Results for 'Enlightenment Legacies'

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  1. Henry Abramson. A Prayer for the Government: Ukrainian and Jews in Revol.Enlightened Absolutism - 2000 - The European Legacy 5 (5):769-772.
     
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  2.  24
    Romantic and Enlightenment Legacies: Habermas and the Post-Modern Critics.Pauline Johnson - 2006 - Contemporary Political Theory 5 (1):68-90.
    Wisdom, Hegel famously said, only flies at dusk. For many, the evening of the liberal-democratic nation state appears to be descending in a globalizing world. This disturbing prospect invites urgent reflection on which of the potentials of this fading order ought to be carried forward. In this climate of review and reassessment, discussions that had seemed done with re-surface sharpened by fresh purpose. The following paper attempts to put new light on a once vigorous dispute between Habermas and his post-modern (...)
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  3.  21
    European integration: The enlightenment legacy.Micheline Ishay - 1994 - History of European Ideas 19 (1-3):207-213.
  4.  24
    Enlightened history and the decline of nations: Ferguson, Raynal, and the contested legacies of the Dutch Republic.Iain McDaniel - 2010 - History of European Ideas 36 (2):203-216.
    This article examines and compares Adam Ferguson's and Guillaume-Thomas Raynal's analyses of modern commercial states by reconstructing their accounts of the history and politics of the Dutch Republic. For both writers, the Dutch case stood as a clear instance of the political dangers implicit in a particular type of commercial polity, and both sought to apply its lessons to an understanding of the future of their own states. Although Ferguson's and Raynal's arguments about the decline of the Dutch trading state (...)
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  5.  18
    The Legacy of the Enlightenment.James Schmidt - 2002 - Philosophy and Literature 26 (2):432-442.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Literature 26.2 (2002) 432-442 [Access article in PDF] The Legacy of the Enlightenment James Schmidt What's Left of Enlightenment? A Postmodern Question, edited by Keith Michael Baker and Peter Hanns Reill; ix & 203 pp. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, $45.00 cloth, $19.95 paper. Postmodernism and the Enlightenment: New Perspectives in Eighteenth-Century French Intellectual History, edited by Daniel Gordon; vi & 227 pp. New (...)
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  6.  34
    The Legacy of Spinoza. The Enlightenment According to Jonathan Israel.Przemysław Gut - 2014 - Diametros 40:45-72.
    The aim of the paper is to present and analyze the interpretation of the Enlightenment which has recently been proposed by Jonathan Israel, with the focus on its philosophical aspect as opposed to the historical one. The paper consists of two parts. The task of the first part is reconstructive: it attempts to explore Israel’s most characteristic statements concerning the Enlightenment. The second and more extensive part has a polemical character: it endeavours to furnish the reader with an (...)
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  7.  61
    The Legacy of the Enlightenment and the Exemplarity of the EU Model.Sebastiano Maffettone - 2009 - The Monist 92 (2):230-257.
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  8.  8
    Legacies of Enlightenment: Diderot’s La Religieuse and Its Cinematic Adaptations.Amy Wyngaard - 2021 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 40:147-163.
    La Religieuse is a classic French Enlightenment work in its elucidation of forced religious vocation as well as the hypocrisy and abuses of the Catholic Church. In reviving and effectively re-envisioning the novel, filmmakers Jacques Rivette and Guillaume Nicloux succeed in bringing Diderot’s ideas to bear on contemporary issues such as the image and role of the Church post Vatican II, and the effects of patriarchal and religious oppression on the individual. This article examines the context and reception of (...)
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  9.  9
    Legacies of Enlightenment: Diderot’s La Religieuse and Its Cinematic Adaptations.Amy Wyngaard - 2021 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 40:147-163.
    La Religieuse is a classic French Enlightenment work in its elucidation of forced religious vocation as well as the hypocrisy and abuses of the Catholic Church. In reviving and effectively re-envisioning the novel, filmmakers Jacques Rivette and Guillaume Nicloux succeed in bringing Diderot’s ideas to bear on contemporary issues such as the image and role of the Church post Vatican II, and the effects of patriarchal and religious oppression on the individual. This article examines the context and reception of (...)
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  10. The Enlightenment's post-9/11 legacy.Kimberly Baxter - 2019 - In Amin Asfari (ed.), Civility, Nonviolent Resistance, and the New Struggle for Social Justice. Boston: Brill | Rodopi.
     
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  11.  32
    Enlightenment Science and the State in Revolutionary France: The Legacy of Charles Coulston Gillispie.Jeff Horn - 2005 - Perspectives on Science 13 (1):112-132.
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  12.  28
    Enlightenment Science and the State in Revolutionary France: The Legacy of Charles Coulston Gillispie.Ph D. Horn Jeff - 2005 - Perspectives on Science 13 (1):112-132.
  13.  17
    A legacy of enlightenment.Jan Golinski - 2003 - History of Science 41 (3):345-350.
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  14.  5
    The Legacy of the Enlightenment and Some News Dilemmas in the Political Thought of Tadeusz Kościuszko.Andrzej Walicki & Emma Harris - 2011 - Dialogue and Universalism 21 (3):11-37.
    The paper presents political views of Roman Dmowski, an leader of integral nationalism in Poland. The author of the paper analyzes also contemporary interpretations of Dmowski’s ideas and their influence on nowadays held political ideas in Poland. Antiliberal, anti-democratic, one-sided trends in the current receptions of Dmowski’s ideas are stressed.
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  15.  12
    The Dutch Legacy: Radical Thinkers of the 17th Century and the Enlightenment.Sonja Lavaert & Winfried Schroder (eds.) - 2016 - Boston: Brill.
    _The Dutch Legacy_ investigates the political philosophy and philosophy of religion of Franciscus van den Enden, Lodewijk Meyer, the brothers De la Court, and Adriaan Koerbagh in order to assess their contributions to the development of radical movements in the Enlightenment.
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  16. The racial legacy of the Enlightenment in Simón Bolívar's political thought.Sergio Armando Gallegos-Ordorica - 2018 - Critical Philosophy of Race 6 (2):198-215.
    This article offers a critical complement to Diego von Vacano’s differential characterization of Bolívar’s political thought and his understanding of race through a comparative analysis between Bolívar’s views and those of certain philosophers of the Enlightenment. Indeed, von Vacano argues that Bolívar’s contributions to republican theory have been traditionally ignored by the Anglo-American tradition. Though von Vacano is right in underscoring that Bolívar’s political thought deserves more attention since it contains valuable contributions that stand in “contradistinction to prevalent discourses (...)
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  17.  14
    Rousseau, the Age of Enlightenment, and Their Legacies.RobertHG Wokler - 2012 - Princeton University Press.
    Robert Wokler was one of the world's leading experts on Rousseau and the Enlightenment, but some of his best work was published in the form of widely scattered and difficult-to-find essays. This book collects for the first time a representative selection of his most important essays on Rousseau and the legacy of Enlightenment political thought. These essays concern many of the great themes of the age, including liberty, equality and the origins of revolution. But they also address a (...)
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  18.  54
    Reforming Witherspoon's Legacy at Princeton: John Witherspoon, Samuel Stanhope Smith and James McCosh on Didactic Enlightenment, 1768–1888.Charles Bradford Bow - 2013 - History of European Ideas 39 (5):650-669.
    SummaryThe College of New Jersey (which later became Princeton University) provides an example of how Scottish philosophy influenced American higher education in an institutional context during the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. This article compares the administrations of John Witherspoon (served from 1768 to 1794), Samuel Stanhope Smith (served from 1795 to 1812) and James McCosh (served from 1868 to 1888) at Princeton and examines their use of Scottish philosophy in restructuring the curriculum and reforming its institutional purpose. While presiding (...)
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  19.  2
    Rousseau, the Age of Enlightenment, and Their Legacies.Bryan Garsten (ed.) - 2012 - Princeton University Press.
    Robert Wokler was one of the world's leading experts on Rousseau and the Enlightenment, but some of his best work was published in the form of widely scattered and difficult-to-find essays. This book collects for the first time a representative selection of his most important essays on Rousseau and the legacy of Enlightenment political thought. These essays concern many of the great themes of the age, including liberty, equality and the origins of revolution. But they also address a (...)
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  20.  4
    Rousseau, the Age of Enlightenment, and Their Legacies.Robert Wokler & Christopher Brooke - 2012 - Princeton University Press.
    Robert Wokler was one of the world's leading experts on Rousseau and the Enlightenment, but some of his best work was published in the form of widely scattered and difficult-to-find essays. This book collects for the first time a representative selection of his most important essays on Rousseau and the legacy of Enlightenment political thought. These essays concern many of the great themes of the age, including liberty, equality and the origins of revolution. But they also address a (...)
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  21.  16
    Resisting the Enlightenment's Instrumentalist Legacy: James, Hamilton, and Carlyle on the Mechanisation of the Human Condition.Ralph Jessop - 2013 - History of European Ideas 39 (5):631-649.
    In the early post-Enlightenment period, informed by the history of Scottish and European thought, Thomas Carlyle and Sir William Hamilton alerted readers to a melancholy future emerging from mechanical theories of the mind. Opposing a Lockean strand in British and French philosophy, their concerns involved predictions about, among other things, a descent into pessimism/ nihilism and the end of metaphysics and moral philosophy. Arguably influenced by Carlyle and Hamilton, William James’s much later Varieties of Religious Experience evinces a similar (...)
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  22.  42
    The Ideas of the Enlightenment and Their Legacy.Morton White - 2000 - The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 7:151-159.
    Concentrating on the legacy of David Hume, I discuss the impact of his psychologism on his two most important sharp distinctions: (1) between statements about the relations of ideas and those about matters of fact; and (2) between what is and what ought to be. I argue that his concept of relations of ideas is subject to difficulties like those attending the concept of synonymy in twentieth-century discussions, and also that his psychologism should lead him to say that (1) is (...)
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  23. Autonomy - the Legacy of the Enlightenment: A Dialogue with Castoriadis.Dick Howard & Diane Pacom - 1998 - Thesis Eleven 52 (1):83-101.
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  24. Dugald Stewart and the legacy of common sense in the Scottish Enlightenment.C. B. Bow - 2018 - In Charles Bradford Bow (ed.), Common Sense in the Scottish Enlightenment. [Oxford, United Kingdom]: Oxford University Press.
  25.  48
    Tensions of modernity: las Casas and his legacy in the French Enlightenment.Daniel R. Brunstetter - 2012 - New York: Routledge.
    Modernity and the other: a story of inequality -- Locating the other in the political debates of early modernity -- Thinking and rethinking the equality of the other: Vitoria, Sepúlveda and the true barbarians -- Las Casas and the other: the tension between equality and cultural othercide -- From the civilizing mission to irreconcilable alterity: the changing perception of the Indians in the French Enlightenment -- The other side of modernity: legitimizing the transition from cultural othercide to physical othercide (...)
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  26.  17
    The Dutch Legacy: Radical Thinkers of the 17 th Century and the Enlightenment ed. by Sonja Lavaert and Winfried Schröder. [REVIEW]Hasana Sharp - 2017 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 55 (4):737-738.
    Scholars of the seventeenth century, the Enlightenment, and Benedict de Spinoza will profit from the essays collected in The Dutch Legacy. Considered as a whole, the volume makes at least two significant contributions. First, it puts firmly to rest the still prevalent idea that Spinoza was a fundamentally lonely thinker whose ideas were sui generis, sprung from the mind of a solitary genius living in social, political, and spiritual exile. Despite the fact that Spinoza's correspondence testifies to a rich (...)
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  27.  12
    Joseph de Maistre and the legacy of Enlightenment.Carolina Armenteros & Richard Lebrun (eds.) - 2011 - Oxford: Voltaire Foundation.
    The 18th century figure, Joseph de Maistre, has long been regarded as characterising the Counter-Enlightenment, but his intellectual relationship to 18th-century philosophy remains unexplored. This is a comprehensive assessment of his response to the Enlightenment.
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  28.  1
    The legacy of liberal Judaism: Ernst Cassirer and Hannah Arendt's hidden conversation.Ned Curthoys - 2013 - New York: Berghahn Books.
    'This man of our destiny': Moses Mendelssohn, Nathan the Wise, and the emergence of a liberal Jewish ethos -- Diasporic visions: the emergence of liberal Judaism -- Abraham Geiger -- Hermann Cohen's prophetic Judaism -- Ernst Cassirer and the ethical legacy of Hermann Cohen -- Ernst Cassirer: the enlightenment as counter-history -- Hannah Arendt: the task of the historian -- Hannah Arendt: a question of character.
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  29.  24
    Modern manifestations of materialism: A legacy of the enlightenment discourse.Amy M. Fisher - 1997 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 17 (1):45-55.
    Explores a postmodern criticism of P. S. Churchland's claims regarding materialism. Materialism is classically understood to be the philosophical position which holds that matter is the fundamental reality of the world, and so neurobiological explanations can be said to be materialistic. Neurobiological explanations of behavior are used increasingly in the place of psychological explanations. This trend is indicative of the rise in popularity of materialism. Churchland is one of the intellectual leaders in the modern manifestation of materialism. She is a (...)
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  30.  13
    Cabanis: Enlightenment and Medical Philosophy in the French Revolution.Martin S. Staum - 2014 - Princeton University Press.
    A physician and spokesman for the French Ideologues, Pierre-JeanGeorges Cabanis (1757-1808) stands at the crossroads of several influential developments in modern culture--Enlightenment optimism about human perfectibility, the clinical method in medicine, and the formation and adaptation of liberal social ideals in the French Revolution. This first major study of Cabanis in English traces the influences of these developments on his thought and career. Originally published in 1980. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available (...)
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  31. Francis Hutcheson’s Philosophy and the Scottish Enlightenment: Reception, Reputation, and Legacy.Daniel Carey - 2015 - In Aaron Garrett & James Anthony Harris (eds.), Scottish Philosophy in the Eighteenth Century, Volume I: Morals, Politics, Art, Religion. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press. pp. 36-76.
    This chapter presents an account of the life and work of Francis Hutcheson. It charts his career from its beginnings in Dublin to the attempt to cement his place in British intellectual life that was his posthumously published A System of Moral Philosophy. Hutcheson’s ideas were not universally welcomed and acclaimed. Religious conservatives constantly challenged him even after he was elected to the Glasgow chair of moral philosophy. The chapter describes the rationalist critique of Hutcheson’s moral sense theory, the criticism (...)
     
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  32.  15
    Schelling’s prehistory in Russia: the legacy of enlightenment.Sigrun Bielfeldt - 2018 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 80 (1-2):90-100.
    ABSTRACTSchelling’s first Russian disciple, D.M. Vellanskij, met his teacher at Würzburg in 1803. It was the heyday of Schelling’s philosophy of identity, the identity of spirit and nature, of mind and matter. Yet, teacher and student differ on the labels they applied to this philosophy. Vellanskij thought of it as the peak of human ‘Aufklärung’, whereas Schelling abhorred the term due to controversies going on within German philosophy at the time. The argument put forward here is that Vellanskij was right (...)
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  33.  5
    The enlightenment: a very brief history.Anthony Kenny - 2017 - London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.
    Montesquieu, Hume, Voltaire, Diderot, Smith, Gibbon, Bentham... These are among the great thinkers who contributed to the dramatic developments in religion, science, and philosophy that we now call the Enlightenment. Written by a world authority, this brief history of the Enlightenment concludes with a perceptive assessment of the cultural, religious, ethical, and political dimensions of its legacy.
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  34.  35
    Robert Wokler , Rousseau, the Age of Enlightenment, and Their Legacies . Reviewed by.Simon Kow - 2013 - Philosophy in Review 33 (2):165-167.
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  35.  2
    The practical reason as a legacy of the Enlightenment.Adela Cortina Orts - 1991 - Enrahonar: Quaderns de Filosofía 17:31.
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  36.  14
    7. Conclusion: The Philosophical Sources and Legacies of Enlightenment Anti-imperialism.Sankar Muthu - 2009 - In Enlightenment Against Empire. Princeton University Press. pp. 259-284.
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  37.  14
    The Scottish Enlightenment: race, gender, and the limits of progress.Silvia Sebastiani - 2013 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    The Scottish Enlightenment shaped a new conception of history as a gradual and universal progress from savagery to civil society. Whereas women emancipated themselves from the yoke of male-masters, men in turn acquired polite manners and became civilized. Such a conception, however, presents problematic questions: why were the Americans still savage? Why was it that the Europeans only had completed all the stages of the historic process? Could modern societies escape the destiny of earlier empires and avoid decadence? Was (...)
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  38. Counter-enlightenments: from the eighteenth-century to the present.Graeme Garrard - 2006 - New York: Routledge.
    The Enlightenment and its legacy are still actively debated, with the Enlightenment acting as a key organizing concept in philosophy, social theory and the history of ideas. Counter-Enlightenments is the first full-length study to deal with the history and development of the Counter-Enlightenment thought from its inception in the eighteenth century right through to the present. Engaging in a critical dialogue with Isiah Berlin's work, this book analyses the concept of Counter-Enlightenment and some of the most (...)
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  39.  7
    Spinoza, life and legacy.Jonathan Israel - 2023 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    The boldest and most unsettling of the major early modern philosophers, Spinoza, had a much greater, if often concealed, impact on the international intellectual scene and on the early Enlightenment than philosophers, historians, and political theorists have conventionally tended to recognize. Europe-wide efforts to prevent the reading public and university students learning about Spinoza, the man and his work, in the years immediately after his death in 1677, dominated much of his early reception owing to the revolutionary implications of (...)
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  40.  18
    Enlightenment: The crisis and transformation of the concept.Mile Savic - 2006 - Filozofija I Društvo 2006 (30):9-29.
    The subject of the paper is the crisis of the concept of enlightenment examined at three levels: polemic-rhetorical, historical-descriptive, and philosophical-normative. The author argues that the inconsistency of substantive definitions of enlightenment does not necessarily result in rejection of this concept but rather in its continuous transformation. By way of conclusion, the author stresses that the normative revival of the concept of enlightenment may be rendered more viable by making a distinction between Enlightenment, as a particular (...)
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  41.  5
    Echoes of the Marseillaise: The Enlightenment and the French Revolution legacy in national constructions in the 19th and 20th centuries. [REVIEW]Stéphanie Ducrocq Roza - 2021 - Astérion 24.
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  42.  13
    The Enlightenment and modernity.Norman Geras & Robert Wokler (eds.) - 1999 - New York: St. Martin's Press.
    This collection of essays is addressed to the legacy of Enlightenment thought, with respect to eighteenth-century notions of human nature, human rights, representative democracy or the nation-state, and with regard to the barbarism, including the Holocaust, allegedly unleashed by eighteenth-century ideals of civilization. Each author offers an interpretation of modern or postmodern philosophy against the background of a so-called Enlightenment Project, envisaged as the conceptual ghost that haunts modernity.
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  43.  7
    Cosmopolitanism and the Enlightenment.Joan Pau Rubiés & Neil Safier (eds.) - 2023 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This timely intervention into the debate about the legacy of the Enlightenment highlights both the plurality and the continuing relevance of Enlightened cosmopolitanism to contemporary global concerns, linking cultural history with the history of ideas and politics, in a global perspective.
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  44.  50
    Spinoza, Enlightenment, and Classical German Philosophy.Sebastian Gardner - 2014 - Diametros 40:22-44.
    This paper offers a critical discussion of Jonathan Israel’s thesis that the political and moral ideas and values which define liberal democratic modernity should be regarded as the legacy of the Radical Enlightenment and thus as deriving from Spinoza. What I take issue with is not Israel’s map of the actual historical lines of intellectual descent of ideas and account of their social and political impact, but the accompanying conceptual claim, that Spinozism as filtrated by the naturalistic wing of (...)
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  45. Hume's Legacy and the Idea of British Empiricism.Paul Russell - 2012 - In Alan Bailey & Dan O'Brien (eds.), The Continuum Companion to Hume. Continuum. pp. 377.
    David Hume’s views on the subject of free will are among the most influential contributions to this long-disputed topic. Throughout the twentieth century, and into this century, Hume has been widely regarded as having presented the classic defense of the compatibilist position, the view that freedom and responsibility are consistent with determinism. Most of Hume’s core arguments on this issue are found in the sections entitled “Of liberty and necessity,” first presented in Book 2 of A Treatise of Human Nature (...)
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  46.  26
    The Enlightenment.Couze Venn - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3):477-486.
    For different reasons, and with different political goals at stake, the fundamental principles advocated by the Enlightenment are being challenged by both the left and the right. This entry sets out to clear a critical space for examining what is at stake in the present in interrogating its legacy as discourse for imagining alternative transmodern and transcolonial futures. A re-evaluation of the Enlightenment by reference to concepts of equality, liberty, emancipation, justice and becoming is central to that task.
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  47.  5
    Vitalizing Nature in the Enlightenment.Peter Hanns Reill - 2005 - University of California Press.
    This far-reaching study redraws the intellectual map of the Enlightenment and boldly reassesses the legacy of that highly influential period for us today. Peter Hanns Reill argues that in the middle of the eighteenth century, a major shift occurred in the way Enlightenment thinkers conceived of nature that caused many of them to reject the prevailing doctrine of mechanism and turn to a vitalistic model to account for phenomena in natural history, the life sciences, and chemistry. As he (...)
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  48.  77
    Placing the Enlightenment: thinking geographically about the age of reason.Charles W. J. Withers - 2007 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    The Enlightenment was the age in which the world became modern, challenging tradition in favor of reason, freedom, and critical inquiry. While many aspects of the Enlightenment have been rigorously scrutinized—its origins and motivations, its principal characters and defining features, its legacy and modern relevance—the geographical dimensions of the era have until now largely been ignored. Placing the Enlightenment contends that the Age of Reason was not only a period of pioneering geographical investigation but also an age (...)
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  49.  10
    ‘Forgive Us Our Trespasses’: The Critical Role, Responsibility and Rights of Ethics in Confronting the Enlightenment's Pride and Prejudice.Stacey M. Floyd-Thomas - 2024 - Studies in Christian Ethics 37 (1):54-65.
    While postmodernists have claimed that the failure of the Enlightenment was a failure of philosophical courage, this plenary address explores how its greatest shortcoming actually was its hubris. Paying attention to how Western scholars have centered pride in their elitist purview was their ultimate worldview, this article examines ‘pride’ as the doctrinal dimension of the good life in contemporary Western society and culture. Furthermore, it implores postmodern Christian social ethicists to reform their stewardship to the telos of the field's (...)
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  50.  6
    The legacy of the Altai composer Afanasy Stepanovich Anokhin as a focus of the formation of the national choral culture of the mid-twentieth century.Tatiana Aleksandrovna Nikitina & Irina Aleksandrovna Zhernosenko - forthcoming - Philosophy and Culture (Russian Journal).
    The authors of the article consider the main directions of the development of choral culture of the twentieth century in the context of domestic and regional socio-cultural processes through the prism of the legacy of the multifaceted creative personality of A. S. Anokhin, as well as through the analysis of the biography and creative path of the composer, based on his diaries and memoirs; presenting his views on the historical events of that time from the point of view of the (...)
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