Reading the Silences, Questioning the Terms: A Response to the Focus on Eighteenth-Century Ethics

Journal of Religious Ethics 28 (2):281 - 284 (2000)
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Abstract

It is striking that most of the essays in this Focus do not explore the specifically religious aspects of Enlightenment ethical thought. A principled reason for this may be found in a conception of religion that makes it hard for Enlightenment thinkers to seem religious at all. Neither does this conception fit anything that is likely to be a live option for most people today, and the now prevalent unpopularity of eighteenth-century piety and religious thought may blind us to important religious possibilities

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