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The Quest for a New Enlightenment
Associated Content ^ | April 5, 2007 | G. Stolyarov II

Posted on 04/06/2007 12:23:27 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II

The 18th-century Enlightenment was the single most important intellectual development in human history; it made possible the comfortable, prosperous, stable, and relatively free Western civilization that we enjoy today.

Enlightenment thinkers believed in a single, knowable, absolute reality guided by rational natural laws. Individuals—said Enlightenment thinkers—had the faculty of reason, which enabled them to accurately understand the absolute reality. Using reason, individuals could understand not only the factual data of reality but a rational moral system which would instruct them on how they ought to behave.

The Enlightenment cultivated the rights of every human being to his life, liberty, property, and pursuit of happiness. Enlightenment thinkers insisted that no one—neither private criminals nor the government—ought to violate these rights. These rights are derived from nature, not from other people—hence the name natural rights. Natural rights cannot be taken away; they can only be violated, and their violation is the ultimate immorality.

The Enlightenment advanced man’s liberty to speak his mind and publish his thoughts using his own property; it decried government censorship and the use force against free expression of ideas. The Enlightenment rebelled against religious bigotry and intolerance; it advocated every individual’s freedom to pursue whatever non-coercive religion he saw fit—or to refrain from religious pursuits altogether. The State should not control religion or morality; both should be left to the private domain.

Enlightenment thinkers advocated freedom of individual association and full-fledged property rights. This implied a conviction that individuals should be allowed to trade freely with one another and voluntarily produce goods, services, and ideas on a free market. The State should not regulate commerce or dictate its objectives; rather, laissez-faire capitalism is the only economic system consistent with individual natural rights to life, liberty, property, and pursuit of happiness. Laissez-faire capitalism—through Adam Smith’s famous “invisible hand” of the marketplace—would produce far superior results to a government-managed economy.

The Enlightenment led to an era of shrinking government, expanding liberty, increased toleration, and immensely amplified commercial freedom. Creative entrepreneurs and thinkers benefited from the Enlightenment; they used their new liberties to invent new technologies and ideas—thereby initiating the Industrial Revolution. The Industrial Revolution of the late 18th and 19th centuries is largely responsible for the unprecedented prosperity, peace, and opportunity we enjoy today.

Unfortunately—while the Enlightenment’s material legacies remain with us today—today’s mainstream culture has largely rejected the ideas which motivated the Enlightenment. If we wish to continue to progress and enjoy lives proper to man, we need to save and revive the Enlightenment’s principles.


TOPICS: Government; History; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: capitalism; enlightenment; liberty; philosophy
See more of my Associated Content articles here

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G. Stolyarov II,

Editor-in-Chief,

The Rational Argumentator

1 posted on 04/06/2007 12:23:29 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II
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To: G. Stolyarov II

I like the idea of your general proposal, if I understand it correctly, though I am far more a fan of the Renaissance than the Enlightenment.

Personally I would like to see and hope to help promote a New Renaissance in the West, to include all of the fields and disciplines of Art, Science, and Religion.

Though I think that efforts like this (yours), and associated efforts are of great potential value.

Are you of Greek descent?

I personally also happen to be a big fan of the Byzantines (New or Greek Romans) and their various enlightenment and renaissance periods.

I have a personal theory that the United States of America is Byzantium come again, and refined and improved.

Good luck and Godspeed with your efforts. When I have the opportunity I will visit your site, and if I like what I read there, and I suspect I shall, then I’ll add your site to my blogroll.

Happy Easter.

Jack.


2 posted on 04/06/2007 12:51:48 PM PDT by occu77
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To: occu77

Jack,

Thank you for your kind remarks. I, too, am extremely fond of the Renaissance along with the Enlightenment; certainly, the former was necessary for the latter to occur, and we are all indebted to the Renaissance for masterpieces of art, philosophy, and science alike.

I am Russian by origin, but my first name is derived from the Greek “Gennadius,” which happened to be the name of the last Patriarch of the Byzantine Empire.

Happy Easter to you as well.

G. Stolyarov II


3 posted on 04/06/2007 1:44:53 PM PDT by G. Stolyarov II (http://rationalargumentator.com)
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To: G. Stolyarov II

I suspected it was either Greek or Russian.

I used to have a couple of Russian friends back during the Cold War. An Army Captain and a psychologist at the University of Leningrad (at that time).

I just finished a great series of lectures on the history of the Byzantine Empire called, Empire of Gold. I recommend it.

I’m reading some of your writings.
Interesting.


4 posted on 04/06/2007 4:58:11 PM PDT by occu77
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