Scienza & Politica (Jul 2018)

Introduction. The Liberty of the Moderns Compared with Itself

  • Stefano Visentin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.6092/issn.1825-9618/8409
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 58

Abstract

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During the period from Benjamin Constants's discourse on The Liberty of Ancients Compared with that of Moderns (1891) to Isaiah Berlin's Two Concepts of Liberty (1958) a reconstruction of the modern concept of liberty has been developed, based upon three theoretical pillars: individualism, commercial society, representative government. This concept has dominated the historiographical debate for a long time, as only in the last years the emergence of a neo-republican idea of liberty has questioned it; however, not even this neo-republican version has really undermined the conceptual frame of liberalism, thus becoming an internal variant of the “liberty of Moderns”. Therefore it is a very important task to address directly to some early-modern thinkers and theoretical contexts, in order to reopen the debate on the genesis of modern liberties, and more in general to consider political modernity as a non-pacified space, within which different visions confront and conflict with each other.

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