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A Revolution of the Mind: Radical Enlightenment and the Intellectual Origins of Modern Democracy

par Jonathan Israel

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2364115,244 (4.03)3
Democracy, free thought and expression, religious tolerance, individual liberty, political self-determination of peoples, sexual and racial equality--these values have firmly entered the mainstream in the decades since they were enshrined in the 1948 U.N. Declaration of Human Rights. But if these ideals no longer seem radical today, their origin was very radical indeed--far more so than most historians have been willing to recognize. In A Revolution of the Mind, Jonathan Israel, one of the world's leading historians of the Enlightenment, traces the philosophical roots of these ideas to what were the least respectable strata of Enlightenment thought--what he calls the Radical Enlightenment. Originating as a clandestine movement of ideas that was almost entirely hidden from public view during its earliest phase, the Radical Enlightenment matured in opposition to the moderate mainstream Enlightenment dominant in Europe and America in the eighteenth century. During the revolutionary decades of the 1770s, 1780s, and 1790s, the Radical Enlightenment burst into the open, only to provoke a long and bitter backlash. A Revolution of the Mind shows that this vigorous opposition was mainly due to the powerful impulses in society to defend the principles of monarchy, aristocracy, empire, and racial hierarchy--principles linked to the upholding of censorship, church authority, social inequality, racial segregation, religious discrimination, and far-reaching privilege for ruling groups. In telling this fascinating history, A Revolution of the Mind reveals the surprising origin of our most cherished values--and helps explain why in certain circles they are frequently disapproved of and attacked even today.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 3 mentions

Did we read this in book group? People didn't really warm to the writing, and Paul admitted it is not one of the author's best. unless i am mixing this up with a different title.....
  JendyandPaul | May 2, 2022 |
Democratie, het vrije woord, tolerantie en individuele vrijheid, al deze waarden hebben in de beleving van de westerse mens een vanzelfsprekendheid gekregen, die er niet altijd geweest is. Toen ze voor het eerst naar voren werden gebracht waren deze ideeën zeer radicaal. In Revolutie van het denken gaat Jonathan Israel terug naar de filosofische wortels van onze democratische rechtsstaat: de Radicale Verlichting.

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De kernwaarden van onze moderne westerse democratie (vrijheid van meningsuiting, gelijkheid voor de wet, rechten van het individu, tolerantie) liggen regelmatig onder vuur. Voor- en tegenstanders gebruiken daarbij te pas en te onpas het woord 'Verlichting' om hun standpunt kracht bij te zetten. Maar recent historisch onderzoek heeft duidelijk gemaakt dat de feiten en de verbanden minder simpel zijn dan daarbij wordt gesuggereerd. In twee magistrale studies, 'Radicale Verlichting' (2005)* en 'Verlichting onder vuur' (2010)**, heeft Jonathan Israel, momenteel onbetwist de grootste autoriteit op dit gebied, drie hoofdstromen onderscheiden: een radicale, een gematigde en een contra-Verlichting. In dit kleine maar overvolle boek, gebaseerd op een collegereeks in Oxford uit 2008, onderzoekt hij de rol van die drie stromen bij het geleidelijk groeien van ons huidige denken over een democratische samenleving. Met afbeeldingen in zwart-wit, index en uitvoerig notenapparaat.
  aitastaes | Oct 8, 2013 |
1/27/10: Spinoza sighting! Can't wait to get to this one.

***

Awww. Look at little, sweet, innocent Esteban, circa early 2010 up there, back before he read this. The abbreviated anticipation is almost palpable.

What a chump.

Shitty books are shitty for different shitty reasons. This one is shitty because it deals foremost with philosophy. Philosophy. Meditate upon the word for a minute. Do you break out in a cold sweat at the thought of a bunch of white, twenty-something males that look like they just rolled out of bed lounging around coffee houses, reeking of stale cigarettes and bicycle grease and trying to impress each other in some indecipherable code? Who don't realize that they've peaked? That they have nothing to offer a society that has moved past them? Waaaaay past them? That's what the word philosophy conjures for me.

Because I think philosophy, as it's currently practiced, is nothing but word games and parlor tricks. A way for nerds to have ready-made pick-up lines because they can't think spontaneously. Sure, it meant something at one time. It pierced the veil of religio-monarchist oppression to a large degree and gave form and expression to both secular democracy and science, at least in the West, back in the 1700s during what we celebrate as the Enlightenment. But that's about the last time it had anything worthwhile to say, at least as far as I'm concerned.

But that's enough for me because I'm interested in history and curious about how we got where we are. Philosophy ushered in modernity. That's a pretty big deal. But, to be frank, the author is an awful writer. Aside from his penchant for quoting bygone philosophers in the original French and German without providing translations (fuck you, Jonathan I. Israel! The conclusion of modernity is 'Merica and we speak English in 'Merica! Why should I have to bother with Google translate, you conceited bastard? See what I mean about philosophers contentedly lounging about and talking only to themselves? Faugh!), he just tries to do too much in too few pages. This thing reads like bullet points interlaced with adjectives.

We, the inheritors and benefactors of the Enlightenment, deserve better from our philosophy. ( )
  KidSisyphus | Apr 5, 2013 |
Jonathan Israel begins with an apparently simple question: Where do the values central to Western political culture—democracy, individual liberty, egalitarianism—come from? His answer, not so simply, is Philosophy.

Israel’s study in intellectual history and historiography makes clear that the usual representation of the European Enlightenment is incomplete. He demonstrates how the Enlightenment was driven by a debate between two incompatible projects of political, social and moral reform. While the Moderate Enlightenment attempted to reconcile empiricism with tradition and refused ultimately to repudiate the monarchical-aristocratic order of society, it was the Radical Enlightenment that portrayed society as it had evolved as inherently defective, oppressive and systematically unjust, and hence wrongly organized for the purpose of human happiness. For the Radicals, enlightenment was not knowledge of abstract, speculative, or theoretical sciences, but ‘understanding,’ and in particular an understanding of how privilege, vast inequalities of wealth and status, and the prevalence of aristocracy and ecclesiastical authority were anathema to freedom. Israel’s review of the arguments is succinct but thorough (he provides a grander exegesis in Radical Enlightenment: Philosophy and the Making of Modernity 1650-1750).

The mistake in the historiography, according to Israel, has been to assume that a dramatic transformation of conditions and/or powerful social forces drove developments in the West. Too often neglected has been the gradual “revolution of the mind,” generated by thinkers and writers during the 1770s and 1780s, which laid the groundwork for the evolution toward liberty and democracy during the 19th century. Ideas have consequences, writes Israel, and the real work was accomplished not by the usual suspects (Locke, Hume, Smith, Rousseau, Voltaire, etc) but by the likes of Bayle, Diderot, Helvétius, d’Holbach, Paine and others, who were responsible for the critical shift in perceptions, concepts, and attitudes. The giant upon whose shoulders the others stood was Spinoza, and the wellspring of Western political culture was the first Dutch republic, not ancient Greece. (Stephen Nadler's Spinoza: A Life is an excellent treatment of the social, cultural, and political milieu within which Spinoza moved.)

What distinguishes the political culture of the West from the rest? In one key sense it has been the formulation of a conception of liberty rooted in a secular moral system that recognizes the interests of the individual as a member of society. In A Revolution of the Mind, Jonathan Israel explains the origins of that conception of liberty.
2 voter HectorSwell | Jun 7, 2011 |
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Democracy, free thought and expression, religious tolerance, individual liberty, political self-determination of peoples, sexual and racial equality--these values have firmly entered the mainstream in the decades since they were enshrined in the 1948 U.N. Declaration of Human Rights. But if these ideals no longer seem radical today, their origin was very radical indeed--far more so than most historians have been willing to recognize. In A Revolution of the Mind, Jonathan Israel, one of the world's leading historians of the Enlightenment, traces the philosophical roots of these ideas to what were the least respectable strata of Enlightenment thought--what he calls the Radical Enlightenment. Originating as a clandestine movement of ideas that was almost entirely hidden from public view during its earliest phase, the Radical Enlightenment matured in opposition to the moderate mainstream Enlightenment dominant in Europe and America in the eighteenth century. During the revolutionary decades of the 1770s, 1780s, and 1790s, the Radical Enlightenment burst into the open, only to provoke a long and bitter backlash. A Revolution of the Mind shows that this vigorous opposition was mainly due to the powerful impulses in society to defend the principles of monarchy, aristocracy, empire, and racial hierarchy--principles linked to the upholding of censorship, church authority, social inequality, racial segregation, religious discrimination, and far-reaching privilege for ruling groups. In telling this fascinating history, A Revolution of the Mind reveals the surprising origin of our most cherished values--and helps explain why in certain circles they are frequently disapproved of and attacked even today.

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