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Index
Cover Half Title Title Page Copyright Page Table of Contents Acknowledgements Contributors Introduction
The Enlightenment: Something to think about
PART I Thinking about Kant and the Enlightenment
1 Kant’s concept of Enlightenment: Individual and universal dimensions 2 Rethinking Kant’s ‘immaturity’ in Arendt’s post-totalitarian reflection
PART II Thinking about Enlightenment and politics
3 The Enlightenment, encyclopedism and the natural rights of man: The case of the Code of Humanity (1778) 4 Deliberative democrats as the heirs of Enlightenment: Between Habermas and Dewey
PART III Thinking about Enlightenment and religion
5 Christianity and Enlightenment: Two hermeneutical approaches to their relationship 6 The Enlightenment legacy and European identity: Reflections on the cartoon controversy
PART IV Thinking about Enlightenment and gender
7 Between shadow and light: Women’s education 8 “Race”, “sex”, and “gender”: Intersections, naturalistic fallacies, and the Age of Reason
PART V Thinking about Enlightenment and its limits
9 Adoption as a limit-case for Enlightenment: Lessing’s Nathan der Weise and Kleist’s Der Findling 10  From unsocial sociability to antagonistic society (and back again): The historical role and social-scientific presence of an anthropological trope
PART VI Postscripts: Thinking about Enlightenment thinking
11  Multiple Counter-Enlightenments: The genealogy of a polemics from the eighteenth century to the present 12  ‘The proper study of mankind’: Enlightenment and tautology
Index
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