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DEMOCRATIC ENLIGHTENMENT This page intentionally left blank Democratic Enlightenment Philosophy, Revolution, and Human Rights 1750–1790 JONATHAN ISRAEL 1 3 GreatClarendonStreet,Oxfordox26dp OxfordUniversityPressisadepartmentoftheUniversityofOxford. ItfurtherstheUniversity’sobjectiveofexcellenceinresearch,scholarship, andeducationbypublishingworldwidein Oxford NewYork Auckland CapeTown DaresSalaam HongKong Karachi KualaLumpur Madrid Melbourne MexicoCity Nairobi NewDelhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto WithoYcesin Argentina Austria Brazil Chile CzechRepublic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore SouthKorea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam OxfordisaregisteredtrademarkofOxfordUniversityPress intheUKandincertainothercountries PublishedintheUnitedStates byOxfordUniversityPressInc.,NewYork ©JonathanIsrael2011 Themoralrightsoftheauthorhavebeenasserted DatabaserightOxfordUniversityPress(maker) FirstPublished2011 Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced, storedinaretrievalsystem,ortransmitted,inanyformorbyanymeans, withoutthepriorpermissioninwritingofOxfordUniversityPress, orasexpresslypermittedbylaw,orundertermsagreedwiththeappropriate reprographicsrightsorganization.Enquiriesconcerningreproduction outsidethescopeoftheaboveshouldbesenttotheRightsDepartment, OxfordUniversityPress,attheaddressabove Youmustnotcirculatethisbookinanyotherbindingorcover andyoumustimposethissameconditiononanyacquirer BritishLibraryCataloguinginPublicationData Dataavailable LibraryofCongressCataloginginPublicationData Dataavailable TypesetbySPIPublisherServices,Pondicherry,India PrintedinGreatBritain onacid-freepaperby ClaysLtd,StIvesplc ISBN978–0–19–954820–0 1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2 Acknowledgements During the years I have spent working on this third volume of my Enlightenment series,IhavebenefitedsoextensivelyfromdiscussionabouttheEnlightenmentinits many aspects with colleagues—historians, philosophers, and social scientists— around the world that it would make little sense simply to present a long list of them here. To those who have helped me most to correct errors and advance my understanding of the numerousthemes and aspects where I have profited fromthe expertise of others, I have repeatedly spoken of my sense of debt and obligation. IwouldsimplyliketoaddherethatIamimmenselygratefulforallthestimulation andhelpthatresultedfromallthisdiscussionandsingthepraises,asmanyofthem would wish to too, in particular of three splendid centres for research and debate wherethelargestamountsofthisprocessofcomparingnoteswenton.Fortraining in informed as well as independent critical thinking about society, politics, the democraticfreedoms,andtheusesofknowledge,thehumanitiessurpasseverything elsebyfar,andinthisuncomprehendingerawhenthehumanitiesareinretreatinso many higher education systems around the world there is nothing to beat the internationalresearchinstitutesforadvancingwhatisbestinthehumanities. Without the immense advantage of having been based at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, during the period on which I worked on this volume notonlywoulditlackmuchofwhateverstrengthithasbutitwouldalmostcertainly never have been attempted at all. Neither the time, nor the scholarly resources, nor the debates, nor the cross-disciplinary stimulation would have been available to anything like the necessary extent. The several months that I spent at the NIAS (Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study), the Dutch equivalent of the Princeton Institute,werealsoinvaluableinthisrespectaswerethemonthsIworkedinOxford based at Corpus Christi College. Itis to these threecentres, above all the Princeton Institute,thatIowemyoverridingdebt.Further,Iwouldliketoaddaheartywordof thanks to all the many librarians in libraries in Europe and both Americas that assistedwiththisvasttask. This page intentionally left blank Contents ListofPlates xiii ListofAbbreviations xv 1. Introduction 1 1. DefiningtheEnlightenment 1 2. InterpretingtheEnlightenment:TheArgument 8 3. SocialContext,CulturalProcess,Ideas 17 PART I: THE RADICAL CHALLENGE 2. NatureandProvidence:EarthquakesandtheHumanCondition 39 1. TheGreatEnlightenmentEarthquakeControversy(1750–1757) 39 2. PhilosophyandInterpretingDisaster 50 3. TheEncyclope´dieSuppressed(1752–1760) 56 1. Fighting‘laPhilosophieModerne’ 56 2. DiderotLoseshisContributors 64 3. The‘War’oftheEncyclop´edieafter1759 82 4. RousseauagainstthePhilosophes 93 1. BreakingwiththeEncyclop´edistes 93 2. VirtueRestored 100 3. DeismandtheRootsofPoliticalRadicalism 106 5. Voltaire,Enlightenment,andtheEuropeanCourts 110 1. ModerateEnlightenmentDominant? 110 2. RegroupingatCleves 124 3. AFalteringMainstream 130 6. Anti-philosophes 140 1. Anti-philosophieasaCulturalForce 140 2. CatholicEnlightenmentagainstRadicalThought 151 3. Philosophy,Religion,andtheSocialOrder 158 4. Anti-philosophieversusSpinozaandBayle 162 viii Contents 7. CentralEurope:Aufkla¨rungDivided 172 1. TheLegacyofLeibnizandWolff 172 2. BerlinanditsRoyalAcademy 188 3. Kant:Searchingfor theMiddlePassage 195 4. Reimarus:ErosionfromtheCentre 200 PART II: RATIONALIZING THE ANCIEN RE´GIME 8. Hume,Scepticism,andModeration 209 1. Hume’sEnlightenment 209 2. Hume,Aristocracy,andtheBritishEmpire 220 9. ScottishEnlightenmentandMan’s‘Progress’ 233 1. Smith,Ferguson,andCivilSociety 233 2. Kames,Race,andProvidence 248 3. Reidand‘CommonSense’ 256 10. EnlightenedDespotism 270 1. RadicalEnlightenmentagainst‘EnlightenedDespotism’ 270 2. TheGermanSmallStates 278 3. JosephII,‘Josephism’,andtheAustrianMonarchy 283 4. Music,Literature,andtheFineArts 296 11. Aufkla¨rungandtheFracturingofGermanProtestantCulture 302 1. Deismbesieged 302 2. BahrdtandFreedomofExpression 310 3. LessingandtheFragmentenstreit 315 12. CatholicEnlightenment:ThePapacy’sRetreat 326 1. ModerateversusRadicalEnlightenmentinItaly 326 2. BeccariaandLegalReform 336 13. SocietyandtheRiseoftheItalianRevolutionaryEnlightenment 349 1. The‘ReformofItaly’Controversy 349 2. ReformingAustrianMilan 356 3. Deprivation,Revolution,andthe‘TwoSicilies’ 364 Contents ix 14. SpainandtheChallengeofReform 374 1. RemakingaTransatlanticEmpire 374 2. TheJesuitsandCarlosIII’sChurchPolicy 383 3. TheOlavideAffair 389 4. SpainandtheRadicalChallenge 395 PART III: EUROPE AND THE REMAKING OF THE WORLD 15. TheHistoirephilosophique,orColonialismOverturned 413 1. TheBookthatmadeaWorld‘Revolution’ 413 2. PhilosophyandtheIndies 425 3. TransatlanticImpact 436 4. TheHistoirephilosophiqueasaProjectofWorldRevolution 438 16. TheAmericanRevolution 443 1. EnlightenmentandtheBirthoftheUnitedStates 443 2. Counter-EnlightenmentandModernity 460 3. Princeton,Harvard,Yale,andColumbia 465 4. UndemocraticStates 470 5. AnInconclusiveLegacy 478 17. EuropeandtheAmerindians 480 1. AztecsandIncasReconfigured 480 2. Amerindians:Saved,ortobeSaved? 489 3. TheTupacAmaruRebellion 497 18. PhilosophyandRevoltinIbero-America(1765–1792) 504 1. TheCreole–PeninsularRift 504 2. BourbonEnlightenmentintheAmericas 510 3. RadicalEnlightenmentDiffusedacrosstheAtlantic 516 4. TheAmericanRevolutionandtheSpanishAmerican Revolution(1780–1809) 522 5. PhilosophyandSelf-EmancipationfromSpain 527 19. CommercialDespotism:DutchColonialisminAsia 535 1. AnAsianEmpire 535 2. TheEnlightenmentRadiatingfromBatavia 543

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