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Melancholy Duty

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Melancholy Duty Synopsis

This book studies the complementary features of the thought of David Hume and Edward Gibbon in the complete range of its confrontation with eighteenth-century Christianity. The ten chapters explore the iconoclasm of these two philosophical historians - Hume as the premier philosopher, Gibbon as the consummate historian - as they labored to `naturalize' the study of Christianity, particularly with attention to its social and political dimensions. No other work deals as comprehensively or thoroughly with the attempt of philosophical history's challenge to Christianity. Belief in miracles and the afterlife, the dimensions of fanaticism and superstition, and the nature of religious persecution were the themes that occupied Hume and Gibbon in the making of their critique of Christianity. This book makes a valuable contribution to scholarship in a number of fields including the history of ideas, religious studies, and philosophy. It will be of interest to philosophers of religion, historians of ideas, eighteenth-century intellectual historians, scholars of the Scottish Enlightenment, and Hume and Gibbon scholars.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9789048149339
Publication date: 7th December 2010
Author: Stephen Paul Foster
Publisher: Springer an imprint of Springer Netherlands
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 372 pages
Series: International Archives of the History of Ideas
Genres: Philosophical traditions and schools of thought
Social and political philosophy
Philosophy of religion
Historiography
History