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A Light Too Bright

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Questioning the very legitimacy of Western liberalism and the modern secular civilization it has given rise to, Dr. Gregorios critically examines the values of the European Enlightenment of the eig...
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  • 17 August 1992
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Questioning the very legitimacy of Western liberalism and the modern secular civilization it has given rise to, Dr. Gregorios critically examines the values of the European Enlightenment of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and the corporate drive of European peoples by which they have dominated the external world. He shows that both Capitalism and Marxism, as well as Modern Science and Technology are creations of the same spirit, he argues.

The powerful light of Critical Rationality emitted by the European Enlightenment is like the light of the sun. It is bright and helpful for seeing this world in detail, but too bright to let us see the night sky and the vast expanses of the universe. This "light too bright" eclipses the Transcendent. Dr. Gregorios invites us to appropriate the other Enlightenment of the overall-religious-cultural outlook in a new way and to relate it to the valid insights of the European Enlightenment.

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Price: £72.50
Pages: 270
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Religious Studies
Publication Date: 17 August 1992
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780791411339
Format: Hardcover
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"The author has a special talent for bringing together vast amounts of material and summarizing in clear and insightful ways. This critique of the European Enlightenment is most significant in itself. While there have been other books on the Enlightenment, the approach taken here is unique and could only have been offered by a non-European." — Harold G. Coward, University of Calgar

Preface


1. Getting Oriented


2. Religion, Culture, and the Secular: Concepts to be Clarified


3. What is the European Enlightenment?


4. Europe: Adventure and Expansion


5. Ideas: Hegel


6. The Dialectics of the Enlightenment: Knowledge—Its Function and Foundation


7. Theory for Practice, Or the Other Way Around?


8. Justice, Human Rights, and the State in European Civilization


9. Science, Technology, and the Enlightenment: Will They Go On Reinforcing Each Other Indefinitely?


10. Reason's Unreason: Ten Questionable Assumptions of Enlightenment Rationality


11. Turning to the Other Enlightenment: The European Tradition Revisited


12. The Twain Shall Be One: On Bringing the Two Enlightenments in Integral-Dialectical Relation to Each Other


Notes


Index