The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman: milie Du Chtelet and the Making of Modern Philosophy
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The Enlightenment's Most Dangerous Woman: milie Du Chtelet and the Making of Modern Philosophy

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Suppressed for centuries, the ideas of French philosopher milie Du Chtelet's are ever relevant today...

Just as the Enlightenment was gaining momentum throughout Europe, philosopher milie Du Chtelet broke through the many barriers facing women at the time and published a major philosophical treatise in French. Within a few short years, she became famous: she was read and debated from Russia to Prussia, from Switzerland to England, from up north in Sweden to down south in Italy. This was not just remarkable because she was a woman, but because of the substance of her contributions. While the men in her milieu like Voltaire and Kant sought disciples to promote their ideas, Du Chtelet promoted intellectual autonomy. She counselled her readers to read the classics, but never to become a follower of another's ideas. Her proclamation that a true philosopher must remain an independent thinker, rather than a disciple of some supposedly "great man" like Isaac Newton or Ren Descartes, posed a threat to an emerging consensus in the Enlightenment. And that made her dangerous.

After all, if young women took Du Chtelet's advice to heart, if they insisted on thinking for themselves, they might demand a proper education--the exclusion of women from the colleges and academies of Europe might finally end. And if young women thought for themselves, rather than listening to the ideas of the men around them, that might rupture the gender-based social order itself. Because of the threat that she posed, the men who created the modern philosophy canon eventually wrote Du Chtelet out of their official histories. After she achieved immense fame in the middle of the eighteenth century, her ideas were later suppressed, or attributed to the men around her. For generations afterwards, she was forgotten. Now we can hear her voice anew when we need her more than ever. Her lessons of intellectual independence and her rejection of hero worship remain ever relevant today.

Hardcover
$29.99
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