3.0(4)

What is Enlightenment?

In the modern era, we take the concept of Enlightenment for granted. The concepts of personal freedom, liberty and the ability to think for one-self have become a personal choice and fundamental to our everyday lives. Yet in 1784, when the essay was written, the concept of Enlightenment was an emerging idea and still a vague notion to most people. What is important for the modern listener in this essay is how Kant outlines those things that discourage enlightenment as well as those things that can enhance it on a personal and social level. The WIKIPEDIA link below provides a more detailed analysis of the essay, although the listener will appreciate how many of the issues defined by Kant are still relevant in today's world.

Om den här boken

In the modern era, we take the concept of Enlightenment for granted. The concepts of personal freedom, liberty and the ability to think for one-self have become a personal choice and fundamental to our everyday lives. Yet in 1784, when the essay was written, the concept of Enlightenment was an emerging idea and still a vague notion to most people. What is important for the modern listener in this essay is how Kant outlines those things that discourage enlightenment as well as those things that can enhance it on a personal and social level. The WIKIPEDIA link below provides a more detailed analysis of the essay, although the listener will appreciate how many of the issues defined by Kant are still relevant in today's world.

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  1. 3.0

    Classic Philosophical Works (Thus Spoke Zarathustra, The Apology of Socrates, Tao Te Ching...)

    Plato, Friedrich Nietzsche, Herman Hesse, Leo Tolstoy, Immanuel Kant, Sun Tzu

  2. 12 Masterpieces You Have to Read Before You Die. Philosophy

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    Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Morals

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  4. Dreams of a Spirit-Seer

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  6. Pedagogiikasta

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    3500 Final Quotes

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  8. 2000 Final Quotations

    Marcus Aurelius, Jane Austen, Buddha, Anton Chekhov, Cicero, Emil Cioran, Confucius, Albert Einstein, Anne Frank, Mahatma Gandhi, Johann Wolfgang Goethe, Carl Jung, Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Nietzsche, Marcel Proust, Arthur Schopenhauer, William Shakespeare, Baruch Spinoza, Leonardo da Vinci, Laozi

  9. 3.0

    An Answer to the Question: What is Enlightenment?

    Immanuel Kant

  10. Critique of Pure Reason

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  11. 3.8

    Kant’s Foundations of Ethics

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  12. Critique of Judgement

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