To those unfamiliar with the study of intellectual history but familiar with The Great Courses, European Thought & Culture in the 19th Century may contain much less philosophy than one might expect. What it does contain is an introduction into what intellectual history is including the many approaches to it. Essentially this appears to be the relationship between historical events and ideas and values of the time, as they were in the minds of the people that lived in those times. The course introduces the Enlightenment, how that led to the French Revolution and thus how many –isms were spawned as a result: notably liberalism, utilitarianism, romanticism, socialism, industrial capitalism, Marxism, Hegelianism, positivism, feminism, nationalism.
As a period of intellectual history of a 100 years is summarised in just over 12 hours, no particular area is focused on in great detail; just enough information is shared in a lecture to allow the learner to understand the lecture(s). This may be as expected to those familiar with these courses. In fact, the learner may find these lectures easier to listen to than most – by not being required listeners to understand any individual component in much detail, the course seems more leisurely than demanding.
Prof. Lloyd S. Kramer discusses even uncomfortable themes in an unbiased way. Left, right and centrist views are discussed, as are racist, misogynist and elitist ones. Kramer is an excellent teacher by general university standards, but some of the other Great Courses lecturers may be slightly better. If anything stands out negatively, it is the focus on dates and lives of historical figures as opposed to the ideas themselves – a bias towards history over philosophy. In Kramer’s defence, his style seems consistent with intellectual history as he defines it.
Even if a learner is familiar with many of the taught ideas in isolation, Prof. Lloyd S. Kramer does an excellent job of tying these ideas together, enriching and consolidating the ideas in context. The course is a stark reminder that so many of our ideas and systems are dependent on key events of the past and responses to these events. Despite some minor criticisms, European Thought & Culture in the 19th Century should be considered a core title for those studying philosophy or history.