European Enlightenment
The "European Enlightenment" or the "Enlightenment"
Overview:
- 1680-1790
- an intellectual "Age of Reason"
- world view change from religious to secular
- marked by skepticism and inquiry
- pursuit of happiness: focus on the human condition
- diffusion of knowledge: books, pamphlets, publications, libraries, universities
Background and historical context & causes[edit | edit source]
- the Enlightenment arose during a time of tremendous change and uncertainty
- religious wars
- expanding world connections
- economic growth and cycles
- it may be seen as a clash of the old and the new:
- new science, new technologies, new religions, new forms of government
- it would be wrong to say, however, that the Enlightenment created the modern world
- change is incremental
- ideas evolve over time
- people and institutions resist change
- events shape that change
Commercial revolutions[edit | edit source]
- key backdrop is the growth of the private economy
- Medieval Europe & manorial feudalism
- church-owned or heritable, aristocratic landowners via royal grants or agreements
- agricultural or extraction labor held by landowners & taxes based on land
- small manufactures & skilled trade controlled by guilds
- late middle-Ages Europe
- growth in trade and movement towards taxation on trade
- growth of towns and cities leads to commercial-based economies
- private land or structure ownership increasingly from purchase or rent and not aristocratic prerogative
- Medieval Europe & manorial feudalism
Protestant Reformation[edit | edit source]
- challenge to papal supremacy and a centralized Church
- religious wars lead to tremendous destruction and loss of life
- protestant nations (Netherlands, German states, England)
Age of Discovery[edit | edit source]
- European expeditions around Africa, across the Atlantic and ultimately across the Pacific
- = a challenge to Europe-centric view of the world, exposure to different geographies and peoples
Scientific Revolution[edit | edit source]
- = a challenge to traditional views and explanations for the world
- new views and comprehension of the physical world and its forces (physics, chemistry, biology, astronomy, etc)
- scientific method as means of rational interpretation of the world
Technological advances[edit | edit source]
- transoceanic travel creates great diffusion of people, animals, plants, materials and ideas
- armament technologies increase lethality of war
- as it did with the protestant reformation, the printing press fueled the diffusion of ideas
Key dates of the Enlightenment[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
- social contract
- the obligation of the government to protect the people and their rights
- and the obligation of the people to obey and support that government
- see Social contract
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]
=== alphabetical by last name=== === section title: first, last, alphabetical by last name
- dates
- famous for:
- background:
- core ideas:
- works:
- legacy:
Cesare Beccaria[edit | edit source]
- 1738-1794
- considered the "father of criminal justice" or law
- core ideas:
- Italian thinker, concerned with prison reform
- works:
- wrote On Crimes and Punishments
- condemned torture and the death penalty
Pierre Bayle[edit | edit source]
- 1647-1706
- famous for:
- important fore-runner (came before) to the Encyclopedists (see Diderot)
- promoted religious toleration
- background:
- born in France, his father was a Calvinist
- he converted to Catholicism, then returned to Calvinism and fled to Geneva
- in Geneva he met Renee Descartes
- he then went to Netherlands and taught at university in
- core ideas:
- a French protestant ("Huguenot"), Bayle fled persecution in France for the Netherlands
- religious skepticism and toleration
- works:
- Historical and Critical Dictionary, starting 1697
- 1682 Reflections on Comets
- Hailey's comet as natural phenomenon and not a mysterious event
- challenged superstition
- legacy
- he argued that the Bible promoted religious toleration
- and that it did not justify use of force to coerce religious beliefs
- also argued for tolerance of different views at the university
- he argued that the Bible promoted religious toleration
Click EXPAND for quotations from Bayle:
Denis Diderot[edit | edit source]
- 1713-1784
- core ideas
- 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."
Thomas Hobbes[edit | edit source]
- 1588-1679
- famous for:
- "Leviathan," his treatise outlining the "social contract"
- considered a founder of modern political philosophy
- background:
- Hobbes was a supporter of the English King during the English Civil War (monarchy v. parliament)
- Hobbes was exiled to Paris after the Parliamentarian's victory
- he was disturbed by the violence and disorder of the English Civil War
- in Paris he taught mathematics and interacted with French thinkers
- Hobbes published Leviathan in 1651 at age 63
- Hobbes was a supporter of the English King during the English Civil War (monarchy v. parliament)
- core ideas:
- the original state of man is no rules, one person against all others
- therefore, government is needed to bring order, safety and happiness to the people
- humans have rights & liberties, but they are meaningless in a state of disorder
- therefore, those rights & liberties can only exist under the protection of a powerful central government
- and many of those rights & liberties must be given up in exchange for security/ protection/ safety
- that central government, however, must have the consent of the governed
- thus Hobbes denied "divine rule"
- = rule by decree from God (birth) v. rule by consent (agreement) of the governed
- additionally, under a strong central government, the people will be able to exercise more rights than in the state of nature, when their rights existed but were denied by a constant state of war
- the logic of Hobbes
- humans can interpret the world
- all humans have passions but the objects of their passions depend on the person
- therefore some people's passions will infringe those of others
- therefore, people fear that their passions will be denied or unfulfilled
- Hobbes identifies uncertainty as a dominant state of human life
- people can't be sure (are uncertain) of their goals or aspirations
- other people can deny the goals and aspirations of others
- Hobbes identifies uncertainty as a dominant state of human life
- Hobbes therefore reasons that people need certainty
- and that certainty can only be provided by a strong, central ruler
- and that "absolute" must therefore deny people of their passions
- as those passions will contradict one another, people must give up their liberties, which lead to those passions in exchange for security
- if given security, people can then find happiness even if denied liberty
- works:
- Hobbes taught mathematics
- Leviathan is his singular work
- legacy:
- Hobbes questioned religious explanations, instead sought reason and logic to understand the world
- Hobbes's "social contract" established a "reason" and not just an assumed reason for a particular form of government
- while Hobbes argued for a strong central power, he did not argue for an absolute central power free of accountability
- quotations
- "Hell is truth recognized too late" << source to do
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]
- 1729-1781
- German writer and critic
- influenced German literature
- promoted religious tolerance and freedom
- works:
- Nathan the Wise, a play on religious tolerance
click EXPAND for details on Nathan the Wise and the "parable of the rings"
John Locke[edit | edit source]

- 1632-1704
- key Enlightenment thinker
- known as "Father of liberalism"
- key ideas:
- "natural law" and "natural rights"
- that people are born with certain rights and that "natural" laws pre-exist governments (which creates "positive law")
- the "social contract"
- the government and the governed must have a "contract" that protects and defines the rights and responsibility of both
- people have the natural right to protect their own "life, health, liberty, or possessions"
- therefore, protecting those rights is a primary purpose of government (its contract)
- "consent of the governed"
- separation of powers
- Locke envisioned separate executive, legislative and judicial branches
- governments are legitimate only if they have the "consent" or permission from the "governed" (the people)
- the "clean slate" or "tabula rosa"
- that all humans are born equal and learn from their environment and experiences
- he promoted proper education of children when young
- otherwise, prejudices, fears, and superstitions will be "locked in" to their memories
- separation of church and state
- property
- Locke argued that property is a natural right and is necessary for happiness
- land ownership was traditionally seen as the property of the aristocracy
- so Locke's views on property rights challenged centralized or aristocratic authority
- supply and demand or "price theory"
- Locke developed the economic / monetary theory of the relationship between supply and demand
- "natural law" and "natural rights"
- works:
- "A Letter Concerning Toleration" 1689
- "Two Treatises of Government" 1689-90
- "Some Thoughts Concerning Education" 1693
- "1695. The Reasonableness of Christianity, as Delivered in the Scriptures" 1695
- quotations:
- "What worries you masters you."
Montesquieu[edit | edit source]
- 1689-1755
- full name Charles-Louis de Secondat, Baron de La Brède et de Montesquieu
- French philosopher and political thinker
- known by Americans as the "champion of liberty"
- the American Founders quoted Montesquieu in their writings more than any other source than the Bible
- the American "Father of the Constitution, James Madison, developed his ideas of separation and balance of powers based on Montesquieu
- promoted the "separation of powers" in government
- John Locke previously discussed this notion, but it was Montesquieu who most clearly articulated them
- promoted representation of the people in the French parliament (known as the "Third Estate")
- studied the past to determine the best forms of government
- developed a theory of history as driven by conditions and not specific events (see quotation below)
- works:
- The Spirit of the Laws 1748
click EXPAND to see excerpts from "The Spirit of the Laws" on separation of powers:
- Causes of the Greatness of the Romans and their Decline, 1734
click EXPAND for Montesquieu's theory of history:
- quotations:
- "To be truly great one has to stand with the people, not above them"
Isaac Newton[edit | edit source]
- Principio Mathematica
- launched idea of a divinely-ordered universe understandable by mathematics
Jonathan Swift[edit | edit source]
- 1667-1745
- Irish satirist and social and religious critic
- most famous for "Gulliver Travels" and "A Modest Proposal"
- both works "satirized" (made fun of) English society
- "A Modest Proposal" criticized British treatment of the Irish people
- most famously proposed the solution to Irish poverty
- for the Irish to sell their babies to rich Englishmen to eat as food'
- most famously proposed the solution to Irish poverty
- his first satire, "A Tale of a Tub" criticized different Christian churches and orthodoxies
- the story tells of a father who gave a tunic each of his sons, under the condition that they could not change or alter it in any way
- as the tunics go out of style, the sons attempt to interpret the father's instructions in such a way as to allow them to alter it
Voltaire[edit | edit source]
- 1694-1778
- French philosopher and writer
- real name =
- "Voltaire" is 'nom de pleume" (pen name), derived from an anagram
- ideas:
- freedom of speech
- freedom of religion and freedom and toleration
- separation of church and state
- was very anti-clerical and anti-dogma (strict religious rules)
- was a "deist" but not an atheist
- disliked democracy
- leads to mob rule
- pluralism
- Voltaire studied foreign religions and history and considered them on equal basis as with those of the West
- he admired Confucius:
Confucius has no interest in falsehood; he did not pretend to be prophet; he claimed no inspiration; he taught no new religion; he used no delusions; flattered not the emperor under whom he lived...
- works:
- Candide
- satire on Enlightenment thought "best of all possible worlds"
- quotations:
- "Common sense is not so common."
Legacy[edit | edit source]
- American Constitution