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E-raamat: Enlightenment Underground: Radical Germany, 1680-1720

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Online supplement, "Mulsow: Additions to Notes drawn from the 2002 edition of Moderne aus dem Untergrund": full versions of nearly 300 notes that were truncated in the print edition. Hosted on H. C. Erik Midelfort's website.

Martin Mulsow’s seismic reinterpretation of the origins of the Enlightenment in Germany won awards and renown in its original German edition, and now H. C. Erik Midelfort's translation makes this sensational book available to English-speaking readers. In Enlightenment Underground, Mulsow shows that even in the late seventeenth century some thinkers in Germany ventured to express extremely dangerous ideas, but did so as part of a secret underground. Scouring manuscript collections across northern Europe, Mulsow studied the writings of countless hitherto unknown radical jurists, theologians, historians, and dissident students who pushed for the secularization of legal, political, social, and religious knowledge. Often their works circulated in manuscript, anonymously, or as clandestinely published books.

Working as a philosophical microhistorian, Mulsow has discovered the identities of several covert radicals and linked them to circles of young German scholars, many of whom were connected with the vibrant radical cultures of the Netherlands, England, and Denmark. The author reveals how radical ideas and contributions to intellectual doubt came from Socinians and Jews, church historians and biblical scholars, political theorists, and unemployed university students. He shows that misreadings of humorous or ironic works sometimes gave rise to unintended skeptical thoughts or corrosively political interpretations of Christianity. This landmark book overturns stereotypical views of the early Enlightenment in Germany as cautious, conservative, and moderate, and replaces them with a new portrait that reveals a movement far more radical, unintended, and puzzling than previously suspected.

Translator's Note vii
Author's Preliminary Note and Acknowledgments ix
Introduction: Radicalism as a Problem for Research 1(28)
One The Ambivalence of Scholars: A Jewish Anti-Christian Manuscript and Its Path into the German Early Enlightenment
29(32)
Two The Socinian Enlightenment: Samuel Crell's European Networks
61(17)
Three Atheism at the Heart of Orthodoxy? On the Origin and Early Spread of Johann Joachim Muller's De tribus impostoribus (1688)
78(32)
Four Political Theology: Reason of State, Historical Pyrrhonism, and the Critique of Religion
110(65)
Five The Destruction of Christian Platonism: Souverain's Le Platonisme devoile (1700) and Gundling's "Plato atheos" (1713)
175(31)
Six Gundling versus Budde: Skeptical versus Conservative Enlightenment
206(33)
Seven Eclecticism and Indifferentism: The Hidden Discourse of the Religio Prudentum from the Ineptus religiosus of 1652 to the Religio Eclectica of 1702
239(64)
Conclusion 303(6)
Notes 309(72)
Bibliography 381(62)
Index 443
Martin Mulsow, author and editor of numerous works, is Professor of History at the University of Erfurt, Germany and Director of the Research Center for Cultural and Social Scientific Studies in Gotha.

H. C. Erik Midelfort, author of Witchcraft, Madness, Society, and Religion in Early Modern Germany: A Ship of Fools, is Julian Bishko Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Virginia, USA.