[HN Gopher] The End of Enlightenment: Empire, Commerce, Crisis
___________________________________________________________________
The End of Enlightenment: Empire, Commerce, Crisis
Author : benbreen
Score : 18 points
Date : 2023-12-20 19:50 UTC (3 days ago)
(HTM) web link (www.historytoday.com)
(TXT) w3m dump (www.historytoday.com)
| rch wrote:
| This seems like an indictment the Enlightenment itself, instead
| of the critique of current social philosophy that I'd be
| interested in.
| hackernewds wrote:
| what is the current social philosophy for you?
| sctb wrote:
| Fair enough, but one of the advantages of looking at
| Enlightenment philosophy on its own terms is that it's easier
| to perceive--and thus learn from--its failures. "Current social
| philosophy" has the disadvantage of being both current (so are
| we) and social (so are we), and so we suffer from a lack of
| perspective. It would not be surprising to me if one could
| identify weaknesses of 18th century thought that persist today.
| eikenberry wrote:
| > What was the Enlightenment? Damned if I know.
|
| It was the rediscovery of Aristotle along with the newly formed
| universities giving him an audience. Everything else fell out of
| that.
| nostromo wrote:
| "Oh actually the Enlightenment was bad" is very on-trend for
| academic historians in 2023.
|
| The book isn't out yet, but the synopsis here seems like the
| author is projecting his bias onto history (claiming "the pursuit
| of happiness" is just about consuming luxury goods is moronic).
|
| Arguing that the decline of religion lead to a rise in
| nationalism might be true, but that doesn't mean the previous
| religious structures didn't deserve to be corrected.
___________________________________________________________________
(page generated 2023-12-23 23:00 UTC)