Blamed for the bloody disasters of the 20th century: Auschwitz, the
Gulags, globalisation, Islamic terrorism; heralded as the harbinger of
reason, equality, and the end of arbitrary rule, the Enlightenment has
been nothing if not divisive. To this day historians disagree over when
it was, where it was, and what it was (and sometimes, still is). Kieron
O'Hara deftly traverses these conflicts, presenting the history,
politics, science, religion, arts, and social life of the Enlightenment
not as a simple set of easily enumerated ideas, but an evolving
conglomerate that spawned a very diverse set of thinkers, from the
radical Rousseau to the conservative Burke.