity, whether society or state, continued to grow throughout this period. A series of philosophers, including [[Rousseau]], [[Montesquieu]], [[David Hume|Hume]] and [[Thomas Jefferson|Jefferson]] advocated this idea. Furthermore, thinkers of this age advocated the idea that nationality had a basis beyond mere preference. Philosophers such as [[Johann Gottfried von Herder]] reasserted the idea from Greek antiquity that language had a decisive influence on cognition and thought, and that the meaning of a particular book or text was open to deeper exploration based on deeper connections, an idea now called [[hermeneutics]]. The original focus of his scholarship was to delve into the meaning in the [[Bible]] and in order to gain a deeper understanding of it. These two concepts - of the contractual nature between the state and the citizen, and the reality of the nation beyond that contract, had a decisive influence in the development of [[liberalism]], [[democracy]] and constitutional government which followed.  
+
===Political thought===
 +
Europe had been ravaged by religious wars; when peace in the [[politics|political]] situation had been restored, after the [[Peace of Westphalia]] (1648) and the [[English Civil War]] (1642-1651), an intellectual upheaval overturned the accepted belief that [[mysticism]] and revelation are the primary sources of knowledge and wisdom—which was blamed for fomenting political instability. Instead, the Age of Reason sought to establish [[axiomatic philosophy]] as a foundation for stability.
  
At the same time, the integration of [[algebra|algebraic thinking]], acquired from the Islamic world over the previous two centuries, and [[geometry|geometric thinking]] which had dominated Western mathematics and philosophy since at least [[Eudoxus of Cnidus|Eudoxus]], precipitated a scientific and mathematical revolution. Sir Isaac Newton's greatest claim to prominence came from a systematic application of algebra to geometry, and synthesizing a workable [[calculus]] which was applicable to scientific problems. The Enlightenment was a time when the solar system was truly discovered: with the accurate calculation of orbits, such as [[Halley's comet]], the discovery of the first planet since antiquity, Uranus by [[William Herschel]], and the calculation of the mass of the Sun using Newton's theory of universal gravitation. These series of discoveries had a momentous effect on both pragmatic commerce and philosophy. The excitement engendered by creating a new and orderly vision of the world, as well as the need for a philosophy of science which could encompass the new discoveries, greatly influenced both religious and secular ideas. If Newton could order the cosmos with natural philosophy, so, many argued, could political philosophy order the body politic.  
+
The seventeenth century saw the birth of some of the classics of political thought, especially [[Thomas Hobbes]]' ''Leviathan'' (1651), and [[John Locke]]'s ''Two Treatises of Government'' (1690). They were basically against the notion of the divine right of the kings, according to which the king derives his right to rule from the will of God and not from any temporal authority, including the will of his subjects, the aristocracy, or any other estate of the realm, so that any attempt to depose the king or to restrict his powers runs contrary to the will of God. Hobbes argued that it is by natural law and contract that sovereignty is to be transferred to the king or monarch, because it is ultimately derived from the people and not from the divine right. Locke proposed an even more democratic view, maintaining that the purpose of authority is to protect human equality and freedom. According to him, citizens agree to a "[[social contract]]" that places an authority over them, but if that authority ceases to care for their welfare, independence, and equality, then the contract is broken and it is the duty of the members of society to overthrow the ruler. His ''Two Treatises'' was published shortly after the [[Glorious Revolution]] of 1688, clearly reflecting the political fallout from that event. It had a decisive influence in the occurrence of the [[American War of Independence]] and the [[French Revolution]] and in the development of [[liberalism]], [[democracy]], and constitutional governments which followed.
  
Within the Enlightenment, two main theories contended to be the basis of that ordering: divine right and natural law. It might seem that divine right would yield absolutist ideas, and that natural law would lead to theories of liberty. The writing of [[Jacques-Benigne Bossuet]] (1627-1704) set the paradigm for the divine right: that the universe was ordered by a reasonable God, and therefore his representative on earth had the powers of that God. The orderliness of the cosmos was seen as proof of God; therefore it was a proof of the power of monarchy. Natural law, began, not as a reaction against divinity, but instead, as an abstraction: God did not rule arbitrarily, but through natural laws that he enacted on earth. [[Thomas Hobbes]], though an absolutist in government, drew this argument in ''Leviathan''. Once the concept of natural law was invoked, however, it took on a life of its own. If natural law could be used to bolster the position of the monarchy, it could also be used to assert the rights of subjects of that monarch, that if there were natural laws, then there were [[natural rights]] associated with them, just as there are rights under man-made laws.  
+
Other political thinkers include [[Montesquieu]] (1689-1755) and [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]] (1712-1778). Montesquieu defined three forms of [[government]]: [[Republic]]s, [[monarchy|monarchies]], and [[despotism]]s, and undoubtedly preferred republics where, according to him, the three governmental powers of legislative, executive, and judicial are to be separated. Rousseau's ''Du contrat social'' (1762) presented his theory of the just state centering on the general will of the people expressed in the laws.
  
What both theories had in common was the need for an orderly and comprehensible function of government. The "Enlightened Despotism" of, for example, [[Catherine the Great]] of Russia and [[Frederick the Great]] of Prussia (a state within The Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation), is not based on mystical appeals to authority, but on the pragmatic invocation of state power as necessary to hold back chaotic and anarchic warfare and rebellion. Frederick the Great was raised by his French governess, importing the Enlightenment to "Germany."  Regularization and standardization were seen as good things because they allowed the state to reach its power outwards over the entirety of its domain and because they liberated people from being entangled in endless local custom. Additionally, they expanded the sphere of economic and social activity.  
+
During the age of Enlightenment, there was so-called "[[enlightened despotism]]," a form of despotism where the rulers were influenced by the Enlightenment. Strictly speaking, these "enlightened" rulers were distinguished from the kings of the divine right in that the former embraced the basic principles of the Enlightenment such as reason and humanism. For example, Joseph II of the [[Holy Roman Empire]] (ruling 1765-1790) is said to have fully embraced the concept of social contract. [[Frederick the Great]] of Prussia (ruling 1740-1786), too, maintained the ideals of the Enlightenment, although he still permitted the practice of serfdom. In nineteenth century Russia, [[Alexander II of Russia|Alexander II]] adopted Enlightenment ideas and liberated the serfs. Eventually, even enlightened despotism was destined to be replaced in the course of history.
  
Thus rationalization, standardization and the search for fundamental unities occupied much of the Enlightenment and its arguments over proper methodology and nature of understanding. The culminating efforts of the Enlightenment: for example the economics of [[Adam Smith]], the physical chemistry of [[Antoine Lavoisier]], the idea of evolution pursued by Goethe, the declaration by Jefferson of inalienable rights, in the end overshadowed the idea of divine right and direct alteration of the world by the hand of God. It was also the basis for overthrowing the idea of a completely rational and comprehensible universe, and led, in turn, to the metaphysics of Hegel and the search for the emotional truth of [[Romanticism]].
+
===The Scottish Enlightenment===
 +
[[Scotland]] benefited economically from the expansion of trade and commerce of the [[British Empire]] in the seventeenth through to the twentieth centuries. Many Scots served overseas in the [[colony|colonial]] service and also engaged in commerce. Traditionally close ties to [[France]] from the pre-Union with [[England]] period helped to forge intellectual links with French thought. Scotland's universities were less subject to ecclesiastical control than Oxford and Cambridge were, and a type of [[humanism]] flourished in the Scottish academy. Several writers, such as Arthur Herman and James Buchan, point to the high level of Scottish contributions to Enlightenment thought, represented by such thinkers as [[Francis Hutcheson]] (1694-1746), [[David Hume]], and [[Adam Smith]] (1723-1790).<ref>Arthur Herman, ''How the Scots Invented the Modern World: The True Story of How Western Europe's Poorest Nation Created Our World and Everything in It'' (New York: Crown, 2001); James Buchan, ''Crowded with Genius: The Scottish Enlightenment: Edinburgh's Moment of the Mind'' (New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2003).</ref> The concept of "free trade," the mainstay of [[globalization]] as well as much of what came to be known as "scientific method" developed within the Scottish Enlightenment. Herman explores how Scotland's 1707 union with England transformed the country from one of the poorest in Europe to an affluent and highly educated society, giving birth to the Scottish Enlightenment.
  
 
==Role of the Enlightenment in later philosophy==
 
==Role of the Enlightenment in later philosophy==
The Enlightenment occupies a central role in the justification for the movement known as [[modernism]]. The neo-classicizing trend in modernism came to see itself as being a period of rationality which was overturning foolishly established traditions, and therefore analogized itself to the Encyclopediasts and other philosophes. A variety of 20th century movements, including liberalism and neo-classicism traced their intellectual heritage back to the Enlightenment, and away from the purported emotionalism of the 19th century. Geometric order, rigor and reductionism were seen as virtues of the Enlightenment. The modern movement points to reductionism and rationality as crucial aspects of Enlightenment thinking of which it is the inheritor, as opposed to irrationality and emotionalism. In this view, the Enlightenment represents the basis for modern ideas of liberalism against superstition and intolerance. Influential philosophers who have held this view are [[Jürgen Habermas]] and [[Isaiah Berlin]].
+
The Enlightenment occupies a central role in the justification for the movement known as [[modernism]]. The [[neoclassicism|neo-classicizing]] trend in modernism came to see itself as being a period of rationality which was overturning foolishly established traditions, and therefore analogized itself to the Encyclopedists and other ''philosophes.'' A variety of twentieth century movements, including liberalism and neo-classicism traced their intellectual heritage back to the Enlightenment, and away from the purported emotionalism of the nineteenth century. Geometric order, rigor, and reductionism were seen as virtues of the Enlightenment. The modern movement points to reductionism and rationality as crucial aspects of Enlightenment thinking, of which it is the inheritor, as opposed to irrationality and emotionalism. One notable school in this connection is [[positivism]], which [[Auguste Comte]] (1798-1857) started in the empiricist tradition, a segment of the Enlightenment.  
  
This view asserts that the Enlightenment was the point where Europe broke through what historian Peter Gay calls "the sacred circle," where previous dogma circumscribed thinking. The Enlightenment is held, in this view, to be the source of critical ideas, such as the centrality of freedom, [[democracy]] and [[reason]] as being the primary values of a society. This view argues that the establishment of a contractual basis of rights would lead to the market mechanism and [[capitalism]], the [[scientific method]], religious and racial [[tolerance]], and the organization of states into self-governing republics through democratic means. In this view, the tendency of the philosophes in particular to apply rationality to every problem is considered to be the essential change. From this point on, thinkers and writers were held to be free to pursue the truth in whatever form, without the threat of sanction for violating established ideas.  
+
In this view, the Enlightenment represents the basis for modern ideas of liberalism against superstition and intolerance. Influential philosophers who have held this view are [[Jürgen Habermas]] (1929- ) and [[Isaiah Berlin]] (1909-1997). This view asserts that the Enlightenment was the point where Europe broke through what historian Peter Gay calls "the sacred circle," where previous dogma circumscribed thinking. The Enlightenment is held, in this view, to be the source of critical ideas, such as the centrality of freedom, [[democracy]], and reason in a society. This view argues that the establishment of a contractual basis of rights would lead to the market mechanism and [[capitalism]], the [[scientific method]], religious and racial [[tolerance]], and the organization of states into self-governing republics through democratic means. In this view, the tendency of the ''philosophes'' in particular to apply rationality to every problem is considered to be the essential change. From this point on, thinkers and writers were held to be free to pursue the truth in whatever form, without the threat of sanction for violating established ideas.
  
With the end of the [[World War II|Second World War]] and the rise of [[post-modernity]], these same features came to be regarded as liabilities - excessive specialization, failure to heed traditional wisdom or provide for unintended consequences, and the romanticization of Enlightenment figures - such as the Founding Fathers of the [[United States]], prompted a backlash against both Science and Enlightenment based dogma in general. Philosophers such as [[Michel Foucault]] are often understood as arguing that the age of reason had to construct a vision of unreason as being demonic and subhuman, and therefore evil and befouling, so that by analogy to argue that rationalism in the modern period is, likewise, a construction. In their book, ''Dialectic of Enlightenment'', Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno wrote a penetrating critique of what they perceived as the contradictions of Enlightenment thought: Enlightenment was seen as being at once liberatory and, through the domination of instrumental rationality tending towards totalitarianism. Foucault critiques the post-Enlightenment tendency to explain eveything according to a dominant mega-theory, so that eveything must fit the master-narrative. Truth, he says, is more subjective and all disciplines are created by elites who control the academy, who determine, often based on self-interests, the standards of normality. Once one method has been selected over others, alternatives become deviant. What does not conform is heresy. History, for example, is written by winners not losers, usually by men not women, by the elite not the workers.  We need to unearth the hidden assumptions within texts; meaning may not be so much discovered within the text as supplied to, or read into, the narrative.  
+
==Critiques of the Enlightenment==
 +
 
 +
===Critiques from Hume and Kant===
 +
In spite of its great contributions to the awareness of human dignity and the development of science, the Enlightenment apparently had its own limitations. So, from within the tradition of the Enlightenment, there emerged some notable critiques of the Enlightenment, such as [[David Hume|Hume]]'s [[skepticism]] and [[Immanuel Kant|Kant]]'s critical philosophy. Hume's thoroughgoing [[empiricism]] resulted in his skepticism about causality, thus destroying the rationalistic approach to God and the world. Kant decided that while pure reason may know the phenomenal world of causation, it cannot know [[God]], [[freedom]], and [[afterlife]], which can only be postulated through faith in the moral sense of duty. This way, the claim of reason to sole validity in the Enlightenment started to decline.
 +
 
 +
===Political conservatism===
 +
The [[French Revolution]] was a [[politics|political]] outcome of the Enlightenment. So, its violent extremes (particularly during the [[Reign of Terror]]) fueled a major reaction against the Enlightenment, which many writers blamed for undermining traditional beliefs that sustained the ''ancien regime,'' thereby fomenting revolution. Counter-revolutionary conservatives such as Irish politician [[Edmund Burke]] (1729-1797), French Jesuit [[Augustin Barruel]] (1741-1820), and French writer [[Joseph de Maistre]] (1753-1821) all asserted a close link between the Enlightenment and the French Revolution, as did many of the revolutionary leaders themselves, so that the Enlightenment became increasingly discredited as the French Revolution became increasingly bloody. Burke's ''Reflections on the Revolution in France'' (1790) was heavily spiced with hostile references to the revolutionaries as merely politicized ''philosophes.'' Barruel argued, in his best-selling ''Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism'' (1797), one of the most widely read books of its period, that the French Revolution was the consequence of a conspiracy of ''philosophes'' and freemasons. De Maistre saw the crimes of the Reign of Terror as the apotheosis and the logical consequence of the destructive spirit of the eighteenth century, as well as the divinely decreed punishment for it.
 +
 
 +
This reaction to the French Revolution did not necessarily extend to its American counterpart. Burke, for one, was entirely supportive of the [[American Revolution]], whose values he saw as compatible with traditions in their best sense.
 +
 
 +
===Religious conservatism===
 +
 
 +
'''Traditionalism in France'''
 +
 
 +
The political Counter-revolution had its counterpart in a religious reaction to its Enlightenment values, especially in France. Félicité Robert de Lamennais (1782-1854) argued that true certitude comes not from individual reason but from the universal consent of reason, which can be seen most clearly in the tradition of the Catholic Church, the largest group of witnesses in the world. Joseph de Maistre, mentioned above as a political counter-revolutionary, was also a staunch defender of the Papacy; in 1819 he wrote ''Du Pape'' ''(On the Pope)'' in which he argued for the infallible authority of the Pope to bring political stability in Europe.   
 +
 
 +
'''German fideism'''
 +
 
 +
With the long tradition of Lutheranism and Pietism in Germany, a [[fedeism|fideist]] reaction against the Enlightenment emerged there. [[Johann Georg Hamann]] (1730-1788) maintained that reason is limited when people try to understand themselves and all existence, and that this limitation of reason leads them to feel that they are ignorant. Consciousness of ignorance leads to genuine faith. Hamann's thought later influenced [[Søren Kierkegaard]], the father of [[Existentialism]]. Another German fideist was [[Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi]] (1743-1819), who believed that super sensible realities such as God can be perceived by an intuitive feeling or faith, as distinguished from scientific reason.
 +
 
 +
===Romanticism and the Counter-Enlightemment===
 +
[[Jean-Jacques Rousseau|Rousseau]]'s romantic sentimental longing for nature was an influence for the emergence of a new movement called [[Romanticism]] around the end of the eighteenth century and the beginning of the nineteenth century, as an another reaction against the Enlightenment. It was especially in [[Germany]] that this movement, with its emphasis upon imagination, spontaneity, and passion, flourished in the fields such as literature and art. [[Johann Gottfried von Herder]] (1744-1803), [[Johann Wolfgang von Goethe]] (1749-1832), and [[Friedrich Schlegel]] (1772-1829) were among the well-known Romantics.
 +
 
 +
[[Isaiah Berlin]] equates this German Romanticism with the so-called "Counter-Enlightenment."<ref>Isaiah Berlin, "The Counter-Enlightenment," in ''The Proper Study of Mankind: An Anthology of Essays'' (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2000).</ref> The term "Counter-Enlightenment" was originally coined by German philosopher [[Friedrich Nietzsche]] ''(Gegenaufklärung'' in German) as he was speaking of it in passing at the end of the nineteenth century, but was popularized by Berlin in the twentieth century. Graeme Garrard identifies Rousseau as the father of the Counter-Enlightenment,<ref>Graeme Garrard, ''Rousseau's Counter-Enlightenment: A Republican Critique of the Philosophes'' (State University of New York Press, 2003).</ref> and even broadens the meaning of the term "Counter-Enlightenment," by saying that there have been many Counter-Enlightenments from the middle of the eighteenth century to the twentieth century amongst various critics, both conservative and liberal alike, including [[postmodernism|postmodernists]] and [[feminism|feminist]]s.<ref>Graeme Garrard, ''Counter-Enlightements: From the Eighteenth Century to the Present'' (Routledge, 2005).</ref>
 +
 
 +
===Postmodernism===
 +
After the end of the [[World War II|Second World War]] the Enlightenment tradition reemerged as a key organizing concept in social and [[politics|political]] thought and the history of ideas. But with the rise of postmodernism, which is one of the Counter-Enlightenments according to Garrard, the features of the Enlightenment started to be regarded as liabilities--excessive specialization, failure to heed traditional wisdom or provide for unintended consequences, and the excessive admiration of Enlightenment figures such as the Founding Fathers of the [[United States]]. They prompted a backlash against both science- and Enlightenment-based dogma in general. Postmodern philosophers such as [[Michel Foucault]] (1926-1984) are often understood as arguing that the Age of Reason unfairly constructed a vision of unreason as being [[demon|demonic]] and subhuman, and therefore, evil and befouling.<ref>Michel Foucault, ''Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason'' (Vintage Books, 1988).</ref> Foucault critiques the tendency of the Enlightenment tradition to explain everything according to a dominant mega-theory, so that everything must fit the master-narrative. He saw truth as more subjective and all disciplines as created by elites who control the academy, who determine, often based on self-interests, the standards of normality. Once one method has been selected over others, alternatives become deviant. What does not conform is heresy. History, for example, is written by winners not losers, usually by men not women, by the elite not the workers.  
 +
 
 +
Foucault actually draws some of his ideas from the Freudo-Marxist book written by Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno of the Frankfurt School, ''Dialectic of Enlightenment,'' which was a penetrating critique of what they perceived as the contradiction of Enlightenment thought: Enlightenment is at once liberatory and, through the domination of instrumental rationality, tending towards totalitarianism, such as fascism, in the twentieth century.<ref>Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno, ''Dialectic of Enlightenment'', tr. Edmund Jephcott (Stanford University Press, 2002).</ref> (Tellingly, the book says nothing about [[communism]], which is, for many liberal critics of the Enlightenment like Berlin, directly descended from the rationalism of the ''philosophes.'')
 +
 
 +
===Muslim critique===
 +
S. H. Nasr expresses Muslim criticism of the Enlightenment as separating knowledge from value. Western science and technology, he says, is immoral because there is no concern with the consequences of progress, but focus only with progress itself. [[Science]] no longer serves humanity, but its own quest for yet more knowledge. His basic critique is that reason became detached from "[[revelation]]," and thus also from values.<ref>S. H. Nasr, ''Traditional Islam in the Modern World'' (London: Routledge, 1990).</ref> Other Muslims argue that while Western science, post-Enlightenment, places trust in reason alone, [[Islam|Islamic]] science places its trust in God's revelation; Western science values science for its own sake, Islamic science regards itself as a type of worship; Western science claims impartiality, Islamic science claims a partiality towards what is true and beneficial for humanity; Western science reduces the world to what can be empirically verified, Islamic science admits the reality of the spiritual dimension.<ref>Clinton Bennett, ''Muslims and Modernity'' (New York & London: Continuum, 2005).</ref> Of course, such a contrast sets up a caricature of Western science over and against a very ideal view of Islamic science, but it does represent a reasoned critique of post-Enlightenment assumptions. Nasr castigates contemporary Islamic [[fundamentalism|fundamentalist]]s for claiming that when they borrow Western technology that are retrieving what Islam gave [[Europe]] through [[Spain]]. Nasr argues that the West condemns as heretics the very philosophers from which they borrowed, while Western science also stands on a foundation which they reject, that is, the primary of reason over revelation. There are also Christians who likewise have criticized the Enlightenment.
 +
 
 +
===Critical acceptance===
 +
At the end of the eighteenth century, Christian thinkers such as Kant and [[Friedrich Schleiermacher]] (1768-1834) were actually appreciative of the Enlightenment, but at the same time, they were of [[Pietism|Pietistic]] background. They were deeply aware of the tension of their Pietistic faith tradition with the humanism of the Enlightenment. So, they attempted to critically accept Enlightenment thought, by synthesizing both traditions. Kant came up with a religion of "practical reason" (not of "pure reason") as a new synthesis of the two, while Schleiermacher decided that "feeling" (not "pure reason" nor "practical reason") is the domain of synthesis. Their projects of synthesis set the tone of nineteenth century Christian theology. 
 +
 
 +
Today, many conservative and evangelical Christians see the Enlightenment tradition as a continued challenge to their faith. The tension of the two traditions still seems to continuously exist today. So, in the twentieth century [[Reinhold Niebuhr]] (1892-1971) called for "a new synthesis" of both traditions and [[Paul Tillich]] (1886-1965) for "new ways of mediation."<ref>Reinhold Niebuhr, ''The Nature and Destiny of Man'', vol. 2: Human Destiny (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1964), 203-12; Paul Tillich, ''A History of Christian Thought'' (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1968), 504-41.</ref> Also, "progressive" evangelicals such as Clark Pinnock, Stanlery J. Glenz, and Alister McGrath have been open to dialogue with the Enlightenment tradition.
 +
 
 +
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
  
Alternatively, the Enlightenment was used as a powerful symbol to argue for the supremacy of rationalism and rationalization, and therefore any attack on it is connected to despotism and madness, for example in the writings of Gertrude Himmelfarb.
 
==Muslim Critique==
 
S H Nasr (1994) expresses Muslim criticism of the Enlightenment as separating knowledge from value. Western science and technology, he says, is immoral because there is no concern with the consequences of progress only with progress itself.  Science no longer serves humanity but its own quest for yet more knowledge. His basic critique is that reason became detached from 'revelation', and thus also from values. Other Muslims argue that while Western science, post-Enlightenment, places trust in reason alone, Islamic science places its trust in God's revelation; Western science values science for its own sake, Islamic science regards itself as a type of worship; Western science claims impartiality, Islamic science claims a partiality towards what is true and beneficial for humanity; Western science reduces the world to what can be empirically verifeid, Islamic science admits the reality of the spiritual dimension (see Bennett: 120). Of course, such a contrast sets up a caricature of Western science over and against a very ideal view of Islamic science but it does represent a reasoned critique of post-Enlightenment assumptions. Nasr castigates contemporary Islamic fundamentalists for claiming that when they borrow Western technology that are retreiving what Islam have Europe through Spain since, says Nasr, they condemn as heretics the very philosophers from whom the West borrowed while Western science also stands on a foundation which they reject, that is, the primary of reason over revelation. There are also Christians who likewise have criticized the Enlightenment.
 
  
==External links==
 
*[http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/cgi-local/DHI/dhi.cgi?id=dv2-10 ''Dictionary of the History of Ideas'':] The Enlightenment
 
*[http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/cgi-local/DHI/dhi.cgi?id=dv2-11 ''Dictionary of the History of Ideas'':] The Counter-Enlightenment
 
*[http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/15970/introduction_to_enlightenment_thought.html Introduction to the Enlightenment]
 
*[http://www.hernandofla.com/litenlightenment.htm The greatest works of Enlightenment Literature]
 
* 'L'esprit des Lumières a encore beaucoup à faire dans le monde d'aujourd'hui' by Tzvetan Todorov Le Monde March 4, 2006  url=http://www.lemonde.fr/web/article/0,1-0@2-3246,36-747585@51-696669,0.html
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Bennett, Clinton ''Muslims and Modernity'', NY & London: Continuum, 2005 ISBN 082645481X
+
*Bennett, Clinton. ''Muslims and Modernity''. NY & London: Continuum, 2005. ISBN 082645481X
*Newbigin, Lesslie ''Foolishness to the Greeks'', Grand Rapids, MI: Eeerdmans, 1986 ISBN 0802801765
+
*Berlin, Isaiah. "The Counter-Enlightenment," in ''The Proper Study of Mankind: An Anthology of Essays''. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2000.
*Nasr, S. H. ''Traditional Islam in the Modern World'', London: Routledge, 1990 ISBN 0710303327
+
*Bronner, Stephen Eric. ''Reclaiming the Enlightenment''. NY: Columbia University Press, 2004. ISBN 0231126085
*Hill, Jonathan ''Faith in the Age of Reason,'' Downers Grove, IL: Lion/Intervarsity Press, 2004 ISBN 0830823603
+
*Brown, Stuart, ed. ''British Philosophy in the Age of Enlightenment''. London: Routledge, 2002. ISBN ISBN  
*Cassirer, Ernst et al ''The Philosophy of the Enlightenment,'' Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1979 ISBN 0691019630  
+
*Buchan, James. ''Crowded with Genius: The Scottish Enlightenment: Edinburgh's Moment of the Mind''. NY: HarperCollins Publishers, 2003. ISBN 0060558881
*Hulluing, Mark ''Autocritique of Enlightenment: Rousseau and the Philosophes'' Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1994 ISBN 0674054253
+
*Cassirer, Ernst et al. ''The Philosophy of the Enlightenment''. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1979. ISBN 0691019630
*Gay, Peter ''The Enlightenment: An Interpretation''. NY: W. W. Norton & Company, 1996 ISBN 0704500175
+
*Foucault, Michel. ''Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason''. Vintage Books, 1988.
*Melamed, Yitzhak Y, 'Salomon Maimon and the Rise of Spinozism in German Idealism', ''Journal of the History of Philosophy'', Volume 42, Issue 1
+
*Garrard, Graeme. ''Counter-Enlightements: From the Eighteenth Century to the Present''. Routledge, 2005.
*Jacob, Margaret ''Enlightenment: A Brief History with Documents'' Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2000 ISBN 0312237014
+
*Garrard, Graeme. ''Rousseau's Counter-Enlightenment: A Republican Critique of the Philosophes''. State University of New York Press, 2003.
*Munck, Thomas ''Enlightenment: A Comparative Social History, 1721-1794'' London: Arnold; NY: Oxford University Press    ISBN 034066326X
+
*Gay, Peter. ''The Enlightenment: An Interpretation''. NY: W. W. Norton & Company, 1996. ISBN 0704500175
*Herman, Arthur ''How the Scots Invented the Modern World: The True Story of how Western Europe's Poorest Nation Created Our World and Everything in It'' NY: Crown, 2001 ISBN 0609606352
+
*Herman, Arthur. ''How the Scots Invented the Modern World: The True Story of how Western Europe's Poorest Nation Created Our World and Everything in It''. NY: Crown, 2001. ISBN 0609606352
*Brown, Stuart ed., ''British Philosophy in the Age of Enlightenment'' London: Routledge, 2002 ISBN ISBN:
+
*Hill, Jonathan. ''Faith in the Age of Reason''. Downers Grove, IL: Lion/Intervarsity Press, 2004. ISBN 0830823603
*Kors, Alan Charles, ed. ''Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment''. 4 volumes. NY: Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003 ISBN  
+
*Himmelfarb, Gertrude. ''The Roads to Modernity: The British, French, and American Enlightenments''. NY: Knopf: Distributed by Random House,2004. ISBN 1400042364
*Buchan, James ''Crowded with Genius: The Scottish Enlightenment: Edinburgh's Moment of the Mind'' NY: HarperCollins Publishers2003 ISBN 0060558881
+
*Horkheimer, Max, and Theodor Adorno. ''Dialectic of Enlightenment'' Translated by Edmund Jephcott. Stanford University Press, 2002.  
*Louis Dupre, Louis ''The Enlightenment & the Intellctural Foundations of Modern Culture'' New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2004 0300100329 ISBN  
+
*Hulluing, Mark. ''Autocritique of Enlightenment: Rousseau and the Philosophes''. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1994. ISBN 0674054253
*Himmelfarb, Gertrude ''The Roads to Modernity: The British, French, and American Enlightenments'', NY: Knopf: Distributed by Random House,2004 ISBN 1400042364
+
*Jacob, Margaret. ''Enlightenment: A Brief History with Documents''. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2000. ISBN 0312237014
*Bronner, Stephen Eric Reclaiming the Enlightenment, NY: Columbia University Press, 2004 ISBN 0231126085
+
*Kors, Alan Charles, ed. ''Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment''. 4 volumes. NY: Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
*May, Henry F ''The Enlightenment in America'' NY: Oxford University Press, 1976 ISBN 0195023676
+
*Louis Dupre, Louis. ''The Enlightenment & the Intellectual Foundations of Modern Culture''. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2004. ISBN 0300100329
 +
*May, Henry F. ''The Enlightenment in America''. NY: Oxford University Press, 1976. ISBN 0195023676
 +
*McGiffert, Arthur Cushman. ''Protestant Thought Before Kant''. London: Duckworth & Co., 1911.
 +
*Melamed, Yitzhak Y. "Salomon Maimon and the Rise of Spinozism in German Idealism," ''Journal of the History of Philosophy'', Volume 42, Issue 1
 +
*Munck, Thomas. ''Enlightenment: A Comparative Social History 1721-1794''. London: Arnold, 2000. ISBN 034066326X 
 +
*Nasr, S. H. ''Traditional Islam in the Modern World''. London: Routledge, 1990. ISBN 0710303327
 +
*Newbigin, Lesslie. ''Foolishness to the Greeks''. Grand Rapids, MI: Eeerdmans, 1986. ISBN 0802801765
 +
*Niebuhr, Reinhold. ''The Nature and Destiny of Man''. Vol. 2: Human Destiny. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1964.
 +
*Tillich, Paul. ''A History of Christian Thought''. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1968.
 +
 
 +
 
  
 +
{{credit1|Age_of_Enlightenment|79157813|17th_century_philosophy|159424183|Divine_Right_of_Kings|161063607|Counter-Enlightenment|157160447}}
  
 
[[Category:Philosophy]]
 
[[Category:Philosophy]]
 
+
[[Category:History]]
[[Category:History and biography]]
 
{{credit1|Age_of_Enlightenment|79157813}}
 

Latest revision as of 04:36, 30 April 2021

An engraving from the 1772 edition of the Encyclopédie; Truth, in the top center, is surrounded by light and unveiled by the figures to the right, Philosophy and Reason.

The Age of Enlightenment, sometimes called the Age of Reason, refers to the time of the guiding intellectual movement, called The Enlightenment. It covers about a century and a half in Europe, beginning with the publication of Francis Bacon's Novum Organum (1620) and ending with Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason (1781). From the perspective of socio-political phenomena, the period is considered to have begun with the close of the Thirty Years' War (1648) and ended with the French Revolution (1789).

The Enlightenment advocated reason as a means to establishing an authoritative system of aesthetics, ethics, government, and even religion, which would allow human beings to obtain objective truth about the whole of reality. Emboldened by the revolution in physics commenced by Newtonian kinematics, Enlightenment thinkers argued that reason could free humankind from superstition and religious authoritarianism that had brought suffering and death to millions in religious wars. Also, the wide availability of knowledge was made possible through the production of encyclopedias, serving the Enlightenment cause of educating the human race.

The age of Enlightenment is considered to have ended with the French Revolution, which had a violent aspect that discredited it in the eyes of many. Also, Immanuel Kant (1724-1804), who referred to Sapere aude! (Dare to know!) as the motto of the Enlightenment, ended up criticizing the Enlightenment confidence on the power of reason. Romanticism, with its emphasis upon imagination, spontaneity, and passion, emerged also as a reaction against the dry intellectualism of rationalists. Criticism of the Enlightenment has expressed itself in a variety of forms, such as religious conservatism, postmodernism, and feminism.

The legacy of the Enlightenment has been of enormous consequence for the modern world. The general decline of the church, the growth of secular humanism and political and economic liberalism, the belief in progress, and the development of science are among its fruits. Its political thought developed by Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679), John Locke (1632-1704), Voltaire (1694-1778) and Rousseau (1712-1788) created the modern world. It helped create the intellectual framework not only for the American Revolutionary War and liberalism, democracy and capitalism but also the French Revolution, racism, nationalism, secularism, fascism, and communism.

Enlightenment thought

The intellectual leaders of the Enlightenment regarded themselves as a courageous elite who would lead the world into progress from a long period of doubtful tradition and ecclesiastical tyranny, which had resulted in the bloody Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) and the English Civil War (1642-1651). This dogmatism took three forms:

  1. Protestant scholasticism by Lutheran and Calvinist divines,[1]
  2. "Jesuit scholasticism" (sometimes called the "second scholasticism") by the Counter-Reformation, and
  3. the theory of the divine right of kings in the Church of England.

(A later, religious reaction against the church's dogmatic outlook was the Pietist movement of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.)

Enlightenment thinkers reduced religion to those essentials which could only be "rationally" defended, i.e., certain basic moral principles and a few universally held beliefs about God. Aside from these universal principles and beliefs, religions in their particularity were largely banished from the public square. Taken to its logical extreme, the Enlightenment resulted in atheism.

Philosophy

In the seventeenth century, Francis Bacon (1561-1626) pointed out intellectual fallacies of the older tradition, and René Descartes (1596-1650) made doubting the first principle of philosophy; and these set much of the agenda as well as much of the methodology for those who came after them. The age of Enlightenment is typified in Europe by the great system-builders—philosophers who present unified systems of epistemology, metaphysics, logic, and ethics. Immanuel Kant later classified his predecessors into two schools: The rationalists and the empiricists. This division may be an oversimplification, but it has continued to be used to this day, especially when writing about the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The three main rationalists are normally taken to have been René Descartes, Baruch Spinoza (1632-1677), and Gottfried Leibniz (1646-1716). Building upon their English predecessors Francis Bacon and Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679), the three main empiricists were John Locke (1632-1704), George Berkeley (1685-1753), and David Hume (1711-1776). The former were distinguished by the belief that, in principle (though not in practice), all knowledge can be gained by the power of reason alone; the latter rejected this, believing that all knowledge has to come through the senses, from experience. Thus the rationalists took mathematics as their model for knowledge, and the empiricists took the physical sciences.

Enlightenment religion

The spirit of the Age of Reason also affected Christianity. Depending on how much it affected Christianity, there occurred two distinguishable schools in the religion of the Enlightenment: Rational supernaturalism and Deism.

Rational supernaturalists included William Chillingworth (1602-1644), John Tillotson (1630-1694), and John Locke. While they understood the unique role of revelation and differentiated between what could and what could not be rationally established, they were convinced that revelation could still be defended by reason. For them, while revelation may be above reason, it is not contradictory to reason. In his The Reasonableness of Christianity as Delivered in the Scriptures (1695), Locke argued that while the miracles recorded in the Bible can indicate their divine origin, reason has the last word in explaining and accepting them. Rational supernaturalists also believed that Christian revelation can be reduced to a few doctrinal essentials about God, which can provide the divine sanctions for morality.

More radical than rational supernaturalism was Deism, which denied the necessity of revelation, by maintaining that after creating the universe, God does not interfere in its day-to-day runnings. Deists included John Toland (1670-1722) and Matthew Tindall (1655-1733) in England, Voltaire (1694-1778) in France, and Hermann Samuel Reimarus (1694-1768) and Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729-1781) in Germany. In his Christianity Not Mysterious (1696), Toland asserted that God's revelation is not above reason, and attributed the mysteries of the Christian faith, allegedly originated from revelation, to priestcraft and paganism. Tindall's Christianity as Old as the Creation (1730), which was regarded as the "Bible" of deism in the eighteenth century, argued that the universal "religion of nature" was already perfect and unalterable from the beginning when the world was created, like God is always perfect and unchangeable, and that historical revelation adds nothing to this religion. Tindall this way critiqued what he thought to be the unnecessary "superstitions" of the Bible and the church. Voltaire's early deism was more quietly philosophical, but later in his life a few critical events, such as the execution of a Huguenot in 1762, led him to more polemically attack the institutionalized fanaticism of Christianity. In place of Christianity, he envisioned a new, practical deistic religion, according to which one has only to believe in one just God without any ritual and to practice virtue. Reimarus subjected the whole biblical history and Christianity to critical analysis based upon reason. In Germany, Johann Gottfried von Herder (1744-1803) reasserted the idea from Greek antiquity that language had a decisive influence on cognition and thought, and that the meaning of a particular book or text such as the Bible was open to deeper exploration based on deeper connections, an idea now called hermeneutics.

So-called philosophes (French for philosophers), many of whom contributed articles to the Encyclopédie, were mainly Deists.

Science

The heliocentric theory of Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) started what historians call the "scientific revolution." This scientific revolution, based on experimentation and reason, questioned previously held truths and searched for new answers. It modified the medieval view of the world and human beings' relation to it. It thus helped shape the Enlightenment.

Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) made the first systematic studies of uniformly accelerated motion and improved astronomical observations, which helped to support Copernicanism. Edmond Halley (1656-1742) discovered the proper motion of stars and the periodicity of comets. Other significant scientific advances were made by Johannes Kepler (1571-1630), Blaise Pascal (1623-1662), Christiaan Huygens (1629-1695), Robert Hooke (1635-1703), and Gottfried Leibniz.

Isaac Newton (1643-1727) combined mathematics of axiomatic proof with mechanics of physical observation and established a coherent system of verifiable predictions in his Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (1687). His greatest claim to prominence came from a systematic application of algebra to geometry, which synthesized a workable calculus applicable to scientific problems. The integration of algebraic thinking, acquired from the Islamic world over the previous two centuries, and geometric thinking which had dominated Western mathematics and philosophy since at least Eudoxus, precipitated a scientific and mathematical revolution.

The Enlightenment was a time when the solar system was truly discovered: With the accurate calculation of orbits, such as Halley's comet, the discovery of the first planet since antiquity, Uranus by William Herschel (1738-1822), and the calculation of the mass of the Sun using Newton's theory of universal gravitation. These series of discoveries had a momentous effect on both pragmatic commerce and philosophy. The excitement engendered by creating a new and orderly vision of the world, as well as the need for a philosophy of science which could encompass the new discoveries, greatly influenced both religious and secular ideas. If Newton could order the cosmos with natural philosophy, so, many argued, could political philosophy order the body politic.

Political thought

Europe had been ravaged by religious wars; when peace in the political situation had been restored, after the Peace of Westphalia (1648) and the English Civil War (1642-1651), an intellectual upheaval overturned the accepted belief that mysticism and revelation are the primary sources of knowledge and wisdom—which was blamed for fomenting political instability. Instead, the Age of Reason sought to establish axiomatic philosophy as a foundation for stability.

The seventeenth century saw the birth of some of the classics of political thought, especially Thomas Hobbes' Leviathan (1651), and John Locke's Two Treatises of Government (1690). They were basically against the notion of the divine right of the kings, according to which the king derives his right to rule from the will of God and not from any temporal authority, including the will of his subjects, the aristocracy, or any other estate of the realm, so that any attempt to depose the king or to restrict his powers runs contrary to the will of God. Hobbes argued that it is by natural law and contract that sovereignty is to be transferred to the king or monarch, because it is ultimately derived from the people and not from the divine right. Locke proposed an even more democratic view, maintaining that the purpose of authority is to protect human equality and freedom. According to him, citizens agree to a "social contract" that places an authority over them, but if that authority ceases to care for their welfare, independence, and equality, then the contract is broken and it is the duty of the members of society to overthrow the ruler. His Two Treatises was published shortly after the Glorious Revolution of 1688, clearly reflecting the political fallout from that event. It had a decisive influence in the occurrence of the American War of Independence and the French Revolution and in the development of liberalism, democracy, and constitutional governments which followed.

Other political thinkers include Montesquieu (1689-1755) and Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778). Montesquieu defined three forms of government: Republics, monarchies, and despotisms, and undoubtedly preferred republics where, according to him, the three governmental powers of legislative, executive, and judicial are to be separated. Rousseau's Du contrat social (1762) presented his theory of the just state centering on the general will of the people expressed in the laws.

During the age of Enlightenment, there was so-called "enlightened despotism," a form of despotism where the rulers were influenced by the Enlightenment. Strictly speaking, these "enlightened" rulers were distinguished from the kings of the divine right in that the former embraced the basic principles of the Enlightenment such as reason and humanism. For example, Joseph II of the Holy Roman Empire (ruling 1765-1790) is said to have fully embraced the concept of social contract. Frederick the Great of Prussia (ruling 1740-1786), too, maintained the ideals of the Enlightenment, although he still permitted the practice of serfdom. In nineteenth century Russia, Alexander II adopted Enlightenment ideas and liberated the serfs. Eventually, even enlightened despotism was destined to be replaced in the course of history.

The Scottish Enlightenment

Scotland benefited economically from the expansion of trade and commerce of the British Empire in the seventeenth through to the twentieth centuries. Many Scots served overseas in the colonial service and also engaged in commerce. Traditionally close ties to France from the pre-Union with England period helped to forge intellectual links with French thought. Scotland's universities were less subject to ecclesiastical control than Oxford and Cambridge were, and a type of humanism flourished in the Scottish academy. Several writers, such as Arthur Herman and James Buchan, point to the high level of Scottish contributions to Enlightenment thought, represented by such thinkers as Francis Hutcheson (1694-1746), David Hume, and Adam Smith (1723-1790).[2] The concept of "free trade," the mainstay of globalization as well as much of what came to be known as "scientific method" developed within the Scottish Enlightenment. Herman explores how Scotland's 1707 union with England transformed the country from one of the poorest in Europe to an affluent and highly educated society, giving birth to the Scottish Enlightenment.

Role of the Enlightenment in later philosophy

The Enlightenment occupies a central role in the justification for the movement known as modernism. The neo-classicizing trend in modernism came to see itself as being a period of rationality which was overturning foolishly established traditions, and therefore analogized itself to the Encyclopedists and other philosophes. A variety of twentieth century movements, including liberalism and neo-classicism traced their intellectual heritage back to the Enlightenment, and away from the purported emotionalism of the nineteenth century. Geometric order, rigor, and reductionism were seen as virtues of the Enlightenment. The modern movement points to reductionism and rationality as crucial aspects of Enlightenment thinking, of which it is the inheritor, as opposed to irrationality and emotionalism. One notable school in this connection is positivism, which Auguste Comte (1798-1857) started in the empiricist tradition, a segment of the Enlightenment.

In this view, the Enlightenment represents the basis for modern ideas of liberalism against superstition and intolerance. Influential philosophers who have held this view are Jürgen Habermas (1929- ) and Isaiah Berlin (1909-1997). This view asserts that the Enlightenment was the point where Europe broke through what historian Peter Gay calls "the sacred circle," where previous dogma circumscribed thinking. The Enlightenment is held, in this view, to be the source of critical ideas, such as the centrality of freedom, democracy, and reason in a society. This view argues that the establishment of a contractual basis of rights would lead to the market mechanism and capitalism, the scientific method, religious and racial tolerance, and the organization of states into self-governing republics through democratic means. In this view, the tendency of the philosophes in particular to apply rationality to every problem is considered to be the essential change. From this point on, thinkers and writers were held to be free to pursue the truth in whatever form, without the threat of sanction for violating established ideas.

Critiques of the Enlightenment

Critiques from Hume and Kant

In spite of its great contributions to the awareness of human dignity and the development of science, the Enlightenment apparently had its own limitations. So, from within the tradition of the Enlightenment, there emerged some notable critiques of the Enlightenment, such as Hume's skepticism and Kant's critical philosophy. Hume's thoroughgoing empiricism resulted in his skepticism about causality, thus destroying the rationalistic approach to God and the world. Kant decided that while pure reason may know the phenomenal world of causation, it cannot know God, freedom, and afterlife, which can only be postulated through faith in the moral sense of duty. This way, the claim of reason to sole validity in the Enlightenment started to decline.

Political conservatism

The French Revolution was a political outcome of the Enlightenment. So, its violent extremes (particularly during the Reign of Terror) fueled a major reaction against the Enlightenment, which many writers blamed for undermining traditional beliefs that sustained the ancien regime, thereby fomenting revolution. Counter-revolutionary conservatives such as Irish politician Edmund Burke (1729-1797), French Jesuit Augustin Barruel (1741-1820), and French writer Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821) all asserted a close link between the Enlightenment and the French Revolution, as did many of the revolutionary leaders themselves, so that the Enlightenment became increasingly discredited as the French Revolution became increasingly bloody. Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790) was heavily spiced with hostile references to the revolutionaries as merely politicized philosophes. Barruel argued, in his best-selling Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism (1797), one of the most widely read books of its period, that the French Revolution was the consequence of a conspiracy of philosophes and freemasons. De Maistre saw the crimes of the Reign of Terror as the apotheosis and the logical consequence of the destructive spirit of the eighteenth century, as well as the divinely decreed punishment for it.

This reaction to the French Revolution did not necessarily extend to its American counterpart. Burke, for one, was entirely supportive of the American Revolution, whose values he saw as compatible with traditions in their best sense.

Religious conservatism

Traditionalism in France

The political Counter-revolution had its counterpart in a religious reaction to its Enlightenment values, especially in France. Félicité Robert de Lamennais (1782-1854) argued that true certitude comes not from individual reason but from the universal consent of reason, which can be seen most clearly in the tradition of the Catholic Church, the largest group of witnesses in the world. Joseph de Maistre, mentioned above as a political counter-revolutionary, was also a staunch defender of the Papacy; in 1819 he wrote Du Pape (On the Pope) in which he argued for the infallible authority of the Pope to bring political stability in Europe.

German fideism

With the long tradition of Lutheranism and Pietism in Germany, a fideist reaction against the Enlightenment emerged there. Johann Georg Hamann (1730-1788) maintained that reason is limited when people try to understand themselves and all existence, and that this limitation of reason leads them to feel that they are ignorant. Consciousness of ignorance leads to genuine faith. Hamann's thought later influenced Søren Kierkegaard, the father of Existentialism. Another German fideist was Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi (1743-1819), who believed that super sensible realities such as God can be perceived by an intuitive feeling or faith, as distinguished from scientific reason.

Romanticism and the Counter-Enlightemment

Rousseau's romantic sentimental longing for nature was an influence for the emergence of a new movement called Romanticism around the end of the eighteenth century and the beginning of the nineteenth century, as an another reaction against the Enlightenment. It was especially in Germany that this movement, with its emphasis upon imagination, spontaneity, and passion, flourished in the fields such as literature and art. Johann Gottfried von Herder (1744-1803), Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832), and Friedrich Schlegel (1772-1829) were among the well-known Romantics.

Isaiah Berlin equates this German Romanticism with the so-called "Counter-Enlightenment."[3] The term "Counter-Enlightenment" was originally coined by German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche (Gegenaufklärung in German) as he was speaking of it in passing at the end of the nineteenth century, but was popularized by Berlin in the twentieth century. Graeme Garrard identifies Rousseau as the father of the Counter-Enlightenment,[4] and even broadens the meaning of the term "Counter-Enlightenment," by saying that there have been many Counter-Enlightenments from the middle of the eighteenth century to the twentieth century amongst various critics, both conservative and liberal alike, including postmodernists and feminists.[5]

Postmodernism

After the end of the Second World War the Enlightenment tradition reemerged as a key organizing concept in social and political thought and the history of ideas. But with the rise of postmodernism, which is one of the Counter-Enlightenments according to Garrard, the features of the Enlightenment started to be regarded as liabilities—excessive specialization, failure to heed traditional wisdom or provide for unintended consequences, and the excessive admiration of Enlightenment figures such as the Founding Fathers of the United States. They prompted a backlash against both science- and Enlightenment-based dogma in general. Postmodern philosophers such as Michel Foucault (1926-1984) are often understood as arguing that the Age of Reason unfairly constructed a vision of unreason as being demonic and subhuman, and therefore, evil and befouling.[6] Foucault critiques the tendency of the Enlightenment tradition to explain everything according to a dominant mega-theory, so that everything must fit the master-narrative. He saw truth as more subjective and all disciplines as created by elites who control the academy, who determine, often based on self-interests, the standards of normality. Once one method has been selected over others, alternatives become deviant. What does not conform is heresy. History, for example, is written by winners not losers, usually by men not women, by the elite not the workers.

Foucault actually draws some of his ideas from the Freudo-Marxist book written by Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno of the Frankfurt School, Dialectic of Enlightenment, which was a penetrating critique of what they perceived as the contradiction of Enlightenment thought: Enlightenment is at once liberatory and, through the domination of instrumental rationality, tending towards totalitarianism, such as fascism, in the twentieth century.[7] (Tellingly, the book says nothing about communism, which is, for many liberal critics of the Enlightenment like Berlin, directly descended from the rationalism of the philosophes.)

Muslim critique

S. H. Nasr expresses Muslim criticism of the Enlightenment as separating knowledge from value. Western science and technology, he says, is immoral because there is no concern with the consequences of progress, but focus only with progress itself. Science no longer serves humanity, but its own quest for yet more knowledge. His basic critique is that reason became detached from "revelation," and thus also from values.[8] Other Muslims argue that while Western science, post-Enlightenment, places trust in reason alone, Islamic science places its trust in God's revelation; Western science values science for its own sake, Islamic science regards itself as a type of worship; Western science claims impartiality, Islamic science claims a partiality towards what is true and beneficial for humanity; Western science reduces the world to what can be empirically verified, Islamic science admits the reality of the spiritual dimension.[9] Of course, such a contrast sets up a caricature of Western science over and against a very ideal view of Islamic science, but it does represent a reasoned critique of post-Enlightenment assumptions. Nasr castigates contemporary Islamic fundamentalists for claiming that when they borrow Western technology that are retrieving what Islam gave Europe through Spain. Nasr argues that the West condemns as heretics the very philosophers from which they borrowed, while Western science also stands on a foundation which they reject, that is, the primary of reason over revelation. There are also Christians who likewise have criticized the Enlightenment.

Critical acceptance

At the end of the eighteenth century, Christian thinkers such as Kant and Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768-1834) were actually appreciative of the Enlightenment, but at the same time, they were of Pietistic background. They were deeply aware of the tension of their Pietistic faith tradition with the humanism of the Enlightenment. So, they attempted to critically accept Enlightenment thought, by synthesizing both traditions. Kant came up with a religion of "practical reason" (not of "pure reason") as a new synthesis of the two, while Schleiermacher decided that "feeling" (not "pure reason" nor "practical reason") is the domain of synthesis. Their projects of synthesis set the tone of nineteenth century Christian theology.

Today, many conservative and evangelical Christians see the Enlightenment tradition as a continued challenge to their faith. The tension of the two traditions still seems to continuously exist today. So, in the twentieth century Reinhold Niebuhr (1892-1971) called for "a new synthesis" of both traditions and Paul Tillich (1886-1965) for "new ways of mediation."[10] Also, "progressive" evangelicals such as Clark Pinnock, Stanlery J. Glenz, and Alister McGrath have been open to dialogue with the Enlightenment tradition.

Notes

  1. Arthur Cushman McGiffert, Protestant Thought Before Kant (London: Duckworth & Co., 1911).
  2. Arthur Herman, How the Scots Invented the Modern World: The True Story of How Western Europe's Poorest Nation Created Our World and Everything in It (New York: Crown, 2001); James Buchan, Crowded with Genius: The Scottish Enlightenment: Edinburgh's Moment of the Mind (New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2003).
  3. Isaiah Berlin, "The Counter-Enlightenment," in The Proper Study of Mankind: An Anthology of Essays (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2000).
  4. Graeme Garrard, Rousseau's Counter-Enlightenment: A Republican Critique of the Philosophes (State University of New York Press, 2003).
  5. Graeme Garrard, Counter-Enlightements: From the Eighteenth Century to the Present (Routledge, 2005).
  6. Michel Foucault, Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason (Vintage Books, 1988).
  7. Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno, Dialectic of Enlightenment, tr. Edmund Jephcott (Stanford University Press, 2002).
  8. S. H. Nasr, Traditional Islam in the Modern World (London: Routledge, 1990).
  9. Clinton Bennett, Muslims and Modernity (New York & London: Continuum, 2005).
  10. Reinhold Niebuhr, The Nature and Destiny of Man, vol. 2: Human Destiny (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1964), 203-12; Paul Tillich, A History of Christian Thought (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1968), 504-41.


References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bennett, Clinton. Muslims and Modernity. NY & London: Continuum, 2005. ISBN 082645481X
  • Berlin, Isaiah. "The Counter-Enlightenment," in The Proper Study of Mankind: An Anthology of Essays. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2000.
  • Bronner, Stephen Eric. Reclaiming the Enlightenment. NY: Columbia University Press, 2004. ISBN 0231126085
  • Brown, Stuart, ed. British Philosophy in the Age of Enlightenment. London: Routledge, 2002. ISBN ISBN
  • Buchan, James. Crowded with Genius: The Scottish Enlightenment: Edinburgh's Moment of the Mind. NY: HarperCollins Publishers, 2003. ISBN 0060558881
  • Cassirer, Ernst et al. The Philosophy of the Enlightenment. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1979. ISBN 0691019630
  • Foucault, Michel. Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason. Vintage Books, 1988.
  • Garrard, Graeme. Counter-Enlightements: From the Eighteenth Century to the Present. Routledge, 2005.
  • Garrard, Graeme. Rousseau's Counter-Enlightenment: A Republican Critique of the Philosophes. State University of New York Press, 2003.
  • Gay, Peter. The Enlightenment: An Interpretation. NY: W. W. Norton & Company, 1996. ISBN 0704500175
  • Herman, Arthur. How the Scots Invented the Modern World: The True Story of how Western Europe's Poorest Nation Created Our World and Everything in It. NY: Crown, 2001. ISBN 0609606352
  • Hill, Jonathan. Faith in the Age of Reason. Downers Grove, IL: Lion/Intervarsity Press, 2004. ISBN 0830823603
  • Himmelfarb, Gertrude. The Roads to Modernity: The British, French, and American Enlightenments. NY: Knopf: Distributed by Random House,2004. ISBN 1400042364
  • Horkheimer, Max, and Theodor Adorno. Dialectic of Enlightenment Translated by Edmund Jephcott. Stanford University Press, 2002.
  • Hulluing, Mark. Autocritique of Enlightenment: Rousseau and the Philosophes. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1994. ISBN 0674054253
  • Jacob, Margaret. Enlightenment: A Brief History with Documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2000. ISBN 0312237014
  • Kors, Alan Charles, ed. Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment. 4 volumes. NY: Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.
  • Louis Dupre, Louis. The Enlightenment & the Intellectual Foundations of Modern Culture. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2004. ISBN 0300100329
  • May, Henry F. The Enlightenment in America. NY: Oxford University Press, 1976. ISBN 0195023676
  • McGiffert, Arthur Cushman. Protestant Thought Before Kant. London: Duckworth & Co., 1911.
  • Melamed, Yitzhak Y. "Salomon Maimon and the Rise of Spinozism in German Idealism," Journal of the History of Philosophy, Volume 42, Issue 1
  • Munck, Thomas. Enlightenment: A Comparative Social History 1721-1794. London: Arnold, 2000. ISBN 034066326X
  • Nasr, S. H. Traditional Islam in the Modern World. London: Routledge, 1990. ISBN 0710303327
  • Newbigin, Lesslie. Foolishness to the Greeks. Grand Rapids, MI: Eeerdmans, 1986. ISBN 0802801765
  • Niebuhr, Reinhold. The Nature and Destiny of Man. Vol. 2: Human Destiny. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1964.
  • Tillich, Paul. A History of Christian Thought. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1968.


Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.