Schools of Thought in the Age of Enlightenment
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Narrado por:
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Michael Bridges
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De:
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Boris Kriger
In the eighteenth century, Europe experienced not just a change in thought, but a seismic upheaval in the very way humanity understood itself. The Enlightenment was an audacious wager: that reason could free people from superstition, that knowledge could replace dogma, that justice could outshine cruelty, and that individuals—once mere subjects of kings and churches—could become citizens of their own destinies.
This book traces the great philosophical schools of the Enlightenment in all their brilliance, contradictions, and drama. From Locke’s blank slate to Hume’s skeptical hammer, from Voltaire’s biting wit to Diderot’s revolutionary Encyclopédie, from Rousseau’s fiery general will to Kant’s disciplined critique, here unfolds the story of an age that dared to ask questions no one had dared before.
It is a story of ideas escaping from studies and salons into coffeehouses, streets, and revolutions—ideas that stormed Bastilles, crossed oceans, and redefined politics, science, and morality. Yet it is also a story of limits: of optimism curdling into terror, of universality concealing exclusions, of reason revealing both its power and its dangers.
Written in a vivid, witty style, this account captures the Enlightenment not as a dry sequence of doctrines but as a living drama of curiosity, rebellion, and hope. It is philosophy with teeth and laughter, philosophy that shaped constitutions and toppled kings, philosophy that still whispers in every demand for liberty, justice, and truth.
The Enlightenment was never finished. Its questions remain ours.