Your Search Results(showing 5)

    • Western philosophy: c 1600 to c 1900x
    • Trusted Partner
      Humanities & Social Sciences
      January 2026

      Anticlerical legacies

      The deistic reception of Thomas Hobbes, c. 1670–1740

      by Elad Carmel

      Anticlerical legacies is the first comprehensive study of the reception of Thomas Hobbes's ideas by the English deists and freethinkers in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. One of the most important English philosophers of all time, Hobbes's theories have had an enduring impact on modern political and religious thought. This book offers a new perspective on the afterlife of Hobbes's philosophy, focusing on the readers who were most sympathetic to his critical and radical ideas in the decades following his death. It investigates how Hobbes's ideas shaped the English anticlerical campaign that peaked in the early eighteenth century and that was essential for the emergence of the early Enlightenment. The book shows that a large number of writers - Charles Blount, John Toland, Anthony Collins, Matthew Tindal, Thomas Morgan, and many others - were more Hobbesian than has ever been appreciated. Not only did they engage consistently with Hobbes's ideas, they even invoked his authority at a time when doing so was highly unpopular. Most fundamentally, they carried on Hobbes's war against the kingdom of darkness and used various Hobbesian weapons for their own war against priestcraft. Analysing the ways in which the deists and freethinkers developed their nuanced theories and conducted their heated dialogues with the orthodoxy, they emerge from this study as sophisticated and valuable theorists in their own right. The case of Hobbes and his successors demonstrates that anticlericalism was a key component of a much larger programme whose primary aim was to secure civil harmony, peace, and stability.

    • Trusted Partner
      Humanities & Social Sciences
      January 2024

      Anticlerical legacies

      The deistic reception of Thomas Hobbes, c. 1670–1740

      by Elad Carmel

      Anticlerical legacies explores the reception of Thomas Hobbes's political and religious ideas by seventeenth- and eighteenth-century deists and freethinkers, such as Charles Blount, John Toland, Anthony Collins, Matthew Tindal, Thomas Morgan, and many others. It shows that these writers were indebted to various aspects of Hobbes's thought, that they engaged with his ideas explicitly in their published and unpublished works, and that they invoked his authority consistently despite the explosive reputation of the 'monster of Malmesbury'. Hobbes emerges from this study as a major source of anticlerical ideas and tools-something that his contemporary admirers and critics seemed to agree on but that has been understudied in the scholarship. The battle of Hobbes and his successors against the orthodoxy was also a battle for civil peace, and the rich anticlerical legacies that they left remained influential long after their lifetime.

    • Diaries, letters & journals
      February 2014

      Michael Oakeshott: Notebooks, 1922-86

      by Oakeshott, Michael, A01; O'Sullivan, Luke, B01

      The sixth volume in the series Michael Oakeshott Selected...

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