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Richard Whatmore

    Richard Whatmore explore l'histoire moderne et intellectuelle, examinant les idées et les mouvements essentiels qui ont façonné le monde. Son travail offre une plongée profonde dans l'histoire de la pensée et son impact profond sur la société. Grâce à une recherche méticuleuse et une analyse pointue, il dévoile les liens complexes entre les idées et les actions à travers les époques historiques. Whatmore invite les lecteurs à contempler les héritages durables des traditions intellectuelles et leur résonance actuelle.

    The End of Enlightenment: Empire, Commerce, Crisis
    • A brilliant work of intellectual interpretation by our foremost historian of Enlightenment ideas, this radical re-evaluation shows why, for many at its center, the Enlightenment was a profound failure. By the early eighteenth century, there was widespread hope that Enlightenment ideals could be paired with toleration, commerce, and an end to the fanatic wars of religion ravaging Europe. Central to this was the battle for liberty in free states, with aspirations that absolute monarchies like France and free states like Britain could coexist, respecting civil liberties. However, this vision collapsed as states pursued wealth and empire through war, leading to rampant xenophobia and a perversion of liberty into fanaticism. The narrative traces the evolving perspectives of economists, philosophers, politicians, and polemicists, including figures like David Hume, Adam Smith, Edmund Burke, and Mary Wollstonecraft. They aimed to replace superstition with reason but instead faced terror, revolution, corruption, and rampant colonialism. By revisiting these tumultuous events and ideas, the author offers a lucid exploration of disillusion and intellectual transformation, challenging our assumptions about the past while providing insights into how our world might be structured today, particularly as the issues raised at the end of the Enlightenment persist.

      The End of Enlightenment: Empire, Commerce, Crisis2023
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