European Enlightenment: Difference between revisions
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1680-1790 | * 1680-1790 | ||
* a product of the Protestant Reformation | * a product of the Protestant Reformation | ||
* intellectual "Age of Reason" | * intellectual "Age of Reason" | ||
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* pursuit of happiness: focus on the human condition | * pursuit of happiness: focus on the human condition | ||
* diffusion of knowledge: books, pamphlets, publications, libraries, universities | * diffusion of knowledge: books, pamphlets, publications, libraries, universities | ||
== | == Key dates== | ||
* 1648: end of the 30 Years War (religious dispute was a core cause of the war) | * 1648: end of the 30 Years War (religious dispute was a core cause of the war) | ||
* 1680: publication of Isaac Newton's ''Principio Mathematica'' | * 1680: publication of Isaac Newton's ''Principio Mathematica'' | ||
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== Enlightenment projects == | == Enlightenment projects == | ||
=== Diderot's Encylopedie === | === Diderot's "Encylopedie" === | ||
* a tremendous project to catalog human knowledge | * a tremendous project to catalog human knowledge | ||
* = an exercise in "freedom of thought" | * = an exercise in "freedom of thought" | ||
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* started by Denis Diderot and Jean le Rond d'Alembert | * started by Denis Diderot and Jean le Rond d'Alembert | ||
* goals: | * goals: | ||
** Diderot wrote that the purpose of the project was ""to change the way people think" | ** Diderot wrote that the purpose of the project was ""to change the way people think" | ||
** to disseminate (spread) knowledge across economic classes | ** to disseminate (spread) knowledge across economic classes | ||
** to give more common people access to practical knowledge, especially mechanics | ** to give more common people access to practical knowledge, especially mechanics | ||
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* some of the ideas presented in the encyclopedia were considered radical | * some of the ideas presented in the encyclopedia were considered radical | ||
** the French government banned it in 1759 | ** the French government banned it in 1759 | ||
** the work supported religious freedom | ** the work supported religious freedom | ||
** many entries challenged religious doctrine | ** many entries challenged religious doctrine | ||
*** under the idea that knowledge is provable, the work treated religion as also subject to proof | *** under the idea that knowledge is provable, the work treated religion as also subject to proof | ||
*** the work attacked mysticism and superstition | *** the work attacked mysticism and superstition | ||
==== taxonomy of human knowledge | ==== taxonomy of human knowledge ==== | ||
[[File:ENC SYSTEME FIGURE.jpeg|thumb|Fig. 3: "Figurative system of human knowledge", the structure that the Encyclopédie organised knowledge into. It had three main branches: memory, reason, and imagination.]] | [[File:ENC SYSTEME FIGURE.jpeg|thumb|Fig. 3: "Figurative system of human knowledge", the structure that the Encyclopédie organised knowledge into. It had three main branches: memory, reason, and imagination.]] | ||
* Enlightenment's outlook was that all human knowledge and the world and universe around it can be understood rationally | |||
** therefore, such knowledge can be organized logical | |||
* the Encyclopedia organized knowledge into three main categories: | * the Encyclopedia organized knowledge into three main categories: | ||
** memory (factual knowledge) | ** memory (factual knowledge) | ||
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=== entry structure === | === entry structure === | ||
<nowiki> === </nowiki>section title: first, last, alphabetical by last name | <nowiki> === </nowiki>section title: first, last, alphabetical by last name | ||
* dates | |||
* core ideas | * core ideas | ||
* works | * works | ||
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=== Cesare Beccaria === | === Cesare Beccaria === | ||
* ''On Crimes and Punishments'' | *''On Crimes and Punishments'' | ||
** condemned torture and the death penality | ** condemned torture and the death penality | ||
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* he also wrote plays and was a prominent art critic | * he also wrote plays and was a prominent art critic | ||
* overall, Diderot's thoughts are expressed in these questions, as proposed by one of his biographers, Andrew S. Curran: | * overall, Diderot's thoughts are expressed in these questions, as proposed by one of his biographers, Andrew S. Curran: | ||
** ''Why be moral in a world without god?'' | **''Why be moral in a world without god?'' | ||
** ''How should we appreciate art?'' | **''How should we appreciate art?'' | ||
** ''What are we and where do we come from?'' | **''What are we and where do we come from?'' | ||
** ''What are sex and love?'' | **''What are sex and love?'' | ||
** ''How can a philosopher intervene in political affairs?'' | **''How can a philosopher intervene in political affairs?'' | ||
* Diderot quotation: | * Diderot quotation: | ||
** ''"posterity is for the philosopher what the 'other world' is for the man of religion."'' | **''"posterity is for the philosopher what the 'other world' is for the man of religion."'' | ||
=== Robert Hooke === | === Robert Hooke === | ||
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=== David Hume === | === David Hume === | ||
* the problem of induction | * the problem of induction | ||
** how do you know that the sun will rise tomorrow? | ** how do you know that the sun will rise tomorrow? | ||
** Greek verwion of hte question >>> todo | ** Greek verwion of hte question >>> todo | ||
* reason will always be the slave of passion | * reason will always be the slave of passion | ||
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** | ** | ||
* works: | * works: | ||
** ''Nathan the Wise'', a play on religious tolerance | **''Nathan the Wise'', a play on religious tolerance | ||
click EXPAND for details on ''Nathan the Wise'' and the "parable of the rings" | click EXPAND for details on ''Nathan the Wise'' and the "parable of the rings" | ||
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | <div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"> | ||
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=== Isaac Newton === | === Isaac Newton === | ||
* ''Principio Mathematica'' | *''Principio Mathematica'' | ||
* launched idea of a divinely-ordered universe understandable by mathematics | * launched idea of a divinely-ordered universe understandable by mathematics | ||
=== Voltaire === | === Voltaire === | ||
* Candide: satire on Englightenment thought "best of all possible worlds" << to do | * Candide: satire on Englightenment thought "best of all possible worlds" << to do |
Revision as of 02:14, 29 July 2021
- 1680-1790
- a product of the Protestant Reformation
- intellectual "Age of Reason"
- world view change from religious to secular
- skepticism & religious skepticism
- pursuit of happiness: focus on the human condition
- diffusion of knowledge: books, pamphlets, publications, libraries, universities
Key dates[edit | edit source]
- 1648: end of the 30 Years War (religious dispute was a core cause of the war)
- 1680: publication of Isaac Newton's Principio Mathematica
- 1688: Glorious Revolution in England
- 1682: Haley's comet & Bayle's "Reflections on Comets"
Enlightenment definitions[edit | edit source]
- disenchantment of the world
- from Max Weber
- attacking superstition
- political reform
- applying reason to public policy
- infrastructure projects
- penal & criminal law enforcement and reform
- vagrants and beggars
Enlightenment core ideas[edit | edit source]
- truth can be found through investigation
- self-government
- Glorious Revolution: William of Orange takes power
- transfer of power based on the public good and not dynastic divine rule
- Glorious Revolution: William of Orange takes power
Enlightenment projects[edit | edit source]
Diderot's "Encylopedie"[edit | edit source]
- a tremendous project to catalog human knowledge
- = an exercise in "freedom of thought"
- had 28 volumes, 71,818 articles and 3,129 illustrations
- started by Denis Diderot and Jean le Rond d'Alembert
- goals:
- Diderot wrote that the purpose of the project was ""to change the way people think"
- to disseminate (spread) knowledge across economic classes
- to give more common people access to practical knowledge, especially mechanics
- it was the first encyclopedia to have independent contributors
- some of the ideas presented in the encyclopedia were considered radical
- the French government banned it in 1759
- the work supported religious freedom
- many entries challenged religious doctrine
- under the idea that knowledge is provable, the work treated religion as also subject to proof
- the work attacked mysticism and superstition
taxonomy of human knowledge[edit | edit source]
- Enlightenment's outlook was that all human knowledge and the world and universe around it can be understood rationally
- therefore, such knowledge can be organized logical
- the Encyclopedia organized knowledge into three main categories:
- memory (factual knowledge)
- reason (logic, deduction)
- imagination (arts, literature)
Enlightenment thinkers[edit | edit source]
entry structure[edit | edit source]
=== section title: first, last, alphabetical by last name
- dates
- core ideas
- works
Pierre Bayle[edit | edit source]
- core ideas
- religious skepticism and toleration
- 1682 Reflections on Comets
- Hailey's comet as natural phenomenon and not a mysterious event
- challenged superstition
- religious toleration
Cesare Beccaria[edit | edit source]
- On Crimes and Punishments
- condemned torture and the death penality
Denis Diderot[edit | edit source]
- author, editor of l'Encyclopedie
- self-exiled to Switzerland to carry on the project in secret
- Diderot was a follower of Voltaire and deisms (that God exists but not as a distinct entity)
- he later adopted materialism and atheism
- he believed that religious truths should be subject to the same standards of proof as any other knowledge
- he also wrote plays and was a prominent art critic
- overall, Diderot's thoughts are expressed in these questions, as proposed by one of his biographers, Andrew S. Curran:
- Why be moral in a world without god?
- How should we appreciate art?
- What are we and where do we come from?
- What are sex and love?
- How can a philosopher intervene in political affairs?
- Diderot quotation:
- "posterity is for the philosopher what the 'other world' is for the man of religion."
Robert Hooke[edit | edit source]
David Hume[edit | edit source]
- the problem of induction
- how do you know that the sun will rise tomorrow?
- Greek verwion of hte question >>> todo
- reason will always be the slave of passion
- in 2020 Hume cancelled by modern "cancel culture"
- Hume wrote a racist tract, "comments on matters of race" that posited that blacks were inferior beings
- in 2020, Edinburgh University removed his name from a building on campus
= Gotthold Ephraim Lessing[edit | edit source]
- core ideas
- works:
- Nathan the Wise, a play on religious tolerance
click EXPAND for details on Nathan the Wise and the "parable of the rings"
- a play about Nathan, a Jewish merchant who meets Saladin the Great, the Ottoman sultan and thus a core Islamic leader
- Saladin asks Nathan which of the Abrahamic religions is the "true religion"
- Abrahamic religions are Judaism, Christianity and Islam (in order of historical appearance)
- Nathan avoids the question trap by answering with the "parable of the ring"
- = a story about a magical ring that empowers the bearer God's approval ("pleasing to God")
- i.e., the bearer's religion is the "true religion"
- it is passed on by generation, until a father can't decide which of three sons to give it to
- so he creates two exact copies and gives each son a ring
- afterwards, the sons argue over who owns the actual ring
- they take their dispute to a wise man who tells them
- that perhaps all three rings are replicas, they cannot know
- therefore, if each acts in such a way as God will be pleased, it would show that each ring has the magical power
- i.e., God doesn't judge by one's religion but by one's actions
- = a story about a magical ring that empowers the bearer God's approval ("pleasing to God")
Isaac Newton[edit | edit source]
- Principio Mathematica
- launched idea of a divinely-ordered universe understandable by mathematics
Voltaire[edit | edit source]
- Candide: satire on Englightenment thought "best of all possible worlds" << to do