European Enlightenment
1680-1790
- 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 =
- 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
- 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
- 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
Diderot's Enccylopedie
Enlightenment thinkers
entry structure
=== section title: first, last, alphabetical by last name
- core ideas
- dates
- works
Pierre Bayle
- 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
- On Crimes and Punishments
- condemned torture and the death penality
Diderot
- author, editor of l'Encyclopedie
- self-exiled to Switzerland to carry on the project in secret
Robert Hooke
David Hume
- 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
- 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
- Principio Mathematica
- launched idea of a divinely-ordered universe understandable by mathematics
Voltaire
- Candide: satire on Englightenment thought "best of all possible worlds" << to do