Religion and the Post revolutionary Mind

Religion and the Post revolutionary Mind
Author: Arthur McCalla
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 398
Release: 2023-03-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780228016601

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The French Revolution swept away the Old Regime along with many of its ideas about epistemology, history, society, and politics. In the intellectual ferment that followed, debates about religion figured prominently as diverse thinkers grappled with the philosophical and civil status of religion in a post-revolutionary age. Arthur McCalla demonstrates the central place of religion in the intellectual life of post-revolutionary France in Religion and the Post-revolutionary Mind. Certain questions – What is the nature of religion? Does society rest on religious foundations? What ought to be the place of religion in society? – drew sustained attention from across the political spectrum. Idéologues viewed religion as error and sought to eradicate it through the promotion of secular values. Catholic Traditionalists understood religion as a body of revealed truths of supernatural origin that ought to be authoritative in all aspects of life. Liberals sought to replace Christian orthodoxy with a new public faith consonant with liberal values. But these blocs were not monolithic, and McCalla reveals the complexities of each one, as well as the dialogues and rivalries among them. The categories established by the concepts of religion these thinkers constructed continue to shape debates over liberationist critiques, liberal pluralism, laïcité, and political theology. The place of religion in civil society is again a matter of urgent debate. Religion and the Post-revolutionary Mind provides essential historical context for thinking about the status of religion in the contemporary world.

Religion and the Post revolutionary Mind

Religion and the Post revolutionary Mind
Author: Arthur McCalla
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 463
Release: 2023-03-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780228016595

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The French Revolution swept away the Old Regime along with many of its ideas about epistemology, history, society, and politics. In the intellectual ferment that followed, debates about religion figured prominently as diverse thinkers grappled with the philosophical and civil status of religion in a post-revolutionary age. Arthur McCalla demonstrates the central place of religion in the intellectual life of post-revolutionary France in Religion and the Post-revolutionary Mind. Certain questions – What is the nature of religion? Does society rest on religious foundations? What ought to be the place of religion in society? – drew sustained attention from across the political spectrum. Idéologues viewed religion as error and sought to eradicate it through the promotion of secular values. Catholic Traditionalists understood religion as a body of revealed truths of supernatural origin that ought to be authoritative in all aspects of life. Liberals sought to replace Christian orthodoxy with a new public faith consonant with liberal values. But these blocs were not monolithic, and McCalla reveals the complexities of each one, as well as the dialogues and rivalries among them. The categories established by the concepts of religion these thinkers constructed continue to shape debates over liberationist critiques, liberal pluralism, laïcité, and political theology. The place of religion in civil society is again a matter of urgent debate. Religion and the Post-revolutionary Mind provides essential historical context for thinking about the status of religion in the contemporary world.

Benjamin Constant and the Post revolutionary Mind

Benjamin Constant and the Post revolutionary Mind
Author: Biancamaria Fontana
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 165
Release: 1991
Genre: Europe
ISBN: 0300049951

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The Swiss writer and political theorist Benjamin Constant was a key figure in the early 19th century attempt to come to terms with the new political world created by the French Revolution of 1789. In this book, Biancamaria Fontana presents an overview of Constant's life and writings, showing the unity of his vision and exploring analogies between the issues he discussed and those that confront modern democratic states today.

Ideas Concepts and Reality

Ideas  Concepts  and Reality
Author: John W. Burbidge
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 181
Release: 2013
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9780773541276

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An original exploration of the distinction between subjective ideas and objective concepts.

Between the Queen and the Cabby

Between the Queen and the Cabby
Author: John Richard Cole
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 327
Release: 2011
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780773538863

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In Between the Queen and the Cabby, John Cole provides the first full translation of de Gouges's Rights of Woman and the first systematic commentary on its declaration, its attempt to envision a non-marital partnership agreement, and its support for persons of colour. Cole compares and contrasts de Gouges's two texts, explaining how the original text was both her model and her foil. By adding a proposed marriage contract to her pamphlet, she sought to turn the ideas of the French Revolution into a concrete way of life for women. Further examination of her work as a playwright suggests that she supported equality not only for women but for slaves as well. Cole highlights the historical context of de Gouges's writing, going beyond the inherent sexism and misogyny of the time in exploring why her work did not receive the reaction or achieve the influential status she had hoped for. Read in isolation in the gender-conscious twenty-first century, de Gouges's Rights of Woman may seem ordinary. However, none of her contemporaries, neither the Marquis de Condorcet nor Mary Wollstonecraft, published more widely on current affairs, so boldly attempted to extend democratic principles to women, or so clearly related the public and private spheres. Read in light of her eventual condemnation by the Revolutionary Tribunal, her words become tragically foresighted: "Woman has the right to mount the Scaffold; she must also have that of mounting the Rostrum."

Kierkegaard as Humanist

Kierkegaard as Humanist
Author: Arnold B. Come
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 506
Release: 1995-07-05
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9780773564138

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Kierkegaard as Humanist is an extensive analysis of Kierkegaard's concepts of self, freedom, possibility, and necessity. Topics examined include the essential and continuing duality of the self, the process by which the self becomes self-consciousness, freedom as the dialectical tension between necessity and possibility and between temporality and eternity, the indeterminate/determinate leap as freedom's form, and love as freedom's content. Come finds in Kierkegaard's writings an anthropological ontology that is derived by a phenomenological method and distinct from those Kierkegaardian materials that are clearly theological in a Christian sense; he concludes that Kierkegaard's anthropological ontology is independent of his Christian theology.

Revolution and Fall

Revolution and Fall
Author: Charles Grice
Publsiher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 125
Release: 2016-12-07
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781524653873

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What happened to this world? How did Western Civilization, with its traditions of religious values and beliefs reaching back over a thousand years, suddenly become a fractured culture of individualism, unmoored from its past? These are the questions being asked today by people of faith. Revolution and Fall takes the reader from the beginnings of this secular revolution, through its present evolution and its subtle ways of persuasion. In these chapters you will gain a greater understanding of modernitys assaults upon the Church, how it seized the public square with its shrill political voice and how it distorts valid science to promote its agenda of agnosticism. Only with an understanding as to why this revolution began and how it was able to seize the mind of our modern world, will Christians and other people of faith be prepared to ask a deeper question. What should we do? With these insights into what historians call a Post-Christian world, we will realize its failure to answer the most basic questions of human life and living, also realizing how fragile are its foundations as they begin to crumble. Revolution and Fall is a journey through Western culture that will restore the proper confidence of faith.

Main Philosophical Writings and the Novel Allwill

Main Philosophical Writings and the Novel Allwill
Author: Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 698
Release: 1995-02-17
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9780773564121

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Jacobi's polemical tract Concerning the Doctrine of Spinoza in Letters to Herr Moses Mendelssohn propelled him to notoriety in 1785. This work, as well as David Hume on Faith, or Idealism and Realism, Jacobi to Fichte, and the novel Allwill, is included in George di Giovanni's translation. In a comprehensive introductory essay di Giovanni situates Jacobi in the historical and philosophical context of his time, and shows how Jacobi's life and work reflect the tensions inherent in the late Enlightenment.