The Facets of the Enlightenment Movement from a Libertarian Perspective:

This paper pretends to explain the origins of the French Revolution, in particular in regards to its connection with the main proponents of the French Enlightenment. It argues that the Enlightenment movement was rather heterogeneous, shaped by many different thinkers with often incompatible views....

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Main Author: Patrick Reimers
Format: Article
Language:Portuguese
Published: Instituto Mises Brasil 2020-02-01
Series:Mises
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistamises.org.br/misesjournal/article/view/1250
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spelling doaj-27a5752ec9234988ab6462cece58bcef2021-07-01T12:24:08ZporInstituto Mises BrasilMises2318-08112594-91872020-02-01810.30800/mises.2020.v8.1250548The Facets of the Enlightenment Movement from a Libertarian Perspective:Patrick Reimers0Ph.D. student at URJC Madrid This paper pretends to explain the origins of the French Revolution, in particular in regards to its connection with the main proponents of the French Enlightenment. It argues that the Enlightenment movement was rather heterogeneous, shaped by many different thinkers with often incompatible views. The merits of Jean Jacques Rousseau in regards to conservation and education are described, while equivalently criticizing his rather collectivist ideas and his disputable views on women. It is argued that even if during the main period of the Enlightenment movement, liberal thinkers such as Montesquieu, Turgot, Lafayette and Condorcet had defined political theories based on individual freedom and competition, they were possibly “too far ahead of times” to significantly shape the French Revolution. Independently from the positive aspects of the Enlightenment movement, the actual French Revolution was often collectivist and nationalist and led to a violent phase – the ‘Reign of Terror’. Thus, this analysis allows us to understand the complexity and diversity of the Enlightenment movement and its relation to the actual French Revolution. Consequently, the revolution’s collectivist, nationalist and violent phase must be seen critically, also showing us that the implementation of democratic processes can bear risks, as the ‘majority rule’ can differ quite significantly to the concept of the ‘Rule of Law’. https://revistamises.org.br/misesjournal/article/view/1250DemocracymonarchyPrivate Property OrderFrench revolutionanarcho-capitalism
collection DOAJ
language Portuguese
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick Reimers
spellingShingle Patrick Reimers
The Facets of the Enlightenment Movement from a Libertarian Perspective:
Mises
Democracy
monarchy
Private Property Order
French revolution
anarcho-capitalism
author_facet Patrick Reimers
author_sort Patrick Reimers
title The Facets of the Enlightenment Movement from a Libertarian Perspective:
title_short The Facets of the Enlightenment Movement from a Libertarian Perspective:
title_full The Facets of the Enlightenment Movement from a Libertarian Perspective:
title_fullStr The Facets of the Enlightenment Movement from a Libertarian Perspective:
title_full_unstemmed The Facets of the Enlightenment Movement from a Libertarian Perspective:
title_sort facets of the enlightenment movement from a libertarian perspective:
publisher Instituto Mises Brasil
series Mises
issn 2318-0811
2594-9187
publishDate 2020-02-01
description This paper pretends to explain the origins of the French Revolution, in particular in regards to its connection with the main proponents of the French Enlightenment. It argues that the Enlightenment movement was rather heterogeneous, shaped by many different thinkers with often incompatible views. The merits of Jean Jacques Rousseau in regards to conservation and education are described, while equivalently criticizing his rather collectivist ideas and his disputable views on women. It is argued that even if during the main period of the Enlightenment movement, liberal thinkers such as Montesquieu, Turgot, Lafayette and Condorcet had defined political theories based on individual freedom and competition, they were possibly “too far ahead of times” to significantly shape the French Revolution. Independently from the positive aspects of the Enlightenment movement, the actual French Revolution was often collectivist and nationalist and led to a violent phase – the ‘Reign of Terror’. Thus, this analysis allows us to understand the complexity and diversity of the Enlightenment movement and its relation to the actual French Revolution. Consequently, the revolution’s collectivist, nationalist and violent phase must be seen critically, also showing us that the implementation of democratic processes can bear risks, as the ‘majority rule’ can differ quite significantly to the concept of the ‘Rule of Law’.
topic Democracy
monarchy
Private Property Order
French revolution
anarcho-capitalism
url https://revistamises.org.br/misesjournal/article/view/1250
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