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z2004-01-27- Searls Brians Enlightenment
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Bill Seitz is a Product Manager/CTO with a track-record of bringing a business perspective to building agile product-development teams for start-ups, and is seeking a senior role in an entrepreneurial organization building disruptive Internet-driven products.
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last edited
by BillSeitz
on
Nov 20, 2008 4:08 am |
Doc Searls quotes [Paul Brians] describing the Enlighten Ment as the celebration of human capacity. Many of the most distinguished leaders of the American Revolution--Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, Ben Franklin, Thomas Paine--were powerfully influenced by English and--to a lesser extent--French Enlightenment thought. The God who underwrites the concept of equality in the Declaration Of Independence is the same [DeIst] (DeIsm) God Rousseau worshipped, not that venerated in the traditional churches which still supported and defended monarchies all over Europe. Jefferson and Franklin both spent time in France--a natural ally because it was a traditional enemy of England--absorbing the influence of the French Enlightenment. The language of Natural Law, of inherent FreeDom-s, of self-determination which seeped so deeply into the American grain was the language of the Enlightenment, though often coated with a light glaze of traditional religion, what has been called our "[Civil Religion]." This is one reason that Americans should study the Enlightenment. It is in their bones. It has defined part of what they have dreamed of, what they aim to become. Separated geographically from most of the aristocrats against whom they were rebelling, their revolution (American Revolution) was to be far less corrosive--and at first less influential--than that in France (French Revolution).
Bill Seitz, fluxent at gmail dot com, Weblog