The Enlightenment: A Sourcebook and ReaderPaul Hyland, Olga Gomez, Francesca Greensides By the end of the eighteenth century a distinctly modern vision of life was emerging. The revolutions in America and France revealed new beliefs about human nature; rights and duties; the natural and material worlds; and a new faith in science, technology and the idea of progress. As people began to change the way they thought about themselves and the world around them, a whole new way of thinking developed, which still has an overwhelming impact two centuries on. The Enlightenment Reader brings together the work of major Enlightenment thinkers to illustrate the full importance and achievements of this period in history. Extracts are gathered thematically into sections on such aspects of the Enlightenment as political theory, religion and belief, art and nature. In each section, the texts are introduced and a final section on 'Critical Reflections' provides a selection of modern critical opinions on the period. Containing illustrations from the work of artists such as Hogarth and Chardin, a chronology of the Enlightenment, and a detailed bibliography, The Enlightenment Reader is a rich source information and inspiration for all those studying this great period of change. |
Contents
The search for knowledge | 33 |
Religion and belief | 59 |
The natural world | 91 |
Science and invention | 122 |
Political rights and responsibilities | 148 |
The development of civil society | 176 |
Moral principles and punishments | 209 |
Gender and society | 233 |
Art architecture and nature | 259 |
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The Enlightenment: A Sourcebook and Reader Paul Hyland,Olga Gomez,Francesca Greensides Limited preview - 2003 |
Common terms and phrases
Age of Enlightenment animals appear authority Baron d'Holbach beauty became become body Book Bougainville Catharine Macaulay cause Christian civil colour common constitution culture d'Alembert David Hume Denis Diderot Diderot Discourse duty earth eighteenth century Encyclopédie Enlightenment Enquiry equally Essay European evil existence experience extract France French French Revolution Giambattista Vico happiness human nature Hume ideas individual invention Isaac Newton Joseph Priestley kind knowledge labour laws legislative Leibniz liberty live London mankind manner mind modern monarch moral Nakaz nations never Newton object observation original OROU pain painting Paris passions person philosophes pleasure political principles produce published punishment quadrupeds reason reflection religion religious Revolution Rousseau Scottish Enlightenment sensations sense social society soul species Tahiti things thought tion Treatise truth understanding University virtue Voltaire woman women writings