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The Kingdom of Man - Genesis and Failure of the Modern Project (Hardcover)
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The Kingdom of Man - Genesis and Failure of the Modern Project (Hardcover)
Series: Catholic Ideas for a Secular World
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Was humanity created, or do humans create themselves? In this
eagerly awaited English translation of Le Règne de l’homme, the
last volume of Rémi Brague's trilogy on the philosophical
development of anthropology in the West, Brague argues that, with
the dawn of the Enlightenment, Western societies rejected the
transcendence of the past and looked instead to the progress
fostered by the early modern present and the future. As scientific
advances drained the cosmos of literal mystery, humanity
increasingly devalued the theophilosophical mystery of being in
favor of omniscience over one’s own existence. Brague narrates
the intellectual disappearance of the natural order, replaced by a
universal chaos upon which only humanity can impose order; he cites
the vivid histories of the nation-state, economic evolution into
capitalism, and technology as the tools of this new dominion, taken
up voluntarily by humans for their own ends rather than accepted
from the deity for a divine purpose. Brague’s tour de force
begins with the ancient and medieval confidence in humanity as the
superior creation of Nature or of God, epitomized in the biblical
wish of the Creator for humans to exert stewardship over the earth.
He sees the Enlightenment as a transition period, taking as a given
that humankind should be masters of the world but rejecting the
imposition of that duty by a deity. Before the Enlightenment, who
the creator was and whom the creator dominated were clear. With the
advance of modernity and banishment of the Creator, who was to be
dominated? Today, Brague argues, “our humanism . . . is an
anti-antihumanism, rather than a direct affirmation of the goodness
of the human.” He ends with a sobering question: does humankind
still have the will to survive in an era of intellectual
self-destruction? The Kingdom of Man will appeal to all readers
interested in the history of ideas, but will be especially
important to political philosophers, historical anthropologists,
and theologians.
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