Enlightenment against EmpirePrinceton University Press, 10.01.2009 - 368 Seiten In the late eighteenth century, an array of European political thinkers attacked the very foundations of imperialism, arguing passionately that empire-building was not only unworkable, costly, and dangerous, but manifestly unjust. Enlightenment against Empire is the first book devoted to the anti-imperialist political philosophies of an age often regarded as affirming imperial ambitions. Sankar Muthu argues that thinkers such as Denis Diderot, Immanuel Kant, and Johann Gottfried Herder developed an understanding of humans as inherently cultural agents and therefore necessarily diverse. These thinkers rejected the conception of a culture-free "natural man." They held that moral judgments of superiority or inferiority could be made neither about entire peoples nor about many distinctive cultural institutions and practices. |
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... distinct cultures, and that such cultures are of worth equal to that of all other cultures. Enlightenment anti-imperialism is not 'multiculturalist' in this conventional (and contemporary) sense because eighteenth-century thinkers did ...
... distinct from that of a number of their most obvious forebears. In this chapter, I investigate the philosophical and political assumptions and arguments that made this outlook possible in part by contrasting this view, as we find it in ...
... distinct historical phases of social activity, scientific and technological complexity, and institutional development: a primordial condition (a pure state of nature); a primitive, middle stage; and the civilized condition of modern ...
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Inhalt
1 | |
11 | |
9780691115177_4CH3 | 72 |
9780691115177_5CH4 | 122 |
9780691115177_6CH5 | 172 |
9780691115177_7CH6 | 210 |
9780691115177_8CH7 | 259 |
9780691115177_9NOT | 285 |
9780691115177_10WC | 325 |
9780691115177_11IND | 341 |