Allie O'Muircheartaigh

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“What was most important and really new about the Age of Reason was the sublime confidence of the intellectuals and societal leaders in the power of man’s reason,” writes the scholar William Goetzmann. “Human nature, like all other nature, was a constant that yielded to rational inquiry.”56 In other words, they thought it possible to use reason and observation to discern the eternal laws of nature and then to use that understanding to aid human progress.
First Principles: What America's Founders Learned from the Greeks and Romans and How That Shaped Our Country
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