| The Age Of Reason |
Article Index for The Age |
Articles about The Age Of Reason |
Website Links For The Age |
Information AboutThe Age Of Reason |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT THE AGE OF REASON | |
| 1794 books | |
| age of reason | |
| deist texts | |
| books critical of christianity | |
| criticism of religion | |
| anti-christianity | |
|
''The Age of Reason,'' written in parts during the 1790s and dealing in a systematic examination of organized religion, advocates a as I detest everything that is cruel." Paine provides not only criticism of religion, but a foundation for belief in a supreme being free of the confines of dogma. Paine wrote the first part of the book in France during the first two months following his imprisonment in December 1793. Paine was in jail for protesting the execution of Louis XVI , so this first section was published in a French translation. After his release from Prison in November 1794, at the urging of James Monroe , Paine wrote the second part. The completed work was published in 1795. Paine became extremely unpopular at the time due to this book and largely became a social pariah upon his return to America until his death in 1809. Yet his treatise became quite influential in the history of the Skeptical , Rationalist , and Freethinking movements and remains one of the most persuasive critiques of the Bible and every other 'revealed religion' ever written. However, it is often ignored that central to this text is an argument in favor of the existence of a Creator, one based on reason and logic as opposed to the various fundamentalist modes of both religion and atheism. EDITIONS IN PRINT
SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS
|
|
|