文人和光明会

Jordan Taylor
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摘要

奥古斯丁·巴鲁尔的《雅各宾主义历史回忆录》在1798年至1800年期间在美国引发了著名的“光照派恐慌”。巴鲁埃尔认为,一个名为“光明会”的神秘共济会组织挑起了法国大革命。18世纪90年代末,美国人推断这个组织正在渗透到美国。学者们常常认为,这次恐慌是由当时美国政治的激烈程度引发的大规模歇斯底里症的一个例子。但事实上,美国人对巴鲁埃尔的反应是有节制的、谨慎的,并以当时盛行的认识论标准为指导。大西洋知识网络反复证实(或未能令人信服地反驳)《回忆录》的内容,使杰迪迪亚·莫尔斯和蒂莫西·德怀特等美国知识分子以“权威”的信念传播阴谋论。莫尔斯作为这些网络和美国观众之间的调解人尤其重要。通过与文学评论、学者通信和知识分子出版物的接触,莫尔斯有充分的理由接受巴鲁埃尔的说法。事实上,莫尔斯和他的盟友所收集的支持巴鲁埃尔的证据可以说比他们的批评者所能得到的证据更有力。从这个角度来看,光照派的“恐慌”并不是一种非理性的恐慌,而是对18世纪90年代末美国人所能获得的证据的合理反应。通过从印刷史、跨大西洋网络和早期现代知识生产过程的角度重新审视这个故事,学者们可以更好地理解早期现代认识论的边界和局限性,以及早期阴谋论的本质。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Literati and the Illuminati
Augustin Barruel’s Memoirs Illustrating the History of Jacobinism incited the famous “Illuminati scare” in the United States from 1798 through 1800. Barruel argued that a shadowy Freemason group known as the Illuminati had provoked the French Revolution. Americans in the late 1790s inferred that this group was infiltrating the United States. Scholars often imagine that this scare was an instance of mass hysteria triggered by the intensity of American politics at this moment. But in fact, Americans’ response to Barruel was measured, careful, and guided by the era’s prevailing epistemological standards. Atlantic knowledge networks repeatedly validated (or failed to persuasively rebut) the content of the Memoirs, allowing American intellectuals such as Jedidiah Morse and Timothy Dwight to spread the conspiracy theory with the conviction of “authority.” Morse was particularly significant as a mediator between these networks and American audiences. By engaging with literary reviews, the correspondence of academics, and the publications of intellectuals, Morse had good reason to accept Barruel’s account. Indeed, the evidence that Morse and his allies marshalled in favor of Barruel was arguably stronger than that which was available to their critics. In this light, the Illuminati “scare” was not an irrational panic, but rather a reasonable response to the evidence available to Americans during the late 1790s. By re-examining this story through the lens of print history, transatlantic networks, and early modern processes of knowledge production, scholars can better understand the borders and limitations of early modern epistemologies, as well as the nature of early conspiracy theories.
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