04613nam 22006973a 450 991058555780332120241206215254.01-4875-3054-41-4875-3156-7(CKB)4100000010163741(OAPEN)1007705(ScCtBLL)e3dbe2e2-c464-42c4-b679-9390c7d91d46(DE-B1597)645232(DE-B1597)9781487531560(OCoLC)1409079588(Perlego)2329339(EXLCZ)99410000001016374120211214i20192020 uu enguuuuu---auuuutxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierClandestine Philosophy New Studies on Subversive Manuscripts in Early Modern Europe /Margaret C. Jacob, John Christian Laursen, Gianni PaganiniToronto :University of Toronto Press,2019.1 online resourceUCLA Clark Memorial Library Series.1-4875-0461-6 Frontmatter --Contents --Preface --Acknowledgments --Introduction: What Is a Clandestine Philosophical Manuscript? --Part One: Clandestinity, the Renaissance, and Early Modern Philosophy --1 Why, and to What End, Should Historians of Philosophy Study Early Modern Clandestine Texts? --2 The First Philosophical Atheistic Treatise: Theophrastus redivivus (1659) --Part Two: Politics, Religion, and Clandestinity in Northern Europe --3 Danish Clandestina from the Early Seventeenth Century? Two Secret Manuscripts and the Destiny of the Mathematician Christoffer Dybvad --4 "Qui toujours servent d'instruction": Socinian Manuscripts in the Dutch Republic --5 "The political theory of the libertines": Manuscripts and Heterodox Movements in the Early-Eighteenth-Century Dutch Republic --Part Three: Gender, Sexuality, and New Morals --6 The Science of Sex: Passions and Desires in Dutch Clandestine Circles, 1670-1720 --7 Expert of the Obscene: The Sexual Manuscripts of Dutch Scholar Hadriaan Beverland (1650-1716) --Part Four: Clandestinity and the Enlightenment --8 The Style and Form of Heterodoxy: John Toland's Nazarenus and Pantheisticon --9 Philosophical Clandestine Literature and Academic Circles in France --10 Joseph as the Natural Father of Christ: An Unknown, Clandestine Manuscript of the Early Eighteenth Century --11 Clandestine Philosophical Manuscripts in the Catalogue of Marc-Michel Rey --PART FIVE TOLERATION, CRITICISM, AND INNOVATION IN RELIGION --12 The Treatise of the Three Impostors, Islam, the Enlightenment, and Toleration --13 The Polyvalence of Heterodox Sources and Eighteenth-Century Religious Change --Part Six: Spanish Developments --14 The Spanish Revolution of 1820-1823 and the Clandestine Philosophical Literature --15 A Clandestine Manuscript in the Vernacular: An 1822 Spanish Translation of the Examen critique of 1733 --Afterword --Contributors --Index --THE UCLA CLARK MEMORIAL LIBRARY SERIESClandestine Philosophy examines the circulation and consequences of 'clandestine philosophical manuscripts', a genre that flourished in the eighteenth century and included forbidden works such as erotic texts, political pamphlets, satires of court life and of the nobility, forbidden religious texts, and books about alchemy and the occult. The editors have brought together leading experts on the history of European philosophy to explore the circulation of radical ideas during the eighteenth century and the social, political, and cultural impact they had on eighteenth-century society.UCLA Clark Memorial Library SeriesHistory of Western philosophybicsscRenaissance.clandestine.court life.early modern philosophy.erotic.forbidden religious texts.history of philosophy.literature.manuscript studies.manuscripts.occult.pamphlets.philosophy.politica.religion.satires.subversive.texts.History of Western philosophyPaganini Gianni286316Jacob Margaret CLaursen John ChristianPaganini Gianni1950-ScCtBLLScCtBLLBOOK9910585557803321Clandestine Philosophy4296557UNINA