Image for The Case for The Enlightenment

The Case for The Enlightenment : Scotland and Naples 1680–1760

Part of the Ideas in Context series
See all formats and editions

The Case for the Enlightenment is a comparative study of the emergence of Enlightenment in Scotland and in Naples.

Challenging the tendency to fragment the Enlightenment in eighteenth-century Europe into multiple Enlightenments, the distinguished intellectual historian John Robertson demonstrates the extent to which thinkers in two societies at the opposite ends of Europe shared common intellectual preoccupations.

Before 1700, Scotland and Naples faced a bleak future as backward, provincial kingdoms in a Europe of aggressive commercial states.

Yet by 1760, Scottish and Neapolitan thinkers were in the van of those advocating the cause of Enlightenment by means of political economy.

By studying the social and institutional contexts of intellectual life in the two countries, and the currents of thought promoted within them, The Case for the Enlightenment explains this transformation.

John Robertson pays particular attention to the greatest thinkers in each country, David Hume and Giambattista Vico.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£19.54 Save 15.00%
RRP £22.99
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521035724 / 9780521035729
Paperback / softback
941.107
31/05/2007
United Kingdom
English
research & professional Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 2005.