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  1. Radical Enlightenment, Enlightened Subversion, and Spinoza.Sonja Lavaert - 2014 - Philosophica 89 (1).
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  • Exorcizing Demons: Thomas Hobbes and Balthasar Bekker on Spirits and Religion.Alissa Macmillan - 2014 - Philosophica 89 (1).
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  • Scholarship, morals and government: Jean-Henri-Samuel formey's and Johann Gottfried Herder's responses to Rousseau's first discourse.Alexander Schmidt - 2012 - Modern Intellectual History 9 (2):249-274.
    This article analyses how Rousseau's First Discourse and the questions it posed about human progress and the reform of society were debated in the institutional context of the Berlin Academy by Formey and Herder. Despite some important disagreements, Formey and Herder fundamentally shared Rousseau's assumption that erudition could be detrimental both to society and to the individual. In order to limit the socially corrosive effects of the arts and the sciences, and in an attempt to realize their full beneficent potential, (...)
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  • Joining the Radical Enlightenment: Some Thoughts on Intellectual Identity, Precarity and Sociability in the Eighteenth Century.Jordy Geerlings - 2014 - Philosophica 89 (1).
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  • Introduction.Steffen Ducheyne & Wim van Moer - 2014 - Philosophica 89 (1).
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