The doubting deanJonathan Swift's Critique of reason in the age of enlightenment

By drawing on the two waves of critique of the Enlightenment and its version of reasonone after the French Revolution and the other after WWIIthis research pushes the timeline to an even earlier point and tries to study the critique of the Enlightenment and its version of reason within the Enlighten...

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Main Author: He, Xiyao
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: HKBU Institutional Repository 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.hkbu.edu.hk/etd_oa/291
https://repository.hkbu.edu.hk/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1291&context=etd_oa
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spelling ndltd-hkbu.edu.hk-oai-repository.hkbu.edu.hk-etd_oa-12912018-05-31T03:37:20Z The doubting deanJonathan Swift's Critique of reason in the age of enlightenment He, Xiyao By drawing on the two waves of critique of the Enlightenment and its version of reasonone after the French Revolution and the other after WWIIthis research pushes the timeline to an even earlier point and tries to study the critique of the Enlightenment and its version of reason within the Enlightenment itself. In doing so it chooses the English/Irish writer Jonathan Swift for case study, because in his works he repeatedly levels scathing criticisms of his age and the reason upheld by many of his contemporaries.;In his critique of the Enlightenment and its version of reason Swift appeals to a long tradition in Western intellectual history which regards human reason as twofold: a discursive part which proceeds in a step-by-step manner, through analysis, calculation, and demonstration; and an intuitive part which reaches the conclusion directly, immediately, and with much certainty. The Enlightenment, however, breaks the balance between the two by promoting discursive reason and eliminating intuitive reason. As a result, discursive reason is easily instrumentalized without the check of intuitive reason, which is thrown into oblivion.;Swift's critique is essentially a protest against this trend that was going on at his time. In contrast to it, he denounces discursive reason while champions intuitive reason. In his critique, the main target is discursive reason, and it necessarily also involves the most representative embodiment of discursive reason that was prospering at the time, namely, natural science. The critique of discursive reason and of science is made partly by relying on intuitive reason, which makes it, in a sense, also reason's critique of itself.;Of course, Swift does not regard human reason, either intuitive or discursive, as the panacea for human beings. As a priest of the Anglican Church, he thinks reason should always be subordinate to faithin other words, reason is limited. But perhaps ironically, in his emphasis on the limit of reason and the consequent need for faith as embodied and ensured in an authoritative institution, Swift reveals his own bigotry, intolerance and authoritarianism, which shows how he was historically and ideologically limited. 2016-07-13T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://repository.hkbu.edu.hk/etd_oa/291 https://repository.hkbu.edu.hk/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1291&context=etd_oa The author retains all rights to this work. The author has signed an agreement granting HKBU a non-exclusive license to archive and distribute their thesis. Open Access Theses and Dissertations English HKBU Institutional Repository Swift Jonathan 1667-1745;Criticism and interpretation.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Swift
Jonathan
1667-1745;Criticism and interpretation.
spellingShingle Swift
Jonathan
1667-1745;Criticism and interpretation.
He, Xiyao
The doubting deanJonathan Swift's Critique of reason in the age of enlightenment
description By drawing on the two waves of critique of the Enlightenment and its version of reasonone after the French Revolution and the other after WWIIthis research pushes the timeline to an even earlier point and tries to study the critique of the Enlightenment and its version of reason within the Enlightenment itself. In doing so it chooses the English/Irish writer Jonathan Swift for case study, because in his works he repeatedly levels scathing criticisms of his age and the reason upheld by many of his contemporaries.;In his critique of the Enlightenment and its version of reason Swift appeals to a long tradition in Western intellectual history which regards human reason as twofold: a discursive part which proceeds in a step-by-step manner, through analysis, calculation, and demonstration; and an intuitive part which reaches the conclusion directly, immediately, and with much certainty. The Enlightenment, however, breaks the balance between the two by promoting discursive reason and eliminating intuitive reason. As a result, discursive reason is easily instrumentalized without the check of intuitive reason, which is thrown into oblivion.;Swift's critique is essentially a protest against this trend that was going on at his time. In contrast to it, he denounces discursive reason while champions intuitive reason. In his critique, the main target is discursive reason, and it necessarily also involves the most representative embodiment of discursive reason that was prospering at the time, namely, natural science. The critique of discursive reason and of science is made partly by relying on intuitive reason, which makes it, in a sense, also reason's critique of itself.;Of course, Swift does not regard human reason, either intuitive or discursive, as the panacea for human beings. As a priest of the Anglican Church, he thinks reason should always be subordinate to faithin other words, reason is limited. But perhaps ironically, in his emphasis on the limit of reason and the consequent need for faith as embodied and ensured in an authoritative institution, Swift reveals his own bigotry, intolerance and authoritarianism, which shows how he was historically and ideologically limited.
author He, Xiyao
author_facet He, Xiyao
author_sort He, Xiyao
title The doubting deanJonathan Swift's Critique of reason in the age of enlightenment
title_short The doubting deanJonathan Swift's Critique of reason in the age of enlightenment
title_full The doubting deanJonathan Swift's Critique of reason in the age of enlightenment
title_fullStr The doubting deanJonathan Swift's Critique of reason in the age of enlightenment
title_full_unstemmed The doubting deanJonathan Swift's Critique of reason in the age of enlightenment
title_sort doubting deanjonathan swift's critique of reason in the age of enlightenment
publisher HKBU Institutional Repository
publishDate 2016
url https://repository.hkbu.edu.hk/etd_oa/291
https://repository.hkbu.edu.hk/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1291&context=etd_oa
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