This essay proposes a bifurcation within the concept of moderation in early modern Europe. To draw this out it reconstructs an “encounter” between two citizens of the scholarly Republic of Letters in the years around 1700—Lodovico Antonio Muratori and Jean Le Clerc—and the concept of moderation each maintained. It proposes that the former maintained an ideal of moderation which was “hard” principally about self-regulation, while the latter maintained an ideal of moderation which was “soft” and principally about (religious) toleration. It then attaches this “encounter” to an analogous conflict between uses of moderation in late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century England. It concludes by proposing that this bifurcation, while occurring...
Permissions were not obtained for sharing the full text of this article.A mid-eighteenth-century deb...
The subject of the paper is the crisis of the concept of enlightenment, examined at three levels: po...
Acknowledging the considerable degree of identity which developed between Episcopalianism and the Ja...
This essay proposes a bifurcation within the concept of moderation in early modern Europe. To draw t...
Toleration, freedom of thought and liberation from social and intellectual convention have long been...
This thesis concerns Enlightenment and pre-Enlightenment views of freedom of expression, including t...
Old-fashioned histories of toleration typically assumed that ‘ideas rule the world’. As a result, t...
While offering a public welcome of communicative participation, a communicative dark side of the mod...
In this essay I shall discuss, first, the contrast between certain religious and philosophical ideas...
The aim of this thesis is to provide a revaluation of the so-called Quarrel of the Ancients and the ...
While the assumption of a sharp distinction between learned culture and lay society has been broadly...
Renaissance Decadence and Enlightenment Modernism forwards Restoration and eighteenth century litera...
Scholars now quite regularly speak of the Radical Enlightenment, the Atlantic Enlightenment, the Sup...
In some sense, the period of scholarship we know as the Enlightenment, well-known for its individual...
Refereed article on the promotion of the humane and historical consciousness in 16 and 17th centurie...
Permissions were not obtained for sharing the full text of this article.A mid-eighteenth-century deb...
The subject of the paper is the crisis of the concept of enlightenment, examined at three levels: po...
Acknowledging the considerable degree of identity which developed between Episcopalianism and the Ja...
This essay proposes a bifurcation within the concept of moderation in early modern Europe. To draw t...
Toleration, freedom of thought and liberation from social and intellectual convention have long been...
This thesis concerns Enlightenment and pre-Enlightenment views of freedom of expression, including t...
Old-fashioned histories of toleration typically assumed that ‘ideas rule the world’. As a result, t...
While offering a public welcome of communicative participation, a communicative dark side of the mod...
In this essay I shall discuss, first, the contrast between certain religious and philosophical ideas...
The aim of this thesis is to provide a revaluation of the so-called Quarrel of the Ancients and the ...
While the assumption of a sharp distinction between learned culture and lay society has been broadly...
Renaissance Decadence and Enlightenment Modernism forwards Restoration and eighteenth century litera...
Scholars now quite regularly speak of the Radical Enlightenment, the Atlantic Enlightenment, the Sup...
In some sense, the period of scholarship we know as the Enlightenment, well-known for its individual...
Refereed article on the promotion of the humane and historical consciousness in 16 and 17th centurie...
Permissions were not obtained for sharing the full text of this article.A mid-eighteenth-century deb...
The subject of the paper is the crisis of the concept of enlightenment, examined at three levels: po...
Acknowledging the considerable degree of identity which developed between Episcopalianism and the Ja...