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Index
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Introduction: Living the Enlightenment
Acknowledgments
Part I: The Philosophers’ Enlightenment: Thinking the Centaur
1 Historians and Philosophers: The Peculiarity of the Enlightenment as Historical Category
2 Kant: Was ist Aufklärung?: The Emancipation of Man through Man
3 Hegel: The Dialectics of the Enlightenment as Modernity’s Philosophical Issue
4 Marx and Nietzsche: The Enlightenment from Bourgeois Ideology to Will to Power
5 Horkheimer and Adorno: The Totalitarian Face of the Dialectic of Enlightenment
6 Foucault: The Return of the Centaur and the Death of Man
7 Postmodern Anti-Enlightenment Positions: From the Cassirer-Heidegger Debate to Benedict XVI’s katholische Aufklärung
Part II: The Historians’ Enlightenment: The Cultural Revolution of the Ancien Régime
8 For a Defense of Historical Knowledge: Beyond the Centaur
9 The Epistemologia imaginabilis in Eighteenth-Century Science and Philosophy
10 The Enlightenment–French Revolution Paradigm: Between Political Myth and Epistemological Impasse
11 The Twentieth Century and the Enlightenment as Historical Problem: From Political History to Social and Cultural History
12 What Was the Enlightenment?: The Humanism of the Moderns in Ancien Régime Europe
13 Chronology and Geography of a Cultural Revolution
14 Politicization and Natura naturans: The Late Enlightenment Question and the Crisis of the Ancien Régime
Afterword: The Enlightenment: A Revolution of the Mind or the Ancien Régime’s Cultural Revolution?
Notes
Index
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