Enlightenment, Secularism and the Freedom of Conscience

Posted: March 15, 2018 at 12:46 pm


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The aim of this project, The Enlightenment Ideas of the Freedom of Thought and Conscience, and Contemporary Secularism,is to expand upon the scope of the research on Enlightenment undertaken in the project Radical and Conservative Thinkers in the Enlightenment and the Making of Modernityat Jagiellonian University in Krakw. This is to be achieved by engaging with new issues related to two key ideas: the idea of the freedom of thought and the idea of the freedom of conscience. We intend to trace the origin of these ideas back to the Enlightenment philosophy, beginning from Spinoza, to Locke, the English levellers, the English and Dutch freethinkers, the French philosophes, and the representatives of the German Enlightenment, such as M. Mendelssohn and I. Kant. Furthermore, we intend to bring into focus the relations between the aforementioned Enlightenment ideas and the philosophical contextdominatedby Aristoteliantradition in which they emerged. We also attempt to assesstheir relevanceto theproblems of contemporary societysuch as: the role of religion in the public sphere, secularism, tolerance, and the question about the justifiability oflimiting the freedom to express ones views (ethical, political, religious, commercial) in a democratic society.

Principal Investigator: Dr Anna Tomaszewska

Co-investigators: Dr Hasse Hmlinen and Dr Damian Barnat

Duration of the project: 07.2015 01.2018

Funder of the project: National Science Centre in Poland

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Enlightenment, Secularism and the Freedom of Conscience

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March 15th, 2018 at 12:46 pm

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