Two Concepts of Moderation in the Early Enlightenment

The European Legacy 28 (3):274-293 (2023)
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Abstract

This essay proposes a bifurcation within the concept of moderation in early modern Europe. To draw this out it reconstructs an “encounter” between two citizens of the scholarly Republic of Letters in the years around 1700—Lodovico Antonio Muratori and Jean Le Clerc—and the concept of moderation each maintained. It proposes that the former maintained an ideal of moderation which was “hard” principally about self-regulation, while the latter maintained an ideal of moderation which was “soft” and principally about (religious) toleration. It then attaches this “encounter” to an analogous conflict between uses of moderation in late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century England. It concludes by proposing that this bifurcation, while occurring within scholarly and theological debates, has enduring significance for our interpretation of the Enlightenment, and for the passage of political moderation into the modern world.

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References found in this work

Liberty: One or Two Concepts Liberty.Eric Nelson - 2005 - Political Theory 33 (1):58-78.
The History of Concepts as a Style of Political Theorizing.Kari Palonen - 2002 - European Journal of Political Theory 1 (1):91-106.
Radical, Sceptical and Liberal Enlightenment.James Alexander - 2020 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 14 (2):257-283.
Four Conceptions of Freedom.Horacio Spector - 2010 - Political Theory 38 (6):780-808.
Montesquieu on moderation, monarchy and reform.Andrea Radasanu - 2010 - History of Political Thought 31 (2):283-308.

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