Status Updates From The Enlightenment: An Evalu...
The Enlightenment: An Evaluation of its Assumptions, Attitudes, and Values, Vol. 4 (History of European Thought) by
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Caity
is on page 100 of 304
This book is fascinating but I do not think it is very well written.
— Dec 24, 2022 01:53PM
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Mitya
is on page 282 of 304
The age of anarchic individualism that Fichte foresaw would give way to a fourth age of action where the enlightened individual would realize himself in proportion to his surrender to state/collective will. History advanced by conflict would constitute the chosen vehicle of the historical process. German nationalism/Nazism/Marxism came to develop.
— Mar 18, 2022 10:49AM
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Mitya
is on page 282 of 304
Fichte thought the course of history could be determined through the deductive reasoning of Descartes. In the beginning, man's reason and rational conduct was intuitive, before splitting off into two groups, one rational, one barbarous. The second stage of history was victory over the barbarous. Third was reason's revolt against this authority. The fourth age, reason as science, subordination to collective will.
— Mar 18, 2022 10:47AM
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Mitya
is on page 277 of 304
Roman Catholic reactionaries saw the French Revolution as a warning that everyone should go back. Burke saw it as proof the British should stay put. German Idealists tried to go forward instead. Fichte saw the external world as not real in the way in which the noumenal world of ideas was. The only reality was that of the mind. The individual mind was part of a universal mind.
— Mar 18, 2022 10:38AM
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Mitya
is on page 251 of 304
Rousseau's formed a the starting point for patriotism, one being civic alongside an aggressive assertion of interests externally. Since obligation was created by society, the community was the source of law and morals. There could be no appeal made to that beyond the collective interest of society. The generation before 1789 saw a decline in cosmopolitanism and the Enlightenment in general.
— Mar 16, 2022 10:24PM
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Mitya
is on page 246 of 304
The movement away from Old Testament chronology led to the partial rejection of a static conception of the universe. Understanding of historical time became linear, not cyclical - those like Chastellux and Condorcet saw the decisive changes as technological. Both saw history as the slow unfolding of a universal and unchanging 'reason'.
— Mar 16, 2022 10:18PM
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Mitya
is on page 210 of 304
It was considered that society must be changed to make it worthy of the individual, and not vice versa. The cult of primitivism saw belief in the alienation of the individual from society, Rousseau lamented the lost virtues of 'natural' society, and desired to go back to it. Most political writers of the century agreed society had degenerated from primitive natural liberty to political authority/social convention.
— Mar 15, 2022 07:52AM
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