In our postmodern era, discussions of the collapse of the "enlightenment project" have become commonplace. Voegelin compels us to follow the great-souled individuals who sought to go from disintegration of the present toward evocations of order for the future. Such thinkers as Comte, Bakunin, and Marx suffered through the crisis and fully understood the need for a new outpouring of the spirit. They resolved to supply the deficiency themselves. As a consequence they launched us irrevocably on the path of the apocalypse of man.
One of the great merits of Voegelin's analysis is his exposition of the pervasive character of this crisis. It is not confined to the megalomaniacal dreamers of a revolutionary apocalypse; rather, echoes of it are found in the more moderate Enlightenment preoccupation with progress to be attained through application of the scientific method. Faith in the capacity of instrumental reason to answer the ultimate questions of human existence defined men such as Voltaire, Helvétius, Diderot, D'Alembert, and Condorcet. It remains the authoritative faith of our world today, Voegelin argues, demonstrated by our continuing inability to step outside the parameters of the Enlightenment. Are we condemned, then, to oscillate between the rational incoherence of a science that never delivers on its promises and a now discredited revolutionary idealism that wreaks havoc in practice? This is the question toward which Voegelin's final volume points. While not direct, his response is evident everywhere. Crisis and the Apocalypse of Man could have been written only by a man who had reached his own resolution of the crisis.
1999. 520 pp. 6 x 9. Index. Cumulative index. ISBN 0-8262-1233-6. $54.95s.
History of Political IdeasSeries Editor, Ellis Sandoz
I. Hellenism,
Rome, and Early Christianity
II. The Middle
Ages to Aquinas
III. The Later Middle Ages
IV. Renaissance and Reformation
V. Religion and the Rise of Modernity
VI. Revolution and the New Science
VII. The New Order and Last Orientation
VIII. Crisis and the Apocalypse of Man The eight volumes of History of Political Ideas comprise Volumes 19-26 of The Collected Works of Eric Voegelin. |