Difference between revisions of "Age of Enlightenment"
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* '''Embraced''': "[[modernism]]" (in a very particular sense); science, democracy, free markets, individual empowerment, liberty | * '''Embraced''': "[[modernism]]" (in a very particular sense); science, democracy, free markets, individual empowerment, liberty | ||
This seems like a good interpretation to me (though other sources agreeing or disagreeing would be useful). | This seems like a good interpretation to me (though other sources agreeing or disagreeing would be useful). | ||
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Revision as of 16:55, 23 October 2006
Overview
The Enlightenment was an intellectual movement which advocated rationality as a means to establishing an authoritative system of aesthetics, ethics, and logic. It overturned the notions of mysticism and faith in individual revelation as the primary source of knowledge and wisdom
The Enlightenment inspired the framework for the American and French Revolutions (among others); the democratic government of the United States is largely an enlightenment innovation.
The liberal ideology, which emphasizes personal liberty (immunity from the arbitrary exercise of authority), arose from Enlightenment ideas.
Notes
David Brin views The Enlightenment as a key revolution which replaced a lot of old, bad ideas with a lot of new good ones [1]:
- Rejected: authority, hierarchy, order, tradition and fanatical religiosity.
- Embraced: "modernism" (in a very particular sense); science, democracy, free markets, individual empowerment, liberty
This seems like a good interpretation to me (though other sources agreeing or disagreeing would be useful).