Central Problem

This chapter examines how Enlightenment philosophy developed distinctive national characteristics in England, Italy, and Germany, each shaped by specific historical, political, and cultural conditions. The central questions addressed are: What is the foundation of moral judgment—reason, sentiment, or self-interest? How should religious belief relate to rational inquiry? What are the proper principles of criminal justice? How should philosophy be systematically organized? And what is the nature and value of aesthetic experience?

The English Enlightenment, emerging in a post-revolutionary society with established parliamentary institutions, focused primarily on moral and religious questions rather than political critique. The Italian Enlightenment, delayed by political fragmentation and Counter-Reformation culture, concentrated on practical moral, juridical, and economic problems. The German Enlightenment, operating within absolutist states and academic settings, developed a systematic, rationalist methodology that sought to synthesize Leibnizian metaphysics with Enlightenment ideals.

Main Thesis

Each national Enlightenment tradition developed distinctive responses to the fundamental problem of grounding human conduct and knowledge on rational, natural principles rather than tradition or revelation.

English Enlightenment: The debate centered on whether morality derives from reason or sentiment. Shaftesbury posited a “rational sentiment” that reflects cosmic harmony and opposes fanaticism through irony. Hutcheson developed the concept of “moral sense” as an irreducible faculty approving actions conducive to “the greatest happiness of the greatest number.” Mandeville provocatively argued the opposite—that “private vices” produce “public benefits,” since society depends on self-interested passions rather than virtue. Smith synthesized these views through “sympathy”—the capacity to see ourselves as others see us—grounded in providential harmony. Reid and the Scottish school defended “common sense” against Humean skepticism, affirming that basic beliefs about external reality and causation are warranted by their universal acceptance.

Italian Enlightenment: Practical reform dominated. Beccaria’s On Crimes and Punishments applied social contract theory to argue that punishment must be proportionate, certain, and aimed at deterrence rather than retribution—condemning both torture and capital punishment. Verri developed a pessimistic hedonism: pleasure is merely the cessation of pain, and pain is the “motive principle of all humanity.”

German Enlightenment: Wolff created a comprehensive philosophical system using mathematical method, dividing philosophy into theoretical (ontology, cosmology, psychology, rational theology) and practical branches, all grounded in the principles of non-contradiction and sufficient reason. Baumgarten founded aesthetics as a discipline, recognizing the autonomous value of sensible knowledge and beauty. Lessing culminated German Enlightenment with a philosophy of history as progressive education, in which revelation accompanies humanity’s development toward the complete coincidence of positive religion with natural reason.

Historical Context

England: The Glorious Revolution (1688) had established parliamentary government and religious toleration, creating conditions fundamentally different from Continental absolutism. Locke and Newton provided the philosophical and scientific foundations. English Enlightenment thinkers thus focused less on political critique and more on refining moral and religious philosophy within an already relatively liberal society.

Italy: The peninsula suffered from economic backwardness, political fragmentation, unstable dynasties (Spanish, Austrian, Bourbon), and Counter-Reformation intellectual constraints. Only after the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748) brought forty years of peace did reform become possible. Milan under the Habsburgs and Naples under the Bourbons became centers of “enlightened despotism” and reform. The journal “Il Caffè” (1764-1766), modeled on the English Spectator, became the vehicle for Milanese illuministi. Beccaria’s work achieved European fame and influenced criminal law reform across the continent.

Germany: Political fragmentation into numerous states, persistent feudalism, and devastating religious wars had left Germany culturally isolated until Leibniz. The absence of a strong commercial bourgeoisie meant intellectuals remained tied to universities and courts rather than engaged in public battles. Frederick II of Prussia embodied “enlightened despotism.” Wolff’s expulsion from Halle (1723) by Pietist opponents, and his restoration under Frederick II (1740), symbolized the tension between traditional religion and philosophical reason.

The period culminated with Lessing‘s Education of the Human Race (1780), which provided a philosophy of historical progress that would profoundly influence German Romanticism and Idealism.

Philosophical Lineage

flowchart TD
    Locke --> Shaftesbury
    Locke --> Hutcheson
    Locke --> Reid
    Shaftesbury --> Hutcheson
    Shaftesbury --> Smith
    Hutcheson --> Smith
    Hutcheson --> Beccaria
    Hume --> Reid
    Leibniz --> Wolff
    Wolff --> Baumgarten
    Wolff --> Mendelssohn
    Wolff --> Lessing
    Shaftesbury --> Lessing
    Spinoza --> Lessing
    Baumgarten --> Kant
    Reid --> Scottish-Common-Sense

    class Baumgarten,Beccaria,Hume,Hutcheson,Kant,Leibniz,Lessing,Locke,Mandeville,Mendelssohn,Reid,Scottish-Common-Sense,Shaftesbury,Smith,Spinoza,Verri,Wolff internal-link;

Key Thinkers

ThinkerDatesMovementMain WorkCore Concept
Shaftesbury1671-1713Moral Sense TheoryCharacteristicsRational sentiment, irony against fanaticism
Hutcheson1694-1746Moral Sense TheorySystem of Moral PhilosophyMoral sense, greatest happiness
Mandeville1670-1733EnlightenmentFable of the BeesPrivate vices, public benefits
Smith1723-1790Scottish EnlightenmentTheory of Moral SentimentsSympathy, impartial spectator
Reid1710-1796Scottish Common SenseInquiry into the Human MindCommon sense against skepticism
Beccaria1738-1794Italian EnlightenmentOn Crimes and PunishmentsProportionate punishment, no torture
Verri1728-1797Italian EnlightenmentDiscourse on Pleasure and PainPain as motive principle
Wolff1679-1754German RationalismPhilosophia rationalisSystematic method, perfection
Baumgarten1714-1762German EnlightenmentAestheticaAesthetics, sensible perfection
Mendelssohn1729-1786German EnlightenmentJerusalemChurch-state separation
Lessing1729-1781German EnlightenmentEducation of the Human RaceProgressive revelation

Key Concepts

ConceptDefinitionRelated to
Moral senseIrreducible faculty that perceives virtue and vice as eyes perceive light and darknessHutcheson, Shaftesbury
SympathyCapacity to see ourselves as others see us, enabling moral evaluation through an “impartial spectator”Smith, Scottish Enlightenment
Private vices, public benefitsParadox that self-interested passions (luxury, vanity) drive economic prosperity rather than virtuous self-denialMandeville, Enlightenment
Common senseUniversal beliefs (external world existence, causation) that provide foundation against skepticismReid, Scottish Common Sense
Greatest happinessMoral criterion: “the greatest happiness of the greatest number” as measure of best actionHutcheson, Beccaria
Certainty of punishmentPrinciple that deterrence depends more on punishment’s certainty than its severityBeccaria, Criminal Justice
Philosophical freedomCondition for progress: ability to publicly express philosophical opinions against traditionWolff, German Enlightenment
OntologyScience of being in general, based on non-contradiction and sufficient reason principlesWolff, Metaphysics
AestheticsScience of sensible knowledge; perfection of sensible cognition is beautyBaumgarten, Philosophy of Art
Education as revelationHumanity develops through revelation that anticipates what reason will later comprehend autonomouslyLessing, Philosophy of History
Hen kai Pan”One and All”—Spinozist formula expressing God’s immanence in the world’s harmonyLessing, Spinoza

Authors Comparison

ThemeShaftesburyMandevilleSmithBeccariaWolffLessing
Human natureHarmonious, oriented to goodSelf-interested, viciousSocial, sympatheticRational, contractualPerfectible through reasonProgressive through history
Moral foundationRational sentimentSelf-interestSympathyUtility, social contractPerfectionStriving toward truth
View of natureDivine harmonyAmoral forceProvidential orderSocial utilityMechanical orderContinuous creation
ReligionNatural religionCritique of moralismDeismSecular justiceRational theologyProgressive revelation
Social theoryNatural sociabilityVices produce prosperitySpontaneous harmonyContractual protectionOrganized perfectionEducational development
MethodIrony, satireParadox, provocationEmpirical observationRational deductionMathematical demonstrationSpeculative history

Influences & Connections

Summary Formulas

  • Shaftesbury: Moral life is grounded in rational sentiment that reflects cosmic harmony; irony is the antidote to fanaticism.
  • Hutcheson: The moral sense is an irreducible faculty perceiving virtue and approving actions conducive to the greatest happiness of the greatest number.
  • Mandeville: Private vices produce public benefits; society prospers through self-interested passions, not through virtue.
  • Smith: Sympathy—seeing ourselves as others see us—grounds moral judgment within a providentially ordered harmony of interests.
  • Reid: Common sense provides warranted basic beliefs against skepticism; perception directly reveals external reality.
  • Beccaria: Punishment must be proportionate, certain, and aimed at deterrence; torture and capital punishment are illegitimate and ineffective.
  • Verri: Pleasure is merely the rapid cessation of pain; pain is the motive principle of all humanity.
  • Wolff: Philosophy is the science of the possible; clear and distinct knowledge through mathematical method leads to human perfection and happiness.
  • Baumgarten: Aesthetics is the science of sensible knowledge; beauty is the perfection of sensible cognition, autonomous from logical truth.
  • Mendelssohn: Religion and morality reside in inner sentiment and cannot be coerced; church and state must be completely separated.
  • Lessing: Human value lies in striving toward truth rather than possessing it; history is progressive education through revelation that will ultimately coincide with reason.

Timeline

YearEvent
1705Mandeville publishes Fable of the Bees
1711Shaftesbury publishes Characteristics
1723Wolff expelled from Halle by Pietists
1729Wolff publishes Philosophia prima sive Ontologia
1740Wolff restored to Halle under Frederick II
1748Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle brings peace to Italy
1750Baumgarten begins publishing Aesthetica
1755Hutcheson’s System of Moral Philosophy published posthumously
1759Smith publishes Theory of Moral Sentiments
1764Reid publishes Inquiry into the Human Mind
1764Beccaria publishes On Crimes and Punishments
1764-1766”Il Caffè” journal published in Milan
1766Lessing publishes Laocoön
1773Verri publishes Discourse on Pleasure and Pain
1776Smith publishes Wealth of Nations
1780Lessing publishes Education of the Human Race
1783Mendelssohn publishes Jerusalem

Notable Quotes

“If God held all truth in His right hand and in His left the ever-living striving after truth, with the condition that I should eternally err, and said to me: Choose, I would humbly fall at His left hand and say: Father, give; pure truth is for Thee alone.” — Lessing

“The greatest happiness of the greatest number is the measure of right and wrong.” — Hutcheson

“For punishment not to be violence by one or many against a private citizen, it must be essentially public, prompt, necessary, the minimum possible under the given circumstances, proportionate to crimes, and dictated by laws.” — Beccaria


NOTE

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