Protestants, Jews, and Catholics from London to Vienna /
David Sorkin.
Princeton :
Princeton University Press,
[2008]
1 online resource :
illustrations, maps.
Jews, Christians, and Muslims from the ancient to the modern world
Includes bibliographical references and index.
List of illustrations -- List of maps -- Preface -- Introduction -- Enlightenment or enlightenments -- Religious enlightenment -- Reasonableness -- Toleration --Public sphere -- State nexus -- Enlightenment spectrum -- 1: Brant Broughton, London, Gloucester : William Warburton's "Heroic Moderation" -- Natural right and toleration -- History -- Established religion -- Justification, philosophy, and science -- Secular culture -- Moderation in decline -- Conclusion -- 2: Geneva : Jacob Vernet's "Middle Way" -- Theology -- Politics -- Enlightenment and the philosophes -- Geneva transformed -- 3: Halle: Siegmund Jacob Baumgarten's "Vital Knowledge" -- Union with God -- Exegesis -- History, sacred and secular -- Natural right and toleration -- Neology and the state -- 4: Berlin: Moses Mendelssohn's "Vital Script" -- Intellectual renewal: Philosophy -- Intellectual renewal: Exegesis -- Civic acceptance and "divine legislation" -- Socrates of Berlin -- Haskalah and beyond -- Conclusion -- 5: Vienna-Linz: Joseph Valentin Eybel's "Reasonable Doctrine" -- Church law -- Linz and Joseph II -- True devotion -- Revolution -- Conclusion -- 6: Toul-Paris-Lyon: Adrien Lamourette's "Luminous Side Of Faith -- Where France differed -- Catholicism -- 1780s -- Theology -- Revolution, 1789-91 -- Revolution, 1791-94 -- Conclusion -- Epilogue -- Glossary -- Index.
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From the Publisher: "Sorkin is right to argue that enlightenment and faith went together for most participants in the Enlightenment, and that this is a major topic that has been relatively neglected. He has written an outstanding and eminently accessible book bringing the whole question centrally to scholars' attention. He skillfully demonstrates that all confessions and religious traditions found themselves very much in a common predicament and sought similar solutions."--Jonathan Israel, Institute for Advanced Study" Powerfully cogent. Sorkin seeks to show that the 'religious Enlightenment' was not a contradiction in terms but was an integral and central part of the Enlightenment. Anyone interested in the history of the Enlightenment in particular or the eighteenth century in general will want to read this book. Sorkin is one of the leading scholars working in the field. His scholarship is as wide as it is deep."-Tim Blanning, University of Cambridge.