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L**D
Well worth reading
This work surveys as well as interprets an enormous field. It does so, and does it well. It is an illuminating guide, especially pertinent to the student and general reader.
V**L
not Porter's best book
I recently discovered the late Roy Porter through his last book Flesh in the Age of Reason: The Modern Foundations of Body and Soul. After devouring that book I ordered both The Enlightenment and The Creation of the Modern World: The Untold Story of the British Enlightenment. The latter book lives up to my expectations but I was disappointed in the shorter book, which was no doubt constrained by the publisher's expectations since it is part of a series.My chief complaint is that because the book is so short, it seems to assume that the reader is already familiar with the main characters of period. For me this was only partially true. Therefore, I would not recommend this as a introduction to the subject.
M**O
Way too brief for such a broad topic
Make sure you realize how few pages there are. This is an exceedingly brief treatment of a topic, the Enlightenment, on which others have written volumes of full-length books-only 68 pages of text, quite pricey per page.
D**E
concise summary of the academic literature
this succinct text is basically a very high quality, informed and judicious "cliff's notes" overview of the sprawling academic literature on the enlightenment -- summarized at the end as an annotated, 13 page bibliography and a detailed, 7 page index. with repeated hat tips to peter gay's landmark, two volume study (1960), porter reviews subsequent confirmations and dissents from gay's narrative and major conclusions about the enlightenment in an "on the one hand ... on the other hand" style. the compact, briskly written chapters cover definitions of the enlightenment, the enlightenment project of creating a secular "science of man," the politics and religious attitudes of the philosophes, and the unity or diversity among the various enlightenment participants, both as individuals and as national, social and class movements. Porter's verdict: "The Enlightenment helped to free man from his past. In so doing, it failed to prevent the construction of future captivities" (tyrannies such as the french revolution and napoleonic era, exploitation of labor by capital, technological alienation, etc.).
B**I
Made me wicked smaat
I'm totally enlightened now. I feel like a went to Haavad and not just to paak my cah like usual
R**S
Too short
The book is too short for being taken very seriously, It looks like a book such as "Everything that you should know about the enlightenment in 2 hours".
E**Y
Four Stars
OK gift to student
M**W
Simple
Well, there's not really all that much to write about this book. It kind of says it all in the title.What I have found is that it presents the topic in a perfectly understandable way, doesn't over-confuse things and is a perfect companion to studies of the Enlightenment.It's not the most detailed of books ever, but it's not claiming to be. But for an overview of the topic, does what it says on the tin.
M**R
Interesting, informative but not simplistic.
Roy Porter has written an interesting and informative book. Although relatively short, (sixty-nine pages of text) this is not a simplistic account. It provides a critical appraisal of both the enlightenment and of previous historical analyses of this period. Porter outlines the issues and ambiguities of the enlightenmt, as well as differences between elightenment thinkers, countries and developments over time.There are chapters on what is meant by enlightenmnet, the goal of enlightenment, religion, politics, who was involved in the enlightenment, and enlightenment and the wider cultural context. Overall, Porter gives a sympathetic account.My knowlege of history is scant, and I read this book because I wanted to know what the enlightenmnet was. 'The Enlightenment' goes some way to answering this question, but I did find it required much concentration and effort. It may be that people with a some background in history would get more out of this book, but i did find it rewarding of the effort.
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