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Enlightenment
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Enlightenment

European intellectual movement that reached its high point in the 18th century. Enlightenment thinkers were believers in social progress and in the liberating possibilities of rational and scientific knowledge. They were often critical of existing society and were hostile to religion, which they saw as keeping the human mind chained down by superstition.

The American and French revolutions were justified by Enlightenment principles of human natural rights. Leading representatives of the Enlightenment were Voltaire, Gotthold Lessing, and Denis Diderot.

enlightenment

In Buddhism, the term used to translate the Sanskrit bodhi ‘awakening’: the transcendence of worldy values to perceive the true nature of the world and the unreality of the self, and the liberation from suffering (dukkha). By experience of bodhi, nirvana is attained.



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Nor, it might be added, should they be allowed to obscure the fact that ideas really do have consequences (even it frequently may take a considerable period of time for these consequences become apparent) and that the various national Enlightenments may not have been equally prescient in grasping the implications of the "deep structure" of thought they shared.
Theologian Tracey Rowland believes the latter description of liberalism--an intellectual tradition derivative of the epistemology and moral, political and economic philosophy of the various European Enlightenments in the 18th century--better understands the phenomenon, and believes Benedict XVI shares at least some elements of this diagnosis.
George Brecht once described his events as "very private, like little enlightenments I wanted to communicate to my friends who would know what to do with them.
 
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