"The Radical Enlightenment" was a set of ideas which helped lay the foundations of the modern world on the basis of equality, democracy, secularism, and universality. This study by cultural historian, Jonathan Israel, shows how Spinoza and his thought set the intellectual current towards the political revolutions of the later 18th century.
"The Radical Enlightenment" was a set of ideas which helped lay the foundations of the modern world on the basis of equality, democracy, secularism, and universality. This study by cultural historian, Jonathan Israel, shows how Spinoza and his thought set the intellectual current towards the political revolutions of the later 18th century.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Jonathan Israel is a professor in the School of Historical Studies, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton.
Inhaltsangabe
I. The 'Radical Enlightenment' 1: Introduction 2: Government and Philosophy 3: Society, Institutions, Revolution 4: Women, Philosophy, and Sexuality 5: Censorship and Culture 6: Libraries and Enlightenment 7: The Learned Journals II. The Rise of Philosophical Radicalism 8: Spinoza 9: Van den Enden: Philosophy, Democracy, and Egalitarianism 10: Radicalism and the People: The Brothers Koerbagh 11: Philosophy, the Interpreter of Scripture 12: Miracles Denied 13: Spinoza's System 14: Spinoza, Science, and the Scientists 15: Philosophy, Politics, and the Liberation of Man 16: Publishing a Banned Philosophy 17: The Spread of a Forbidden Movement III. Europe and the 'New' Intellectual Controversies 1680-1720 18: Bayle and the 'Virtuous Atheist' 19: The Bredenburg Disputes 20: Fontenelle and the War of the Oracles 21: The Death of the Devil 22: Leenhof and the 'Universal Philosophical Religion' 23: The 'Nature of God' Controversy IV. The Intellectual Counter-Offensive 24: New Theological Strategies 25: The Collapse of Cartesianism 26: Leibniz and the Radical Enlightenment 27: Anglomania: The 'Triumph' of Newton and Locke 28: The Intellectual Drama in Spain and Portugal 29: Germany and the Baltic: 'The 'War of the Philosophers' V. The Clandestine Progress of the Radical Enlightenment 1680-1750 30: Boulainvilliers and the Rise of French 31: French Refugee Deists in Exile 32: The Spinozistic Novel in French 33: English Deism and Europe 34: Germany: The Radical Aufklaerung 35: The Radical Impact in Italy 36: The Clandestine Philosophical Manuscripts 37: From La Mettrie to Diderot 38: Epilogue: Rousseau, Radicalism, Revolution
I. The 'Radical Enlightenment' 1: Introduction 2: Government and Philosophy 3: Society, Institutions, Revolution 4: Women, Philosophy, and Sexuality 5: Censorship and Culture 6: Libraries and Enlightenment 7: The Learned Journals II. The Rise of Philosophical Radicalism 8: Spinoza 9: Van den Enden: Philosophy, Democracy, and Egalitarianism 10: Radicalism and the People: The Brothers Koerbagh 11: Philosophy, the Interpreter of Scripture 12: Miracles Denied 13: Spinoza's System 14: Spinoza, Science, and the Scientists 15: Philosophy, Politics, and the Liberation of Man 16: Publishing a Banned Philosophy 17: The Spread of a Forbidden Movement III. Europe and the 'New' Intellectual Controversies 1680-1720 18: Bayle and the 'Virtuous Atheist' 19: The Bredenburg Disputes 20: Fontenelle and the War of the Oracles 21: The Death of the Devil 22: Leenhof and the 'Universal Philosophical Religion' 23: The 'Nature of God' Controversy IV. The Intellectual Counter-Offensive 24: New Theological Strategies 25: The Collapse of Cartesianism 26: Leibniz and the Radical Enlightenment 27: Anglomania: The 'Triumph' of Newton and Locke 28: The Intellectual Drama in Spain and Portugal 29: Germany and the Baltic: 'The 'War of the Philosophers' V. The Clandestine Progress of the Radical Enlightenment 1680-1750 30: Boulainvilliers and the Rise of French 31: French Refugee Deists in Exile 32: The Spinozistic Novel in French 33: English Deism and Europe 34: Germany: The Radical Aufklaerung 35: The Radical Impact in Italy 36: The Clandestine Philosophical Manuscripts 37: From La Mettrie to Diderot 38: Epilogue: Rousseau, Radicalism, Revolution
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Internetauftritt der buecher.de internetstores GmbH
Geschäftsführung: Monica Sawhney | Roland Kölbl | Günter Hilger
Sitz der Gesellschaft: Batheyer Straße 115 - 117, 58099 Hagen
Postanschrift: Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg
Amtsgericht Hagen HRB 13257
Steuernummer: 321/5800/1497
USt-IdNr: DE450055826