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Postmodernism and the Enlightenment Meta-narratives, enlightenment and paradoxgordon's

In: A Research Annual

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  • Willie Henderson

Abstract

It was with a certain amount of surprise mixed in roughly equal proportions with curiosity that I recently accepted the task of writing a review of a work, published in 2001, on the encounter between the Enlightenment (meaning the French Enlightenment) and postmodernism. Reading in the Scottish Enlightenment suggests a need to know something about the wider European context though the exclusivity of France as the Enlightenment or asthehome of Enlightenment is no longer a sustainable proposition. The Scots, in their energetic Universities, were as much involved with applying Newton and developing Locke or extending Shaftesbury or countermanding Mandeville as they were with the continentalphilosophies. The proposition put to me, to persuade me to the task, was the work was likely to contain ideas that intellectual historians of economics might profit from. A reflection on the significance of two potentially conflicting sets of ideas ought to have significance for the study of 18th-century economics developed within the cultural context of wider Enlightenment thought.

Suggested Citation

  • Willie Henderson, 2009. "Postmodernism and the Enlightenment Meta-narratives, enlightenment and paradoxgordon's," Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, in: A Research Annual, pages 291-296, Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
  • Handle: RePEc:eme:rhetzz:s0743-4154(2009)00027a017
    DOI: 10.1108/S0743-4154(2009)00027A017
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