I: Introductory
1: Early Enlightenment, Revolution, and the Modern Age
2: Philosophy and the Making of Modernity
II: The Crisis of Religious Authority
3: Faith and Reason: Bayle versus the Rationaux
4: Demolishing Priesthood, Ancient and Modern
5: Socinianism and the Social, Psychological, and Cultural Roots of
Enlightenment
6: Locke, Bayle, and Spinoza: A Contest of Three Toleration
Doctrines
7: Germany and the Baltic: Enlightenment, Society, and the
Universities
8: Newtonianism and Anti-Newtonianism in the Early Enlightenment:
Science, Philosophy, and Religion
III: Political Emancipation
9: Anit-Hobbesianism and the Making of 'Modernity'
10: The Origins of Modern Democratic Republicanism
11: Bayle, Boulainvilliers, Montesquieu: Secular Monarchy versus
the Aristocratic Republic
12: 'Enlightened Despotism': Autocracy, Faith, and Enlightenment in
Eastern and South-Eastern Europe 1689-1755
13: Popular Sovereignty, Resistance, and the 'Right to
Revolution'
14: Anglomania, anglicisme, and the 'British Model'
15: The Triumph of the 'Moderate Enlightenment' in the United
Provinces
IV: Intellectual Emancipation
16: The Overthrow of Humanist Criticism
17: The Recovery of Greek Thought
18: The Rise of 'History of Philosophy'
19: From 'History of Philosophy' to Histoire de l'Esprit humain
20: Italy, the Two Enlightenments, and Vico's 'New Science'
V: The Party of Humanity
21: The Problem of Equality
22: Sex, Marriage, and the Equality of Women
23: Race, Radical Thought, and the Advent of Anti-Colonialism
24: Rethinking Islam: Philosophy and the 'Other'
25: Spinoza, Confucius, and Classical Chinese Philosophy
26: Is Religion Requisite for a Well-Ordered Society?
VI: Radical Philosophes
27: The French Enlightenment prior to Voltaire's Lettres
Philosophiques (1734)
28: Men, Animals, Fossils: French Hylozoic materialisme before
Diderot
29: Realigning of the parti philosophique: Voltair, Voltairemanie,
antivoltairianisme 1733-1747
30: From Voltaire to Diderot
31: The 'Unvirtuous Atheist'
32: The parti philosophique Embraces the Radical Enlightenment
1747-1752
33: The 'War of the Encyclopedie: The First Stage 1745-1752
34: Postscript
Bibliography
Index
Jonathan Israel is Professor of Modern European History, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton.
Brilliantly presented and dense with learning. Simon Blackburn, THES An enormously impressive piece of scholarship. The breadth and depth of the author's reading are breathtaking and Enlightenment Contested is set to become the definitive work for philosophers as well as historians on this extraordinary period. Keith Richmond, Tribune Mr Israel's groundbreaking interpretation looks set to establish itself as the one to beat. The Economist Evocative and compelling. John Dunn, Literary Review Enlightenment Contested is full of wonderful things John Dunn, Literary Review
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