About This Book
The essay argues that enlightenment is humanity's emergence from self-imposed immaturity — the inability to use one's own reason without guidance — and urges readers to dare to think independently. It diagnoses laziness and fear as causes that sustain dependence on guardians and warns that institutions and prejudices perpetuate passivity. It distinguishes the public use of reason, which must remain free to promote reform, from restricted private roles where obedience is necessary; offers examples of officers, officials, and clergy to show how individuals can be constrained in office yet still speak as scholars. It concludes that gradual intellectual freedom, not violent revolution, advances enlightenment.
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