Liberty, Enlightenment, and the Polish Brethren
The article presents an overview of the history of the idea of dialogics and liberty of expression. This liberty is strictly tied to the problem of liberty of conscience. Since the 17th century, the development of the dialogics traveled from an apocalyptic – and demonising its opponents – discourse...
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Ksiegarnia Akademicka Publishing
2019
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oai:doaj.org-article:2a86d105ae5544c884810d6824dc40272021-11-27T12:55:29ZLiberty, Enlightenment, and the Polish Brethren10.12797/RM.02.2018.04.072544-21392544-2546https://doaj.org/article/2a86d105ae5544c884810d6824dc40272019-03-01T00:00:00Zhttps://journals.akademicka.pl/relacje/article/view/619https://doaj.org/toc/2544-2139https://doaj.org/toc/2544-2546 The article presents an overview of the history of the idea of dialogics and liberty of expression. This liberty is strictly tied to the problem of liberty of conscience. Since the 17th century, the development of the dialogics traveled from an apocalyptic – and demonising its opponents – discourse as in John Milton’s approach in Areopagitica, through dialogics of cooperation and obligations and laws (in the Polish Brethren, so-called Socinians, especially Jan Crell), through dialogics of deduction (transcendental deduction in Immanuel Kant), to dialogics of induction and creativity (John Stuart Mill). Jarosław PłuciennikKsiegarnia Akademicka Publishingarticleliberty of conscienceliberty of expressionEnlightenmenthistory of ideasdialogueEthnology. Social and cultural anthropologyGN301-674ENPLRelacje Międzykulturowe, Vol 2, Iss 2(4) (2019) |
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EN PL |
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liberty of conscience liberty of expression Enlightenment history of ideas dialogue Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology GN301-674 |
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liberty of conscience liberty of expression Enlightenment history of ideas dialogue Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology GN301-674 Jarosław Płuciennik Liberty, Enlightenment, and the Polish Brethren |
description |
The article presents an overview of the history of the idea of dialogics and liberty of expression. This liberty is strictly tied to the problem of liberty of conscience. Since the 17th century, the development of the dialogics traveled from an apocalyptic – and demonising its opponents – discourse as in John Milton’s approach in Areopagitica, through dialogics of cooperation and obligations and laws (in the Polish Brethren, so-called Socinians, especially Jan Crell), through dialogics of deduction (transcendental deduction in Immanuel Kant), to dialogics of induction and creativity (John Stuart Mill).
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format |
article |
author |
Jarosław Płuciennik |
author_facet |
Jarosław Płuciennik |
author_sort |
Jarosław Płuciennik |
title |
Liberty, Enlightenment, and the Polish Brethren |
title_short |
Liberty, Enlightenment, and the Polish Brethren |
title_full |
Liberty, Enlightenment, and the Polish Brethren |
title_fullStr |
Liberty, Enlightenment, and the Polish Brethren |
title_full_unstemmed |
Liberty, Enlightenment, and the Polish Brethren |
title_sort |
liberty, enlightenment, and the polish brethren |
publisher |
Ksiegarnia Akademicka Publishing |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
https://doaj.org/article/2a86d105ae5544c884810d6824dc4027 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT jarosławpłuciennik libertyenlightenmentandthepolishbrethren |
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1718408975082323968 |