Rating:  Summary: Decent five stars, but not six or seven Review: A good overview of early enlightenment intellectual culture. Unfortunately, the first book it made me think of was Paul Hazard's The European Mind (an seven star book, if ever there was one), which it clearly sets it self up as a successor to, and while it is a more than honorable effort, it is not a book on that scale. Maybe that is unfair: Hazard is on my list of 10 best of all time, and anyway an academic would not be allowed to write a like Hazard these days, but nevertheless, Israel does not bring Spinoza or his buddies alive , never mind make me wish I could invite them to dinner, in the same way that Hazard does with Pierre Bayle, and that is a flaw. On the other hand, I have learned from Israel that things never change: the sort of rants you encounter in the New Criterion on Derrida, Rorty, et al., are uncannily like the sorts of rants that Israel records being directed against Spinoza, and that lesson is more than enough to justify five stars.Minor - and slightly disturbing - production quibble: for a book by OUP, the text is badly proofed. I do not mean that it is littered with gramatical errors, but it was the first time I have read an OUP book where I regularly stumbled over badly constructed sentences. Or is it just Israel's style? Finally, why isn't Paul Hazard's 'The European Mind' in print in English?
Rating:  Summary: One of the best books I ever read !!! Review: After his magnum opus Israel seems to be abble to write another amazing book. After this book I read the Republic again and its interesting to see that here he already seems to doubt about the influence of France & England in the cration of the modern world, thoughts, science and so on. Things we knows now as Enlightingment. Anyway what he seems to have learned from his research he is working out in this book, and very very we'll done. I really ran through the pages, eagerly to learn more. Since Im a Dutch I cannot deny that my nationalistic heart began to beath like never before, besides the moment I read the Republic. For all of us Dutch OBLIGATED MATERIAL !!!!!!! And not only to us but perhaps even more to show the French who are the true founders of the Enlightingment. I read a few books of Spinoza and highly symphatized with his thoughts. But never really looked at it the way that Israel is looking to it, as he is in this book. Like another review already mentioned to, the book is not short and the research is really really detailed. He is using everything to prove his right. But he beter should be cos I can imagine he gets major attacks on this one. I already had when I tried to make a few of his points clear in my class. I can imagine you will feel a bit strange afterwards, especially when you are French he he he !!! Since Israel seem to have the guts to turm our entire perpective upside down. A great achievement.
Rating:  Summary: An impressive, benchmark work Review: In Radical Enlightenment: Philosophy And The Making Of Modernity, 1650-1750, Jonathan Israel (Professor in the School of Historical Studies at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton) has created an impressive, benchmark work revealing how the decisive shift in the history of modern ideas by such original thinkers as Voltaire, Diderot, Rousseau, and others, occurring in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries resulted in the complete demolition of traditional European structures of authority, scientific thought, and belief which collectively came to be called "The Age Of Enlightenment". Radical Enlightenment is an 810 pp. volume with major sections devoted to the role of philosophy's evolution to government, society, institutions, revolution, women's roles, sexuality, censorship, culture, libraries, publishing, religion, law, science, and more. Enhanced for scholarship with an extensive bibliography and index, Radical Enlightenment will prove to be an indispensable and welcome addition to the study of both European civilization, history, and philosophy.
Rating:  Summary: How Spinoza liberated the world Review: Israel's book offers a valuable new perspective on the nature of the Enlightenment. Instead of concentrating on England or France, Israel looks at all of Europe. There is considerable attention paid not only to the Netherlands, Israel's main area of expertise as a historian, but also to Spain, Portugal, Italy, the many German states and Scandinavia. Nor is this emphasis undeserved, since the Dutch Republic was the home of Spinoza, Sweden the home of Linnaeus, and Italy the home of Vico. Only two areas receive little attention. One is Russia, under the grip of Tsarist despotism. The other is the future United States, which were arguably peripheral to the intellectual life of the West before 1750. Israel argues that the Enlightenment can be seen as a construct and a conflict between four major forces. The first is Cartesianism, the second Newton-Lockean ideas, the third the Leibnitzian synthesis, and the fourth, and the main subject of this book, the Radical Enlightenment around Spinoza. The main theme of this book is that Spinoza's ideas, and the debates around them were central to the development of the Enlightenment. Israel's perspective is an unusual one. His book ends in 1750 and therefore only briefly discusses much of what people popularly consider the Enlightenment. Diderot gets only a few pages, and Rousseau and Voltaire get even less. The Scottish Enlightenment is not mentioned at all, and Hume is barely mentioned. Israel's concentration is on the critique of religion; it is this ultimately successful challenge that he considers the Enlightenment's major achievement. As a consequence other areas get less attention. It is Locke the theorist against innate ideas and the ambiguous believe in miracles that Israel concentrates on, not so much the constitutional theorist. The development of history, of economics, of many of the sciences are downplayed in this account. The liberation of women is discussed only briefly and the question of slavery is discussed even less. Many questions that have concerned intellectual history over the past few decades are dealt with only cursorily. One would have to go elsewhere to find out what were the links between the Enlightenment and the French Revolution, what was the relationship between religion, magic and the rise of science, and what was the popular mentality of the time? Likewise questions about the potential dark side of modernity, why Enlightenment arose at this particular time in history, or the origins of pornography will have to be looked at elsewhere. Nevertheless this book makes a valuable contribution. First off it demonstrates Spinoza's importance to the rise of the Enlightenment as his pantheism, materialism and determinism became the major challenge that other philosphers had to face. There is also some tantalizing evidence that Spinoza's ideas were making greater popular headway in the Netherlands than one might have thought. Second, it provides copious accounts of the many debates and discussions in intellectual life that other accounts tend to ignore. Many accounts concentrate on the "great men," while Straussian accounts tend to drastically oversimplify intellectual debates. By discussing such thinkers as Fontenelle and his debunking of classical oracles, Bekker on the death of the devil, the many Dutch thinkers who helped to propagate Spinoza's ideas one gets a fuller picture of the Enlightenment's progress. Third, Israel's book is full of many valuable insights. Israel is particularly good on how Spinoza's theory of toleration is more liberal than that of Locke's. He also shows how the "moderate" enlightenment consistently supported the censorship of their radical opponents. He is also good on the fundamental modernity of Vico, as well as on the limited influence Locke and Newton had on the continent before the 1730s. All in all, this is an important book.
Rating:  Summary: How Spinoza liberated the world Review: Israel's book offers a valuable new perspective on the nature of the Enlightenment. Instead of concentrating on England or France, Israel looks at all of Europe. There is considerable attention paid not only to the Netherlands, Israel's main area of expertise as a historian, but also to Spain, Portugal, Italy, the many German states and Scandinavia. Nor is this emphasis undeserved, since the Dutch Republic was the home of Spinoza, Sweden the home of Linnaeus, and Italy the home of Vico. Only two areas receive little attention. One is Russia, under the grip of Tsarist despotism. The other is the future United States, which were arguably peripheral to the intellectual life of the West before 1750. Israel argues that the Enlightenment can be seen as a construct and a conflict between four major forces. The first is Cartesianism, the second Newton-Lockean ideas, the third the Leibnitzian synthesis, and the fourth, and the main subject of this book, the Radical Enlightenment around Spinoza. The main theme of this book is that Spinoza's ideas, and the debates around them were central to the development of the Enlightenment. Israel's perspective is an unusual one. His book ends in 1750 and therefore only briefly discusses much of what people popularly consider the Enlightenment. Diderot gets only a few pages, and Rousseau and Voltaire get even less. The Scottish Enlightenment is not mentioned at all, and Hume is barely mentioned. Israel's concentration is on the critique of religion; it is this ultimately successful challenge that he considers the Enlightenment's major achievement. As a consequence other areas get less attention. It is Locke the theorist against innate ideas and the ambiguous believe in miracles that Israel concentrates on, not so much the constitutional theorist. The development of history, of economics, of many of the sciences are downplayed in this account. The liberation of women is discussed only briefly and the question of slavery is discussed even less. Many questions that have concerned intellectual history over the past few decades are dealt with only cursorily. One would have to go elsewhere to find out what were the links between the Enlightenment and the French Revolution, what was the relationship between religion, magic and the rise of science, and what was the popular mentality of the time? Likewise questions about the potential dark side of modernity, why Enlightenment arose at this particular time in history, or the origins of pornography will have to be looked at elsewhere. Nevertheless this book makes a valuable contribution. First off it demonstrates Spinoza's importance to the rise of the Enlightenment as his pantheism, materialism and determinism became the major challenge that other philosphers had to face. There is also some tantalizing evidence that Spinoza's ideas were making greater popular headway in the Netherlands than one might have thought. Second, it provides copious accounts of the many debates and discussions in intellectual life that other accounts tend to ignore. Many accounts concentrate on the "great men," while Straussian accounts tend to drastically oversimplify intellectual debates. By discussing such thinkers as Fontenelle and his debunking of classical oracles, Bekker on the death of the devil, the many Dutch thinkers who helped to propagate Spinoza's ideas one gets a fuller picture of the Enlightenment's progress. Third, Israel's book is full of many valuable insights. Israel is particularly good on how Spinoza's theory of toleration is more liberal than that of Locke's. He also shows how the "moderate" enlightenment consistently supported the censorship of their radical opponents. He is also good on the fundamental modernity of Vico, as well as on the limited influence Locke and Newton had on the continent before the 1730s. All in all, this is an important book.
Rating:  Summary: fascinating study of Spinozist history Review: It is surprising, really, that the thought of Benedictus de Spinoza (1632-1677) is not more well-known and influential in our modern world. After all, Spinoza laid the groundwork for many of the assumptions that have become dominant in scientific and philosophical thought over the past three centuries. Long before Darwin, he declared that the essence of a thing was its striving to exist. He said the universe has no purpose, that God was the force of nature itself, and that people should be allowed to believe whatever they wanted about religious matters. He made these statements during the same century when one-third of the population of Germany was anihilated in a religious war, and when women were still being burned as witches. His thoughts, most of which were published only after his death or circulated in manuscript form during his lifetime, set off a explosion of philosophical thought and a firestorm of criticism from ecclesiastical authorities of every stripe. Spinoza's reputation never truly recovered from the savage attacks by the clergy and he remains an undiscovered philosopher for many in our day. "Radical Enlightenment" is the history of the Spinozist firestorm, and it is a brilliant history indeed. Jonathan Israel leaves no stone unturned in his search for the influence of Spinoza's thought on Seventeenth and Eighteenth-Century Europeans. From Spain to Russia, from Holland to Italy, he carefully catalogues the broad sweep of what he calls "The Radical Enlightenment": the philosophical movement that refused to compromise with traditional pietistic notions. This work is a magnificent study of everything one could want to know about this movement, including an interesting study of the clanestine dissemination of manuscripts a la Robert Darnton. My only caveat for the reader (other than the length of the work, which may be daunting for the non-specialist) is that Israel assumes a familiarity with the French language, including its Seventeenth Century variants. Passages in Dutch and Latin are scrupulously translated, but the reader is on his or her own for long stretches of French quotations. Anyone with a working knowledge of modern-day French should be able to get through these passages (the language hasn't changed THAT much), but the person without any French may feel somewhat lost at times.
Rating:  Summary: fascinating study of Spinozist history Review: It is surprising, really, that the thought of Benedictus de Spinoza (1632-1677) is not more well-known and influential in our modern world. After all, Spinoza laid the groundwork for many of the assumptions that have become dominant in scientific and philosophical thought over the past three centuries. Long before Darwin, he declared that the essence of a thing was its striving to exist. He said the universe has no purpose, that God was the force of nature itself, and that people should be allowed to believe whatever they wanted about religious matters. He made these statements during the same century when one-third of the population of Germany was anihilated in a religious war, and when women were still being burned as witches. His thoughts, most of which were published only after his death or circulated in manuscript form during his lifetime, set off a explosion of philosophical thought and a firestorm of criticism from ecclesiastical authorities of every stripe. Spinoza's reputation never truly recovered from the savage attacks by the clergy and he remains an undiscovered philosopher for many in our day. "Radical Enlightenment" is the history of the Spinozist firestorm, and it is a brilliant history indeed. Jonathan Israel leaves no stone unturned in his search for the influence of Spinoza's thought on Seventeenth and Eighteenth-Century Europeans. From Spain to Russia, from Holland to Italy, he carefully catalogues the broad sweep of what he calls "The Radical Enlightenment": the philosophical movement that refused to compromise with traditional pietistic notions. This work is a magnificent study of everything one could want to know about this movement, including an interesting study of the clanestine dissemination of manuscripts a la Robert Darnton. My only caveat for the reader (other than the length of the work, which may be daunting for the non-specialist) is that Israel assumes a familiarity with the French language, including its Seventeenth Century variants. Passages in Dutch and Latin are scrupulously translated, but the reader is on his or her own for long stretches of French quotations. Anyone with a working knowledge of modern-day French should be able to get through these passages (the language hasn't changed THAT much), but the person without any French may feel somewhat lost at times.
Rating:  Summary: Good survey Review: It's a good book if you want to have an overview of the general philosophical and cultural atmosphere of the time.
Rating:  Summary: Spinoza, Enlightenment, and the Love of Learning Review: Jonathan Israel has written an erudite, extensive, and inspiring study on a seminal moment in Western thought, commonly known as the Age of Enlightenment.In short, the Enlightenment marks a change from a thought and society that was theologically focused to thought and society that were secular and scientific in character. This period and this transition has been much studied, but Israel has many new insights to offer. In addition, he writes a book filled with wonderful detail, with rare thinkers and books that make the reader yearn to learn more. It is an enlightening experience in itself to read this book. The book begins with the philosophy of Descartes which is widely regarded as overthrowing the philosophy of scholasticism and initiating the modern period. Descartes developed a dualism with a mechanistic philosophy of nature and a spiritual philosophy of mind. It was the first of many attempts to reconcile theology with the newly developed scientific outlook. But the focus of Professor Israel's study is on Spinoza (1632-1677.) Spinoza rejected Cartesian dualism and developed his philosophy equating God and Nature. He rejected a transcendental God, providence, miracles, revelation, and transcendental bases for human ethics. Spinoza developed his ideas in his Ethics while in his earlier and almost equally important Theological-Political Treatise, Spinoza developed the basis for modern Bible criticism. Professor Israel argues that Spinoza's thought constitutes the basis for what he terms "radical enlightmentment", which rejected theology and revealed religion in favor of a philosophy of mechanism and determinism. Radical enlightenment proved to be a potent weapon in rejecting the divine right of kings and other forms of privilege, in promoting democracy and the rights of women, in encouraging free speech and free thought, and in allowing people to pursue happiness, in particular sexual fulfillment, in this world without fear of hells and punishments in the next world. Spinoza influenced many scholars and thinkers and also, Israel points out, had substantial influence on unlettered people of his time. Professor Israel contrasts the Radical Enlightenment emanating from Spinoza with "moderate enlightenment". Moderate enlightenment sought, as I indicated above, to reconcile mechanism and science with traditional religious faith, to the extent possible. Professor Israel identifies three separate strains of moderate enlightenment: Cartesianism, the monadic philosophy of Leibniz and Wolff, and the deism and empiricism of Locke and Newton. Most of the book is about Radical Enlightenment and its impact and about the interplay between Radical Enlightenment on the one hand and Moderate Enlightenment and traditionalism on the other hand. The book includes a good basic exposition of the thought of Spinoza. (The exposition of Descartes thought and of the teachings of scholasticism is less thorough.) The major theme of the book is that Spinoza's ideas were not simply those of an isolated recluse; rather, his ideas became widely known and disseminated even during his lifetime, and became the basis for much of the secular, modern thought and life we have today. Israel discusses a plethora of sources, some well-known some highly obscure in which various thinkers from throughout Europe (another theme of Israel's book is that Enlightenment was European in character and shared essentially the same features in all European countries) adopted and promulgated Spinozistic doctrines. The books and individuals are fascinating, as are the conflicts many of them encountered with civil and religous authorities. He discusses how many writers had to try to present their teachings covertly (i.e. by appearing to criticize Spinozism while in fact advocating it.) in order to attempt to avoid conflict. There are also extended treatments of Leibniz and Locke and their interactions with Radical Enlightenment. For the most part, Professor Israel avoids explicit comment on the philosophical merits of the many ideas and thinkers he explores. The reader is left to think through the issues on the basis of his descriptions and from the words of the thinkers themselves. It is a fascinating study. I have long been a student of Spinoza and came away from this book awed by the wealth of learning displayed in this book and by the scope and influence of Radical Enlightenment in the years following Spinoza's death. Philosophically, I came away from this book with a new appreciation of the virtues of Western secularism and with a renewed understanding of the dear price that has been paid for the intellectual liberation of the mind and heart. It is a journey that every person must undertake for him or herself, and many people may reach results that differ from those reached during the age of Radical Enlightenment. Spinoza's goal (shared with the religious thinkers whom he rejected) was to find the path to human blessedness, enlightenment, and happiness by freeing the mind. I got a good sense of the value of this search through reading this masterful book.
Rating:  Summary: A slightly flawed masterpiece Review: Most people, when they think of the Enlightenment, think first of 18th France, of Voltaire and of Diderot. The late Roy Porter, in his spirited Enlightenment (Penguin paperback) claimed that the roots of the Enlightenment were actually in England. Then we have recently had James Buchan's Capital of the Mind, which claims in its subtitle that the philosophers of Edinburgh "changed the world". Jonathan Israel says that these are all parochial approaches, and that the Enlightenment was a movement whose international character he intends to illustrate. He has indeed read prodigiously in international literature: his bibliography gives 26 pages of published primary sources and 31 of secondary literature, and these include titles in Latin, English, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Swedish and Danish.
Nevertheless, what emerges quite clearly from this book is that he places the origins of the Radical Enlightenment very firmly in 17th century Holland in general and in Spinoza in particular; and although one might perhaps expect this from a historian whose previous book was an equally massive work on the Dutch Republic (OUP), he makes a totally convincing case for this. In the course of it we learn much about many Dutch thinkers. Many of them are scarcely known in this country; and there are some, like Anthonie van Dale and Frederik van Leenhof, who according to Professor Israel are almost unknown even in Holland today.
True, it is a Frenchman, René Descartes, who could be said to have planted the seeds of what would become the Enlightenment, and there is a good deal about him in the book; but the principal theatre for the debate about Descartes is again shown to be Holland, where he had moved for safety in 1628, where the Discours de la Méthode was first published in 1637, and from where it later spread to other countries. Indeed, Spinoza's first published work was The Principles of Cartesian Philosophy (1663). I think myself that the title of the book is somewhat misleading. It ought really to have been called Spinoza and the Enlightenment, since it is almost wholly devoted to his influence: all later Enlightenment thinkers of whatever nation are discussed almost exclusively in terms of the extent to which they were in agreement or disagreement with him.
That debate is described in exhaustive - I would say - exhausting - detail, since in fact the various arguments are repeated over and over again. There are principally three parties to this argument: thinkers of the Radical Enlightenment who follow Spinoza more or less all the way; those of the Moderate Enlightenment, who accept a broadly rational approach but stop short of denying a providential deity and the principal mysteries of the Christian faith; and the Conservatives or fideists who demand total acceptance of the traditional doctrines of the churches about such matters as miracles, the existence of Hell and of the Devil. Jonathan Israel patiently gives the arguments of this last group more space than most histories of the Enlightenment would do. Interestingly, many members of even the first group often denied that they were "Spinozists". That label was used by anti-rationalists, right up to eve of the French Revolution in a positively McCarthyist way to discredit even members of the second group, who themselves went out of their way to condemn Spinoza in the strongest terms. The true Spinozists often protected themselves by giving a full statement of the Spinozan positions and then following them with perfunctory or even deliberately feeble objections.
Despite its enormous length and the width of Israel's research, the book does remain rather narrowly focussed. The debates described in the book are largely about religion and about the challenges to deductive rationalism both from the churches and from the pragmatic schools. Such discussion as there is of Enlightenment political thought is again entirely related to the influence of or reaction against Spinoza's unfinished Tractatus Politicus. So, for instance, the debate in France between the thèse royale, the thèse nobiliaire, and democracy does not feature on its own terms. At the end there is an interesting short section on Diderot and his relationship to Spinozism; but there is nothing much of interest on Montesquieu, Voltaire, Helvétius or Holbach, all of whom are considerable figures in the history of the French Enlightenment. And there are just two references to Hume.
There are two other major criticisms: the book takes much previous knowledge for granted (for example, what exactly had been both the psychological and political teaching Thomas Hobbes). Although there are several references to Malebranche and Malebranchisme, there is nowhere a concise account of what that philosopher taught: the "Occasionalism" for which he is famous has just two references in the index, only one of which links that doctrine with him.
However, Professor Israel has undoubteldy written a most important book which significantly shifts the focus of Enlightenment studies. For that and for his immense scholarship he deserves the praise that reviewers have heaped upon his book.
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