The Religious Enlightenment
Protestants, Jews, and Catholics from London to Vienna
- 358pages
- 13 heures de lecture
The book presents a re-evaluation of the Enlightenment, arguing that its core was fundamentally religious rather than solely a precursor to modernity and secularism. David Sorkin contends that this period, often viewed as a time of conflict between liberalism and religious faith, actually integrated religious thought into its philosophical developments, challenging prevailing narratives about the era's impact on contemporary intellectual and political culture.