¶ … religious faith seems to most of us living in the United States at the beginning of the 21st century to be a purely private one. We (most of us believe) that a person's choice of religion, of congregation, of philosophy is something that each individual must decide for himself or herself. If a person finds most intellectual and emotional comfort in being a Muslim or a Jew or an atheist or a Theosophist we believe that such choices are between that person and his or her conscience alone. However, this acceptance that people must choose their own moral path in life as a purely individual choice is a relatively new idea and one that we owe very much to the beliefs promulgated by the thinkers and writers of the Enlightenment who for the first time began a systematic exploration of the ways in which questions of morality, religion and conscience could be considered as questions entirely separate from questions about the ways in which societies were constituted and governed. It was writers like John Locke and Denis Diderot - along with other members of the group of French progressive thinkers known as the philosophes - who laid the groundwork for our own, essentially secular society. This paper examines the views of Enlightenment writers towards the ideas of deism and atheism, focusing on Locke's 1689 "Letter Concerning Toleration" and Denis Diderot's 1763 "Rameau's Nephew."
It is essential, as suggested above, when examining these texts and others contemporaneous with those by Locke and Diderot, to understand that the question of atheism was not viewed by those people living at the beginning of the modern era as a personal question but rather as a public and social one. Atheism was not a choice that (most people would have argued at the beginning of the Enlightenment) that a person could reasonably make because a belief in God by everyone was essential to the maintenance of communal order.
Locke argues this point:
Lastly, those are not at all to be tolerated who deny the being of a God. Promises, covenants, and oaths, which are the bonds of human society, can have no hold upon an atheist. The taking away of God, though but even in thought, dissolves all; besides also, those that by their atheism undermine and destroy all religion, can have no pretence of religion whereupon to challenge the privilege of a toleration.
We can perhaps appreciate Locke's point even as it makes us (at least those of us who believe in the importance of the separation of church and state) uncomfortable. While there are certainly ethical problems with the imposition of a single set of moral beliefs on an entire population, it is also true that if all members of a community believe in a single set of ideas and moral precepts it is far easier to maintain social order and promote a sense of community.
The importance of orthodoxy as a way of maintaining stability and even tranquility in a community had been in the centuries leading up to the Enlightenment an article of (political) faith. However, as colonization and exploration began to bring Europeans into greater and greater contact with people with very different belief systems from their own - and as Protestantism challenged the power of the Catholic Church and some people began to be repelled by the excesses of Rome and its Inquisition - new ideas about how societies might be governed began to be considered. These new ideas included both intellectual and later practical explorations into democratic governance (both the French Revolution and the American Revolution are very much practical applications of the ideas of the great writers of the Enlightenment) as well as ideas about political governance that was entirely separate from religious authority.
This is not to say that political philosophers like Locke were entirely modern in their thinking about the relationship between...
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