Description
Enlightenment’s Reformation provides a comprehensive analysis of how German thinkers navigated the complex relationship between religious tradition and Enlightenment rationalism from 1750 to 1830. Michael Printy demonstrates that rather than viewing these forces as inherently opposed, German intellectuals developed sophisticated frameworks that integrated philosophical inquiry with theological commitments.
The book traces the development of German religious thought through major intellectual movements, examining key figures and their contributions to both philosophy and religious understanding. Printy argues that the German Reformation tradition provided unique resources for engaging with Enlightenment ideas, creating a distinctly German approach to modernity that differed from Western European patterns.
This work is essential for understanding how religious thought evolved during Europe’s most transformative intellectual period, and how German culture came to synthesize faith and reason in ways that shaped subsequent European intellectual history.







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