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5 - Exploration, cross-cultural contact, and the ambivalence of the Enlightenment

Dorinda Outram
Affiliation:
University of Rochester, New York
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Summary

The eighteenth century was one of extraordinary geographical discovery. This is another way of saying that it was also an age of ever-increasing contacts between very different cultures. How those contacts took place, how they were received in Europe, and what debates they fostered, are the subjects of this chapter.

Exploration in order to gain new knowledge was a characteristic of the Enlightenment. Previous centuries had regarded new geographical knowledge as merely a by-product from voyages primarily aimed at loot and booty. At most, expedition leaders went to little-known territories as a way of interesting investors in parcels of land. The eighteenth century, however, began to regard exploration as a primary source of knowledge. Exploration in the Enlightenment was the first to be centrally concerned with the gathering of information about man and the natural world. Although geopolitical incentives, including taking possession of unknown lands, still motivated much travelling to unknown regions of the world, international cooperation between national scientific institutions to solve geophysical problems came very much more to the fore. In 1768, for example, observers were sent out from Lapland to Tahiti in order to observe the rare event of the passage of the planet Venus between the earth and the sun.

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The Enlightenment , pp. 54 - 66
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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References

Frost, Alan, ‘The Pacific Ocean: The Eighteenth Century's New World’, Studies in Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 1976 (15): 797–826
Forster, J. R., Observations Made during a Voyage around the World, ed. Nicholas Thomas Michael Dettelbach and Harriet Guest (Honolulu, 1996), 137–8
Smith, Bernard, European Vision and the South Pacific (New Haven, CT, and London, 1988)
Political Writings, ed. John Hope Mason and Robert Wokler (Cambridge, 1992)
Le Neveu de Rameau (1762), ed. J. Barzun and R. H. Bowen (New York, 1956), 194, 233–4
Esquer, Gabriel (ed.), L’anti-colonialisme au XVIIIe siècle: Histoire philosophique et politique des établissements et du commerce des européennes dans les deux Indes, par l’Abbé Reynal (Paris, 1951), 43 (opening paragraphs of the work)
Barnard, F. (ed.), Herder on Social and Political Culture (Cambridge, 1969), 187, 320
Joppke, Christian and Lukes, Steven (eds.), Multicultural Questions (Oxford, 1999)

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