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The Last Utopia: Human Rights in History
— published 2010 — 2 editions |
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Origins of the Other: Emmanuel Levinas Between Revelation and Ethics
— published 2005 — 2 editions |
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A Holocaust Controversy: The Treblinka Affair in Postwar France
— published 2005 — 2 editions |
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The Last Utopia: Human Rights in History
— published 2011 |
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Democracy Past and Future
by Pierre Rosanvallon, Samuel Moyn — published 2006 — 2 editions |
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The Modernist Imagination: Intellectual History and Critical Theory: Essays in Honor of Martin Jay
by Warren Breckman, Peter Eli Gordon , Samuel Moyn — published 2008 |
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The Weimar Moment: Liberalism, Political Theology, and Law
by Leonard V. Kaplan , Rudy Koshar , Peter C. Caldwell — published 2012 |
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“Israel's monomaniacal Spinoza worship is amusing and exasperating by turns. For a start, his insistence that Spinoza was the singular font of the Enlightenment leaves him without a story of the Enlightenment's intellectual or cultural origins. Every historian has to begin somewhere, but the fact that Israel begins with Spinoza, and then reduces most of what follows the philosopher to a footnote, leaves his account of the Enlightenment founded on something like immaculate conception.”
― Samuel Moyn
― Samuel Moyn
“It is neither cowardice nor betrayal to insist that the Enlightenment's main lesson is to be mindful of how much it has left its inheritors to figure out.”
― Samuel Moyn
― Samuel Moyn
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