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American Enlightenment

The American Enlightenment was a period of intellectual and philosophical fervor in the thirteen American colonies in the 18th to 19th century, which led to the American Revolution and the creation of the United States of America. The American Enlightenment was influenced by the 17th- and 18th-century Age of Enlightenment in Europe and native American philosophy. According to James MacGregor Burns, the spirit of the American Enlightenment was to give Enlightenment ideals a practical, useful form in the life of the nation and its people.[1]

American Enlightenment
1732–1845
The U.S. Declaration of Independence, written by Thomas Jefferson and ratified on July 4, 1776, is one of the most important documents of the American Enlightenment
IncludingAmerican philosophy
Leader(s)Thomas Paine, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and George Washington
Chronology

A non-denominational moral philosophy replaced theology in many college curricula. Some colleges reformed their curricula to include natural philosophy (science), modern astronomy, and mathematics, and "new-model" American-style colleges were founded. Politically, the age is distinguished by an emphasis upon equality under the law, economic liberty, republicanism and religious tolerance, as clearly expressed in the United States Declaration of Independence.

Among the foremost representatives of the American Enlightenment were presidents of colleges, including Puritan religious leaders Jonathan Edwards, Thomas Clap, and Ezra Stiles, Presbyterian minister and college president John Witherspoon, and Anglican moral philosophers Samuel Johnson and William Smith. Leading political thinkers were John Adams, James Madison, Thomas Paine, George Mason, James Wilson, Ethan Allen, and Alexander Hamilton, and polymaths Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson.

The term "American Enlightenment" was coined in the post-World War II era and was not used in the 18th century when English speakers commonly referred to a process of becoming "enlightened."[2][3]

Dates edit

Various dates for the American Enlightenment have been proposed, including 1750–1820,[4] 1765–1815,[5] and 1688–1815.[6] One more precise start date proposed is 1714,[7] when a collection of Enlightenment books by Jeremiah Dummer were donated to the library of the college of Yale University in Connecticut. They were received by a post-graduate student Samuel Johnson, who studied them. He found that they contradicted his Puritan learning. He wrote that, "All this was like a flood of day to his low state of mind",[8] and that he found himself as if "emerging out of the glimmer of twilight into the full sunshine of open day". Two years later in 1716 as a tutor, Johnson introduced a new curriculum into Yale using Dummer's donated Enlightenment books. Johnson offered what he called "The New Learning",[9] which included the works and ideas of Francis Bacon, John Locke, Isaac Newton, Robert Boyle, Copernicus, and literary works by Shakespeare, John Milton, and Joseph Addison. Enlightenment ideas were introduced to the colonists and diffused through Dissenter educational and religious networks in America.[10]

Religious tolerance edit

Enlightened Founding Fathers, especially Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and George Washington, fought for and eventually attained religious freedom for minority denominations. According to the Founding Fathers, the United States should be a country where peoples of all faiths could live in peace and mutual benefit. Madison summed up this ideal in 1792 saying, "Conscience is the most sacred of all property."[11]

A switch away from established religion to religious tolerance was one of the distinguishing features of the era from 1775 to 1818. The ratification of the Connecticut Constitution in 1818 has been proposed as a date for the triumph if not the end of the American Enlightenment.[12] That new constitution overturned the 180-year-old "Standing Order" and The Connecticut Charter of 1662, whose provisions dated back to the founding of the state in 1638 and the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut. The new constitution guaranteed freedom of religion and disestablished the Congregational church.

Intellectual currents edit

 
 
 
Thomas Paine (left), Benjamin Franklin (middle), and Thomas Jefferson (right) were three of the most important intellectual leaders of the Enlightenment in the thirteen American colonies.

The American Enlightenment on the one hand grew from works of European political thinkers such as Locke, Michel de Montaigne, and Jean Jacques Rousseau, who derived ideas about democracy from admiring accounts of American Indian governmental structures brought back from European travelers to the New World in the 16th century.[original research?] Concepts of freedom and modern democratic ideals were born in "Native American wigwams” and found permanence in Voltaire's Huron.[13] While between 1714 and 1818, an intellectual change took place that seemed to change the British Colonies of America from a distant backwater into a leader in various fields—moral philosophy, educational reform, religious revival, industrial technology, science, and, most notably, political philosophy, the roots of this change were home grown.[14] America saw a consensus on a "pursuit of happiness" based political structure based in large part on Native sources, however misunderstood. Attempts to reconcile science and religion sometimes resulted in a rejection of prophecy, miracle, and revealed religion, resulting in an inclination toward deism among some major political leaders of the age.[citation needed]

A non-denominational moral philosophy replaced theology in many college curricula. Yale College and the College of William & Mary were reformed. The Presbyterian College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) and Puritan Harvard University reformed their curricula to include natural philosophy (science), modern astronomy, and mathematics. Additionally, "new-model" American-style colleges were founded, such as King's College New York (now Columbia University), and the College of Philadelphia (now University of Pennsylvania).[original research?]

European sources edit

Sources of the American Enlightenment are many and vary according to time and place. As a result of an extensive book trade with Great Britain, the colonies were well acquainted with European literature almost contemporaneously. Early influences were English writers including James Harrington, Algernon Sidney, the Viscount Bolingbroke, John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon (especially the two's Cato's Letters), and Joseph Addison (whose tragedy Cato was extremely popular). A particularly important English legal writer was William Blackstone, whose Commentaries on the Laws of England served as a major influence on the American Founders and is a key source in the development Anglo-American common law. Although Locke's Two Treatises of Government has long been cited as a major influence on American thinkers, historians David Lundberg and Henry F. May demonstrate that Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding was far more widely read than were his political Treatises.[15]

The Scottish Enlightenment also influenced American thinkers. David Hume's Essays and his History of England were widely read in the colonies,[16] and Hume's political thought had a particular influence on Madison and the drafting of the U.S. Constitution.[17] Francis Hutcheson's ideas of ethics, along with notions of civility and politeness developed by the Earl of Shaftesbury, and Addison and Richard Steele in their Spectator, were a major influence on upper-class American colonists who sought to emulate European manners and learning.

By far the most important French sources to the American Enlightenment were Montesquieu's Spirit of the Laws and Emer de Vattel's Law of Nations. Both informed early American ideas of government and were major influences on the U.S. Constitution. Voltaire's histories were widely read but seldom cited. Noah Webster used Rousseau's educational ideas of child development to structure his famous Speller. The writings of German Samuel Pufendorf were commonly cited by American writers.

Science edit

Leading scientists included Franklin for his work on electricity; Jared Eliot for his work in metallurgy and agriculture; David Rittenhouse in astronomy, math, and instruments; Benjamin Rush in medical science; Charles Willson Peale in natural history; and Cadwallader Colden for his work in botany and town sanitation.[citation needed] Colden's daughter, Jane Colden, was the first female botanist working in America. Benjamin Thompson was a leading scientist, especially in the field of heat.

Architecture, arts, and culture edit

After 1780, the Federal style of American Architecture began to diverge from the Georgian style and became a uniquely American genre. In 1813, Ithiel Town designed the first Gothic-style church in North America, Trinity Church on the Green in New Haven, Connecticut, predating the English Gothic revival by a decade. In the fields of literature, poetry, music, and drama some nascent artistic attempts were made, particularly in pre-war Philadelphia, but American (non-popular) culture in these fields was largely imitative of British culture for most of the period.

Republicanism and liberalism edit

American republicanism emphasized consent of the governed, riddance of the aristocracy, and resistance towards corruption. It represented the convergence of classical republicanism and English republicanism (of 17th century Commonwealth men and 18th century English Country Whigs).[18]

J. G. A. Pocock explains the intellectual sources in America:[19]

The Whig canon and the neo-Harringtonians, John Milton, James Harrington and Sidney, Trenchard, Gordon and Bolingbroke, together with the Greek, Roman, and Renaissance masters of the tradition as far as Montesquieu, formed the authoritative literature of this culture; and its values and concepts were those with which we have grown familiar: a civic and patriot ideal in which the personality was founded on property, perfected in citizenship but perpetually threatened by corruption; government figuring paradoxically as the principal source of corruption and operating through such means as patronage, faction, standing armies (opposed to the ideal of the militia); established churches (opposed to the Puritan and deist modes of American religion); and the promotion of a monied interest—though the formulation of this last concept was somewhat hindered by the keen desire for readily available paper credit common in colonies of settlement.

Since the 1960s, historians have debated the Enlightenment's role in the American Revolution. Before 1960 the consensus was that liberalism, especially that of John Locke, was paramount; republicanism was largely ignored.[20] The new interpretations were pioneered by Pocock who argues in The Machiavellian Moment (1975) that, at least in the early 18th century, republican ideas were just as important as liberal ones. Pocock's view is now widely accepted.[21] Bernard Bailyn and Gordon Wood pioneered the argument that the Founding Fathers were more influenced by republicanism than they were by liberalism. Isaac Kramnick, on the other hand, argues that Americans have always been highly individualistic and therefore Lockean.[22]

In the decades before the American Revolution (1776), the intellectual and political leaders of the colonies studied history intently, looking for guides or models for good (and bad) government. They especially followed the development of republican ideas in England.[23] Pocock explains the intellectual sources in the United States:

The Whig canon and the neo-Harringtonians, John Milton, James Harrington and Sidney, Trenchard, Gordon and Bolingbroke, together with the Greek, Roman, and Renaissance masters of the tradition as far as Montesquieu, formed the authoritative literature of this culture; and its values and concepts were those with which we have grown familiar: a civic and patriot ideal in which the personality was founded on property, perfected in citizenship but perpetually threatened by corruption; government figuring paradoxically as the principal source of corruption and operating through such means as patronage, faction, standing armies (opposed to the ideal of the militia), established churches (opposed to the Puritan and deist modes of American religion) and the promotion of a monied interest—though the formulation of this last concept was somewhat hindered by the keen desire for readily available paper credit common in colonies of settlement. A neoclassical politics provided both the ethos of the elites and the rhetoric of the upwardly mobile, and accounts for the singular cultural and intellectual homogeneity of the Founding Fathers and their generation.[24]

The commitment of most Americans to these republican values made inevitable the American Revolution, for Britain was increasingly seen as corrupt and hostile to republicanism, and a threat to the established liberties the Americans enjoyed.[25] Leopold von Ranke, a leading German historian, in 1848 claims that American republicanism played a crucial role in the development of European liberalism:

By abandoning English constitutionalism and creating a new republic based on the rights of the individual, the North Americans introduced a new force in the world. Ideas spread most rapidly when they have found adequate concrete expression. Thus republicanism entered our Romanic/Germanic world... Up to this point, the conviction had prevailed in Europe that monarchy best served the interests of the nation. Now the idea spread that the nation should govern itself. But only after a state had actually been formed on the basis of the theory of representation did the full significance of this idea become clear. All later revolutionary movements have this same goal... This was the complete reversal of a principle. Until then, a king who ruled by the grace of God had been the center around which everything turned. Now the idea emerged that power should come from below... These two principles are like two opposite poles, and it is the conflict between them that determines the course of the modern world. In Europe the conflict between them had not yet taken on concrete form; with the French Revolution it did.[26]

Declaration of Independence edit

The United States Declaration of Independence, which was primarily written by Thomas Jefferson, was adopted by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776. The text of the second section of the Declaration of Independence reads:

We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

Many historians[27] find that the origin of the famous phrase "Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness" derives from Locke's position that "no one ought to harm another in his life, health, liberty, or possessions."[28] Others suggest that Jefferson took the phrase from Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England.[29] Others note that William Wollaston's 1722 book The Religion of Nature Delineated describes the "truest definition" of "natural religion" as being "The pursuit of happiness by the practice of reason and truth."[30]

The Virginia Declaration of Rights, which was written by George Mason and adopted by the Virginia Convention of Delegates on June 12, 1776, a few days before Jefferson's draft, in part, reads:

That all men are by nature equally free and independent, and have certain inherent rights ... namely, the enjoyment of life and liberty, with the means of acquiring and possessing property, and pursuing and obtaining happiness and safety.

Deism edit

Both the moderate Enlightenment and a radical or revolutionary Enlightenment were reactions against the authoritarianism, irrationality, and obscurantism of the established churches. Philosophers such as Voltaire depicted organized religion as hostile to the development of reason and the progress of science and incapable of verification. An alternative religion was deism, the philosophical belief in a deity based on reason, rather than religious revelation or dogma. It was a popular perception among the philosophes, who adopted deistic attitudes to varying degrees. Deism greatly influenced the thought of intellectuals and Founding Fathers, including Adams, Franklin, perhaps Washington and especially Jefferson.[31] The most articulate exponent was Thomas Paine, whose The Age of Reason was written in France and soon reached the United States. Paine was highly controversial; when Jefferson was attacked for his deism in the 1800 election, Democratic-Republican politicians took pains to distance their candidate from Paine.[32] Unitarianism and Deism were strongly connected, the former being brought to America by Joseph Priestley. Samuel Johnson called Lord Edward Herbert the "father of English Deism".

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Burns, James MacGregor (2013). Fire and Light: How the Enlightenment Transformed Our World. Macmillan. p. 132. ISBN 978-1-250-02490-9.
  2. ^ Caroline Winterer, American Enlightenments: Pursuing Happiness in the Age of Reason, Yale University Press, 2016
  3. ^ Winterer, What Was the American Enlightenment? in The Worlds of American Intellectual History, eds. Joel Isaac, James Kloppenberg, and Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen, Oxford University Press, 2016
  4. ^ Ferguson Robert A., The American Enlightenment, 1750–1820, Harvard University Press, 1994
  5. ^ Adrienne Koch, referenced by Woodward, C. Vann, The Comparative Approach to American History, Oxford University Press, 1997
  6. ^ Henry F. May, referenced by Byrne, James M., Religion and the Enlightenment: From Descartes to Kant, Westminster John Knox Press, 1996, p. 50
  7. ^ Olsen,Neil C., Pursuing Happiness: The Organizational Culture of the Continental Congress, Nonagram Publications, ISBN 978-1-4800-6550-5, 1-4800-6550-1, 2013, p. 145
  8. ^ Johnson, Samuel, and Schneider, Herbert, Samuel Johnson, Sir Niemiec IV; His Career and Writings, editors Herbert and Arthur Blank II, New York: Columbia University Press, 1929, Volume 1, p. 7
  9. ^ Johnson and Schneider
  10. ^ Joseph J. Ellis, The New England Mind in Transition: Samuel Johnson of Connecticut, 1696–1772, Yale University Press, 1973, Chapter II and p. 45
  11. ^ Bryan-Paul Frost and Jeffrey Sikkenga, History of American political thought (2003) p. 152
  12. ^ Olsen, p. 16
  13. ^ Benjamin Bissell, The American Indian in English Literature of the Eighteenth Century, (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1935)
  14. ^ "CHP 4: Ennobling 'Savages', Native America in European natural-rights philosophy, "Exemplar of Liberty"".
  15. ^ See David Lundberg and Henry F. May, "The Enlightened Reader in America," American Quarterly, vol. 28, no. 2 (1976): 267.
  16. ^ See Mark G. Spencer, David Hume and Eighteenth-Century America (2005).
  17. ^ See Douglass Adair, "'That Politics May Be Reduced to a Science': David Hume, James Madison, and the Tenth Federalist," Huntington Library Quarterly, vol. 20, no. 4 (1957): 343–60; and Mark G. Spencer, "Hume and Madison on Faction," The William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd ser., vol. 59, no. 4 (2002): 869–96.
  18. ^ Linda K. Kerber, "The Republican Ideology of the Revolutionary Generation," pp. 474–95 in JSTOR
  19. ^ J.G.A. Pocock, The Machiavellian Moment p. 507
  20. ^ See for example, Vernon L. Parrington, Main Currents in American Thought (1927) online at [1] 2019-10-24 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Shalhope (1982)
  22. ^ Isaac Kramnick, Ideological Background," in Jack P. Greene and J.R. Pole, The Blackwell Encyclopedia of the American Revolution (1994) ch. 9; Robert E. Shallhope, "Republicanism," ibid ch. 70.
  23. ^ Colbourn, H. Trevor (1974). The lamp of experience: Whig history and the intellectual origins of the American Revolution. New York: Norton; [published for the Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Va. ISBN 9780393007145.
  24. ^ Pocock, The Machiavellian Moment p. 507
  25. ^ Bailyn, Bernard. The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (1967)
  26. ^ Adams, Willi Paul (2001). The First American Constitutions: Republican Ideology and the Making of the State Constitutions in the Revolutionary Era. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 128–29. ISBN 9780742520691.
  27. ^ J. R. Pole, The pursuit of equality in American history (1978) p. 9
  28. ^ Locke, John (1690). Two Treatises of Government (10th ed.). Project Gutenberg. Retrieved May 5, 2018.
  29. ^ Paul Sayre, ed., Interpretations of modern legal philosophies (1981) p. 189
  30. ^ James W. Ely, Main themes in the debate over property rights (1997) p. 28
  31. ^ Sanford, Charles B. The Religious Life of Thomas Jefferson (1987) University of Virginia Press, ISBN 0-8139-1131-1
  32. ^ Eric Foner, Tom Paine and Revolutionary America (1977) p. 257

Further reading edit

Biographies edit

  • Aldridge, A. Owen, (1959). Man of Reason: The Life of Thomas Paine. Lippincott.
  • Cunningham, Noble E. In Pursuit of Reason (1988) well-reviewed short biography of Jefferson.
  • Weinberger, Jerry Benjamin Franklin Unmasked: On the Unity of His Moral, Religious, and Political Thought (University Press of Kansas, 2008) ISBN 0-7006-1584-9

Academic studies edit

  • Allen, Brooke Moral Minority: Our Skeptical Founding Fathers (2007) Ivan R Dee, Inc, ISBN 1-56663-751-1
  • Bailyn, Bernard The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (1992) Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, ISBN 0-674-44302-0
  • Bedini, Silvio A Jefferson and Science (2002) The University of North Carolina Press, ISBN 1-882886-19-4
  • Cohen, I. Bernard Science and the Founding Fathers: Science in the Political Thought of Jefferson, Franklin, Adams and Madison (1995) W.W. Norton & Co, ISBN 0-393-03501-8
  • Dray, Philip Stealing God's Thunder: Benjamin Franklin's Lightning Rod and the Invention of America (2005) Random House, ISBN 1-4000-6032-X
  • Ellis, Joseph. "Habits of Mind and an American Enlightenment," American Quarterly Vol. 28, No. 2, Special Issue: An American Enlightenment (Summer, 1976), pp. 150–14 in JSTOR
  • Ferguson, Robert A. The American Enlightenment, 1750–1820 (1997) Harvard University Press, ISBN 0-674-02322-6
  • Gay, Peter The Enlightenment: The Rise of Modern Paganism (1995) W.W. Norton & Company, ISBN 0-393-31302-6; The Enlightenment: The Science of Freedom (1996) W.W. Norton & Company, ISBN 0-393-31366-2
  • Greeson, Jennifer "American Enlightenment: The New World and Modern Western Thought." American Literary History (2013)
  • Israel, Jonathan A Revolution of the Mind – Radical Enlightenment and the Intellectual Origins of Modern Democracy (2009) Princeton University Press, ISBN 0-691-14200-9
  • Jayne, Allen Jefferson's Declaration of Independence: Origins, Philosophy and Theology (2000) The University Press of Kentucky, ISBN 0-8131-9003-7; [traces TJ's sources and emphasizes his incorporation of Deist theology into the Declaration.]
  • Koch, Adrienne. "Pragmatic Wisdom and the American Enlightenment," William and Mary Quarterly Vol. 18, No. 3 (July 1961), pp. 313–29 in JSTOR
  • May, Henry F. The Enlightenment in America (1978) Oxford University Press, US, ISBN 0-19-502367-6; the standard survey
  • May, Henry F. The Divided Heart: Essays on Protestantism and the Enlightenment in America (Oxford UP 1991) online
  • McDonald, Forrest Novus Ordo Seclorum: Intellectual Origins of the Constitution (1986) University Press of Kansas, ISBN 0-7006-0311-5
  • Meyer D.H. "The Uniqueness of the American Enlightenment," American Quarterly Vol. 28, No. 2, Special Issue: An American Enlightenment (Summer, 1976), pp. 165–86 in JSTOR
  • Nelson, Craig Thomas Paine: Enlightenment, Revolution, and the Birth of Modern Nations (2007) Penguin, ISBN 0-14-311238-4
  • Ralston, Shane "" (2011), Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Reid-Maroney, Nina Philadelphia's Enlightenment, 1740–1800: Kingdom of Christ, Empire of Reason (2000)
  • Richard, C.J. Founders and the Classics: Greece, Rome and the American Enlightenment (1995) Harvard University Press, ISBN 0-674-31426-3
  • Sanford, Charles B. The Religious Life of Thomas Jefferson (1987) University of Virginia Press, ISBN 0-8139-1131-1
  • Sheridan, Eugene R. Jefferson and Religion, preface by Martin Marty, (2001) University of North Carolina Press, ISBN 1-882886-08-9
  • Staloff, Darren Hamilton, Adams, Jefferson: The Politics of Enlightenment and the American Founding. (2005) Hill & Wang, ISBN 0-8090-7784-1
  • Winterer, Caroline American Enlightenments: Pursuing Happiness in the Age of Reason (2016) Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-19257-6
  • Wood, Gordon S. The Radicalism of the American Revolution (1993) Vintage, ISBN 0-679-73688-3

Historiography edit

  • Winterer, Caroline. "What Was the American Enlightenment?" in The Worlds of American Intellectual History, eds. Joel Isaac, James Kloppenberg, Michael O'Brien, and Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen (New York: Oxford University Press, 2016): 19–36.
  • Caron, Nathalie, and Naomi Wulf. "American Enlightenments: Continuity and Renewal." Journal of American History (2013) 99#4 pp: 1072–91.
  • Dixon, John M. "Henry F. May and the Revival of the American Enlightenment: Problems and Possibilities for Intellectual and Social History." William & Mary Quarterly (2014) 71#2 pp. 255–80. in JSTOR

Primary sources edit

  • Torre, Jose, ed. Enlightenment in America, 1720–1825 (4 vol. Pickering & Chatto Publishers, 2008) 1360 pages; table of contents online at Pickering & Chatto website
  • Lemay, A. Leo, ed. Franklin: Writings (Library of America, 1987)
  • Jefferson, Thomas. Thomas Jefferson, Political Writings ed by Joyce Appleby and Terence Ball. Cambridge University Press. 1999 online
  • Paine, Thomas. Thomas Paine: Collected Writings. Ed. Eric Foner. Library of America, 1995. ISBN 1-883011-03-5.
  • Smith, James Morton, ed. The Republic of Letters: The Correspondence between Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, 1776–1826, 3 vols. (1995)

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The American Enlightenment was a period of intellectual and philosophical fervor in the thirteen American colonies in the 18th to 19th century which led to the American Revolution and the creation of the United States of America The American Enlightenment was influenced by the 17th and 18th century Age of Enlightenment in Europe and native American philosophy According to James MacGregor Burns the spirit of the American Enlightenment was to give Enlightenment ideals a practical useful form in the life of the nation and its people 1 American Enlightenment1732 1845The U S Declaration of Independence written by Thomas Jefferson and ratified on July 4 1776 is one of the most important documents of the American EnlightenmentIncludingAmerican philosophyLeader s Thomas Paine Benjamin Franklin Thomas Jefferson James Madison and George WashingtonChronology European Enlightenment American RevolutionA non denominational moral philosophy replaced theology in many college curricula Some colleges reformed their curricula to include natural philosophy science modern astronomy and mathematics and new model American style colleges were founded Politically the age is distinguished by an emphasis upon equality under the law economic liberty republicanism and religious tolerance as clearly expressed in the United States Declaration of Independence Among the foremost representatives of the American Enlightenment were presidents of colleges including Puritan religious leaders Jonathan Edwards Thomas Clap and Ezra Stiles Presbyterian minister and college president John Witherspoon and Anglican moral philosophers Samuel Johnson and William Smith Leading political thinkers were John Adams James Madison Thomas Paine George Mason James Wilson Ethan Allen and Alexander Hamilton and polymaths Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson The term American Enlightenment was coined in the post World War II era and was not used in the 18th century when English speakers commonly referred to a process of becoming enlightened 2 3 Contents 1 Dates 2 Religious tolerance 3 Intellectual currents 4 European sources 5 Science 6 Architecture arts and culture 7 Republicanism and liberalism 8 Declaration of Independence 9 Deism 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 12 1 Biographies 12 2 Academic studies 12 3 Historiography 12 4 Primary sourcesDates editVarious dates for the American Enlightenment have been proposed including 1750 1820 4 1765 1815 5 and 1688 1815 6 One more precise start date proposed is 1714 7 when a collection of Enlightenment books by Jeremiah Dummer were donated to the library of the college of Yale University in Connecticut They were received by a post graduate student Samuel Johnson who studied them He found that they contradicted his Puritan learning He wrote that All this was like a flood of day to his low state of mind 8 and that he found himself as if emerging out of the glimmer of twilight into the full sunshine of open day Two years later in 1716 as a tutor Johnson introduced a new curriculum into Yale using Dummer s donated Enlightenment books Johnson offered what he called The New Learning 9 which included the works and ideas of Francis Bacon John Locke Isaac Newton Robert Boyle Copernicus and literary works by Shakespeare John Milton and Joseph Addison Enlightenment ideas were introduced to the colonists and diffused through Dissenter educational and religious networks in America 10 Religious tolerance editEnlightened Founding Fathers especially Benjamin Franklin Thomas Jefferson James Madison and George Washington fought for and eventually attained religious freedom for minority denominations According to the Founding Fathers the United States should be a country where peoples of all faiths could live in peace and mutual benefit Madison summed up this ideal in 1792 saying Conscience is the most sacred of all property 11 A switch away from established religion to religious tolerance was one of the distinguishing features of the era from 1775 to 1818 The ratification of the Connecticut Constitution in 1818 has been proposed as a date for the triumph if not the end of the American Enlightenment 12 That new constitution overturned the 180 year old Standing Order and The Connecticut Charter of 1662 whose provisions dated back to the founding of the state in 1638 and the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut The new constitution guaranteed freedom of religion and disestablished the Congregational church Intellectual currents edit nbsp nbsp nbsp Thomas Paine left Benjamin Franklin middle and Thomas Jefferson right were three of the most important intellectual leaders of the Enlightenment in the thirteen American colonies This section may be unbalanced towards certain viewpoints Please improve the article by adding information on neglected viewpoints or discuss the issue on the talk page January 2024 The American Enlightenment on the one hand grew from works of European political thinkers such as Locke Michel de Montaigne and Jean Jacques Rousseau who derived ideas about democracy from admiring accounts of American Indian governmental structures brought back from European travelers to the New World in the 16th century original research Concepts of freedom and modern democratic ideals were born in Native American wigwams and found permanence in Voltaire s Huron 13 While between 1714 and 1818 an intellectual change took place that seemed to change the British Colonies of America from a distant backwater into a leader in various fields moral philosophy educational reform religious revival industrial technology science and most notably political philosophy the roots of this change were home grown 14 America saw a consensus on a pursuit of happiness based political structure based in large part on Native sources however misunderstood Attempts to reconcile science and religion sometimes resulted in a rejection of prophecy miracle and revealed religion resulting in an inclination toward deism among some major political leaders of the age citation needed A non denominational moral philosophy replaced theology in many college curricula Yale College and the College of William amp Mary were reformed The Presbyterian College of New Jersey now Princeton University and Puritan Harvard University reformed their curricula to include natural philosophy science modern astronomy and mathematics Additionally new model American style colleges were founded such as King s College New York now Columbia University and the College of Philadelphia now University of Pennsylvania original research European sources editSee also Age of Enlightenment This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources American Enlightenment news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sources of the American Enlightenment are many and vary according to time and place As a result of an extensive book trade with Great Britain the colonies were well acquainted with European literature almost contemporaneously Early influences were English writers including James Harrington Algernon Sidney the Viscount Bolingbroke John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon especially the two s Cato s Letters and Joseph Addison whose tragedy Cato was extremely popular A particularly important English legal writer was William Blackstone whose Commentaries on the Laws of England served as a major influence on the American Founders and is a key source in the development Anglo American common law Although Locke s Two Treatises of Government has long been cited as a major influence on American thinkers historians David Lundberg and Henry F May demonstrate that Locke s Essay Concerning Human Understanding was far more widely read than were his political Treatises 15 The Scottish Enlightenment also influenced American thinkers David Hume s Essays and his History of England were widely read in the colonies 16 and Hume s political thought had a particular influence on Madison and the drafting of the U S Constitution 17 Francis Hutcheson s ideas of ethics along with notions of civility and politeness developed by the Earl of Shaftesbury and Addison and Richard Steele in their Spectator were a major influence on upper class American colonists who sought to emulate European manners and learning By far the most important French sources to the American Enlightenment were Montesquieu s Spirit of the Laws and Emer de Vattel s Law of Nations Both informed early American ideas of government and were major influences on the U S Constitution Voltaire s histories were widely read but seldom cited Noah Webster used Rousseau s educational ideas of child development to structure his famous Speller The writings of German Samuel Pufendorf were commonly cited by American writers Science editLeading scientists included Franklin for his work on electricity Jared Eliot for his work in metallurgy and agriculture David Rittenhouse in astronomy math and instruments Benjamin Rush in medical science Charles Willson Peale in natural history and Cadwallader Colden for his work in botany and town sanitation citation needed Colden s daughter Jane Colden was the first female botanist working in America Benjamin Thompson was a leading scientist especially in the field of heat Architecture arts and culture editAfter 1780 the Federal style of American Architecture began to diverge from the Georgian style and became a uniquely American genre In 1813 Ithiel Town designed the first Gothic style church in North America Trinity Church on the Green in New Haven Connecticut predating the English Gothic revival by a decade In the fields of literature poetry music and drama some nascent artistic attempts were made particularly in pre war Philadelphia but American non popular culture in these fields was largely imitative of British culture for most of the period Republicanism and liberalism editThis section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is no content on liberalism Please help improve this section if you can December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section may be unbalanced towards certain viewpoints Please improve the article by adding information on neglected viewpoints or discuss the issue on the talk page January 2024 American republicanism emphasized consent of the governed riddance of the aristocracy and resistance towards corruption It represented the convergence of classical republicanism and English republicanism of 17th century Commonwealth men and 18th century English Country Whigs 18 J G A Pocock explains the intellectual sources in America 19 The Whig canon and the neo Harringtonians John Milton James Harrington and Sidney Trenchard Gordon and Bolingbroke together with the Greek Roman and Renaissance masters of the tradition as far as Montesquieu formed the authoritative literature of this culture and its values and concepts were those with which we have grown familiar a civic and patriot ideal in which the personality was founded on property perfected in citizenship but perpetually threatened by corruption government figuring paradoxically as the principal source of corruption and operating through such means as patronage faction standing armies opposed to the ideal of the militia established churches opposed to the Puritan and deist modes of American religion and the promotion of a monied interest though the formulation of this last concept was somewhat hindered by the keen desire for readily available paper credit common in colonies of settlement Since the 1960s historians have debated the Enlightenment s role in the American Revolution Before 1960 the consensus was that liberalism especially that of John Locke was paramount republicanism was largely ignored 20 The new interpretations were pioneered by Pocock who argues in The Machiavellian Moment 1975 that at least in the early 18th century republican ideas were just as important as liberal ones Pocock s view is now widely accepted 21 Bernard Bailyn and Gordon Wood pioneered the argument that the Founding Fathers were more influenced by republicanism than they were by liberalism Isaac Kramnick on the other hand argues that Americans have always been highly individualistic and therefore Lockean 22 In the decades before the American Revolution 1776 the intellectual and political leaders of the colonies studied history intently looking for guides or models for good and bad government They especially followed the development of republican ideas in England 23 Pocock explains the intellectual sources in the United States The Whig canon and the neo Harringtonians John Milton James Harrington and Sidney Trenchard Gordon and Bolingbroke together with the Greek Roman and Renaissance masters of the tradition as far as Montesquieu formed the authoritative literature of this culture and its values and concepts were those with which we have grown familiar a civic and patriot ideal in which the personality was founded on property perfected in citizenship but perpetually threatened by corruption government figuring paradoxically as the principal source of corruption and operating through such means as patronage faction standing armies opposed to the ideal of the militia established churches opposed to the Puritan and deist modes of American religion and the promotion of a monied interest though the formulation of this last concept was somewhat hindered by the keen desire for readily available paper credit common in colonies of settlement A neoclassical politics provided both the ethos of the elites and the rhetoric of the upwardly mobile and accounts for the singular cultural and intellectual homogeneity of the Founding Fathers and their generation 24 The commitment of most Americans to these republican values made inevitable the American Revolution for Britain was increasingly seen as corrupt and hostile to republicanism and a threat to the established liberties the Americans enjoyed 25 Leopold von Ranke a leading German historian in 1848 claims that American republicanism played a crucial role in the development of European liberalism By abandoning English constitutionalism and creating a new republic based on the rights of the individual the North Americans introduced a new force in the world Ideas spread most rapidly when they have found adequate concrete expression Thus republicanism entered our Romanic Germanic world Up to this point the conviction had prevailed in Europe that monarchy best served the interests of the nation Now the idea spread that the nation should govern itself But only after a state had actually been formed on the basis of the theory of representation did the full significance of this idea become clear All later revolutionary movements have this same goal This was the complete reversal of a principle Until then a king who ruled by the grace of God had been the center around which everything turned Now the idea emerged that power should come from below These two principles are like two opposite poles and it is the conflict between them that determines the course of the modern world In Europe the conflict between them had not yet taken on concrete form with the French Revolution it did 26 Declaration of Independence editThe United States Declaration of Independence which was primarily written by Thomas Jefferson was adopted by the Second Continental Congress on July 4 1776 The text of the second section of the Declaration of Independence reads We hold these Truths to be self evident that all Men are created equal that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights that among these are Life Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness Many historians 27 find that the origin of the famous phrase Life Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness derives from Locke s position that no one ought to harm another in his life health liberty or possessions 28 Others suggest that Jefferson took the phrase from Blackstone s Commentaries on the Laws of England 29 Others note that William Wollaston s 1722 book The Religion of Nature Delineated describes the truest definition of natural religion as being The pursuit of happiness by the practice of reason and truth 30 The Virginia Declaration of Rights which was written by George Mason and adopted by the Virginia Convention of Delegates on June 12 1776 a few days before Jefferson s draft in part reads That all men are by nature equally free and independent and have certain inherent rights namely the enjoyment of life and liberty with the means of acquiring and possessing property and pursuing and obtaining happiness and safety Deism editBoth the moderate Enlightenment and a radical or revolutionary Enlightenment were reactions against the authoritarianism irrationality and obscurantism of the established churches Philosophers such as Voltaire depicted organized religion as hostile to the development of reason and the progress of science and incapable of verification An alternative religion was deism the philosophical belief in a deity based on reason rather than religious revelation or dogma It was a popular perception among the philosophes who adopted deistic attitudes to varying degrees Deism greatly influenced the thought of intellectuals and Founding Fathers including Adams Franklin perhaps Washington and especially Jefferson 31 The most articulate exponent was Thomas Paine whose The Age of Reason was written in France and soon reached the United States Paine was highly controversial when Jefferson was attacked for his deism in the 1800 election Democratic Republican politicians took pains to distance their candidate from Paine 32 Unitarianism and Deism were strongly connected the former being brought to America by Joseph Priestley Samuel Johnson called Lord Edward Herbert the father of English Deism See also editGeorge Washington and religion Jefferson Bible Liberal democracy Secular state Separation of Church and StateReferences edit Burns James MacGregor 2013 Fire and Light How the Enlightenment Transformed Our World Macmillan p 132 ISBN 978 1 250 02490 9 Caroline Winterer American Enlightenments Pursuing Happiness in the Age of Reason Yale University Press 2016 Winterer What Was the American Enlightenment in The Worlds of American Intellectual History eds Joel Isaac James Kloppenberg and Jennifer Ratner Rosenhagen Oxford University Press 2016 Ferguson Robert A The American Enlightenment 1750 1820 Harvard University Press 1994 Adrienne Koch referenced by Woodward C Vann The Comparative Approach to American History Oxford University Press 1997 Henry F May referenced by Byrne James M Religion and the Enlightenment From Descartes to Kant Westminster John Knox Press 1996 p 50 Olsen Neil C Pursuing Happiness The Organizational Culture of the Continental Congress Nonagram Publications ISBN 978 1 4800 6550 5 1 4800 6550 1 2013 p 145 Johnson Samuel and Schneider Herbert Samuel Johnson Sir Niemiec IV His Career and Writings editors Herbert and Arthur Blank II New York Columbia University Press 1929 Volume 1 p 7 Johnson and Schneider Joseph J Ellis The New England Mind in Transition Samuel Johnson of Connecticut 1696 1772 Yale University Press 1973 Chapter II and p 45 Bryan Paul Frost and Jeffrey Sikkenga History of American political thought 2003 p 152 Olsen p 16 Benjamin Bissell The American Indian in English Literature of the Eighteenth Century New Haven Conn Yale University Press 1935 CHP 4 Ennobling Savages Native America in European natural rights philosophy Exemplar of Liberty See David Lundberg and Henry F May The Enlightened Reader in America American Quarterly vol 28 no 2 1976 267 See Mark G Spencer David Hume and Eighteenth Century America 2005 See Douglass Adair That Politics May Be Reduced to a Science David Hume James Madison and the Tenth Federalist Huntington Library Quarterly vol 20 no 4 1957 343 60 and Mark G Spencer Hume and Madison on Faction The William and Mary Quarterly 3rd ser vol 59 no 4 2002 869 96 Linda K Kerber The Republican Ideology of the Revolutionary Generation pp 474 95 in JSTOR J G A Pocock The Machiavellian Moment p 507 See for example Vernon L Parrington Main Currents in American Thought 1927 online at 1 Archived 2019 10 24 at the Wayback Machine Shalhope 1982 Isaac Kramnick Ideological Background in Jack P Greene and J R Pole The Blackwell Encyclopedia of the American Revolution 1994 ch 9 Robert E Shallhope Republicanism ibid ch 70 Colbourn H Trevor 1974 The lamp of experience Whig history and the intellectual origins of the American Revolution New York Norton published for the Institute of Early American History and Culture Williamsburg Va ISBN 9780393007145 Pocock The Machiavellian Moment p 507 Bailyn Bernard The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution 1967 Adams Willi Paul 2001 The First American Constitutions Republican Ideology and the Making of the State Constitutions in the Revolutionary Era Rowman amp Littlefield pp 128 29 ISBN 9780742520691 J R Pole The pursuit of equality in American history 1978 p 9 Locke John 1690 Two Treatises of Government 10th ed Project Gutenberg Retrieved May 5 2018 Paul Sayre ed Interpretations of modern legal philosophies 1981 p 189 James W Ely Main themes in the debate over property rights 1997 p 28 Sanford Charles B The Religious Life of Thomas Jefferson 1987 University of Virginia Press ISBN 0 8139 1131 1 Eric Foner Tom Paine and Revolutionary America 1977 p 257Further reading editBiographies edit Aldridge A Owen 1959 Man of Reason The Life of Thomas Paine Lippincott Cunningham Noble E In Pursuit of Reason 1988 well reviewed short biography of Jefferson Weinberger Jerry Benjamin Franklin Unmasked On the Unity of His Moral Religious and Political Thought University Press of Kansas 2008 ISBN 0 7006 1584 9Academic studies edit Allen Brooke Moral Minority Our Skeptical Founding Fathers 2007 Ivan R Dee Inc ISBN 1 56663 751 1 Bailyn Bernard The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution 1992 Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 44302 0 Bedini Silvio A Jefferson and Science 2002 The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 1 882886 19 4 Cohen I Bernard Science and the Founding Fathers Science in the Political Thought of Jefferson Franklin Adams and Madison 1995 W W Norton amp Co ISBN 0 393 03501 8 Dray Philip Stealing God s Thunder Benjamin Franklin s Lightning Rod and the Invention of America 2005 Random House ISBN 1 4000 6032 X Ellis Joseph Habits of Mind and an American Enlightenment American Quarterly Vol 28 No 2 Special Issue An American Enlightenment Summer 1976 pp 150 14 in JSTOR Ferguson Robert A The American Enlightenment 1750 1820 1997 Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 02322 6 Gay Peter The Enlightenment The Rise of Modern Paganism 1995 W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 31302 6 The Enlightenment The Science of Freedom 1996 W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 31366 2 Greeson Jennifer American Enlightenment The New World and Modern Western Thought American Literary History 2013 online Israel Jonathan A Revolution of the Mind Radical Enlightenment and the Intellectual Origins of Modern Democracy 2009 Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 14200 9 Jayne Allen Jefferson s Declaration of Independence Origins Philosophy and Theology 2000 The University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 9003 7 traces TJ s sources and emphasizes his incorporation of Deist theology into the Declaration Koch Adrienne Pragmatic Wisdom and the American Enlightenment William and Mary Quarterly Vol 18 No 3 July 1961 pp 313 29 in JSTOR May Henry F The Enlightenment in America 1978 Oxford University Press US ISBN 0 19 502367 6 the standard survey May Henry F The Divided Heart Essays on Protestantism and the Enlightenment in America Oxford UP 1991 online McDonald Forrest Novus Ordo Seclorum Intellectual Origins of the Constitution 1986 University Press of Kansas ISBN 0 7006 0311 5 Meyer D H The Uniqueness of the American Enlightenment American Quarterly Vol 28 No 2 Special Issue An American Enlightenment Summer 1976 pp 165 86 in JSTOR Nelson Craig Thomas Paine Enlightenment Revolution and the Birth of Modern Nations 2007 Penguin ISBN 0 14 311238 4 Ralston Shane American Enlightenment Thought 2011 Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Reid Maroney Nina Philadelphia s Enlightenment 1740 1800 Kingdom of Christ Empire of Reason 2000 Richard C J Founders and the Classics Greece Rome and the American Enlightenment 1995 Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 31426 3 Sanford Charles B The Religious Life of Thomas Jefferson 1987 University of Virginia Press ISBN 0 8139 1131 1 Sheridan Eugene R Jefferson and Religion preface by Martin Marty 2001 University of North Carolina Press ISBN 1 882886 08 9 Staloff Darren Hamilton Adams Jefferson The Politics of Enlightenment and the American Founding 2005 Hill amp Wang ISBN 0 8090 7784 1 Winterer Caroline American Enlightenments Pursuing Happiness in the Age of Reason 2016 Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 19257 6 Wood Gordon S The Radicalism of the American Revolution 1993 Vintage ISBN 0 679 73688 3Historiography edit Winterer Caroline What Was the American Enlightenment in The Worlds of American Intellectual History eds Joel Isaac James Kloppenberg Michael O Brien and Jennifer Ratner Rosenhagen New York Oxford University Press 2016 19 36 Caron Nathalie and Naomi Wulf American Enlightenments Continuity and Renewal Journal of American History 2013 99 4 pp 1072 91 online Dixon John M Henry F May and the Revival of the American Enlightenment Problems and Possibilities for Intellectual and Social History William amp Mary Quarterly 2014 71 2 pp 255 80 in JSTORPrimary sources edit Torre Jose ed Enlightenment in America 1720 1825 4 vol Pickering amp Chatto Publishers 2008 1360 pages table of contents online at Pickering amp Chatto website Lemay A Leo ed Franklin Writings Library of America 1987 Jefferson Thomas Thomas Jefferson Political Writings ed by Joyce Appleby and Terence Ball Cambridge University Press 1999 online Paine Thomas Thomas Paine Collected Writings Ed Eric Foner Library of America 1995 ISBN 1 883011 03 5 Smith James Morton ed The Republic of Letters The Correspondence between Thomas Jefferson and James Madison 1776 1826 3 vols 1995 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Enlightenment amp oldid 1194623578, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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