Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The enlightenment: Conscience and authority in judgment
View through CrossRef
There were two prevailing sentiments in Europe after the Reformation: One opposing papal authority and one advocating individual freedom. This paper analyzes these two sentiments and finds that the concept of conscience is crucial in understanding them. The issue of conscience is about judging truth and good, and in initiating the Reformation, Martin Luther heavily appealed to his conscience while countering Catholic attacks. With the wide dispersal of the Reformation, Luther’s notion of conscience was well received among his supporters throughout Europe. Descartes later transformed Luther’s conscience into an epistemological being (the cogito), and argued that its existence was the only valid thing that survived his thorough skepticism — and as such is the foundation of human knowledge. Rousseau continued this line of thinking, which we call subjectivism, and re-employed the term conscience as a replacement for cogito, holding that conscience is the final authority in judging good and bad; that, as the starting point of human existence, it cannot be withheld from any human being; and that it therefore constitutes an inalienable human right. This paper argues that the Enlightenment was a subjectivist movement propelled by this conscience-cogito-conscience conceptualization, and that it sought to enlighten this inalienable conscience.
Title: The enlightenment: Conscience and authority in judgment
Description:
There were two prevailing sentiments in Europe after the Reformation: One opposing papal authority and one advocating individual freedom.
This paper analyzes these two sentiments and finds that the concept of conscience is crucial in understanding them.
The issue of conscience is about judging truth and good, and in initiating the Reformation, Martin Luther heavily appealed to his conscience while countering Catholic attacks.
With the wide dispersal of the Reformation, Luther’s notion of conscience was well received among his supporters throughout Europe.
Descartes later transformed Luther’s conscience into an epistemological being (the cogito), and argued that its existence was the only valid thing that survived his thorough skepticism — and as such is the foundation of human knowledge.
Rousseau continued this line of thinking, which we call subjectivism, and re-employed the term conscience as a replacement for cogito, holding that conscience is the final authority in judging good and bad; that, as the starting point of human existence, it cannot be withheld from any human being; and that it therefore constitutes an inalienable human right.
This paper argues that the Enlightenment was a subjectivist movement propelled by this conscience-cogito-conscience conceptualization, and that it sought to enlighten this inalienable conscience.
Related Results
Het slechte geweten van Vlaanderen: Over het racisme van Hendrik Conscience (1812-1883). Deel 2
Het slechte geweten van Vlaanderen: Over het racisme van Hendrik Conscience (1812-1883). Deel 2
Deze tweedelige bijdrage vertrekt van de vaststelling dat Hendrik Conscience (1812-1883) de voorbije decennia met een erg kwalijke reputatie werd opgezadeld. De oorzaak wordt uitge...
Keadaan Suara Hati dalam Mengambil Suatu Keputusan
Keadaan Suara Hati dalam Mengambil Suatu Keputusan
God created human being and endowed with a conscience. Conscience has a very important role to guide humans to make the right decisions. Through help of conscience, humans are able...
Effet d'un entrainement en pleine conscience et validation d'une échelle de mesure
Effet d'un entrainement en pleine conscience et validation d'une échelle de mesure
En psychologie du sport, l’intérêt pour les interventions basées sur la pleine conscience (MABI) ne cesse de croitre. Cependant, la majorité des études impliquant des MABI ne sont ...
Italian Jewish Enlightenment
Italian Jewish Enlightenment
Evolving definitions of the “Italian Jewish Enlightenment” are key to surveying scholarly output on this theme and will be reflected in the bibliographic overview presented here, w...
La conscience émotionnelle. Sa fonction dans l’autisme
La conscience émotionnelle. Sa fonction dans l’autisme
Cette thèse concerne la nature de la conscience émotionnelle et son rôle dans l’autisme. L’hypothèse principale concerne les particularités autistiques à propos des émotions propre...
Baumgarten and Kant on Conscience
Baumgarten and Kant on Conscience
Abstract
Both Baumgarten and Kant adopt a legalistic perspective in ethics, emphasizing the significance of imputation and judgment. They both regard moral conscienc...
L'ontologie de la conscience dans l'oeuvre de Henri Ey
L'ontologie de la conscience dans l'oeuvre de Henri Ey
En 1963 Henri Ey renoue, en écrivant « La Conscience », avec une tradition philosophique oubliée : ramener la psychologie dans le giron de la philosophie. Le lien entre psychologie...
The Concept of Reflection in the Philosophy of Kant
The Concept of Reflection in the Philosophy of Kant
The article analyzes the concept of reflection in Kant's philosophy. The distinction between consciousness (Bewußtsein) and thinking (Denken) in the structure of Kantian experience...

