|
|
|
Book Review
Canada and the United States
Kerry S. Walters. Benjamin Franklin and His Gods. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press. 1999. Pp. xii, 213. Cloth $44.95, paper $18.95.
|
Kerry S. Walters, who distinguished himself with earlier work on the American Deists and how Enlightenment thought penetrated strands of American religion, offers the first full-length analysis of Benjamin Franklin's religion in more than thirty years. His work is revisionist; at the outset, he states his intent to counter the prevailing understanding developed by Alfred Owen Aldridge in Benjamin Franklin and Nature's God (1967). |
1 |
|
Aldridge argued that Franklin was an idiosyncratic deist who espoused a kind of polytheism. Walters does not deny the existence of an idiosyncratic dimension to Franklin's thought but counters that it leads to a theistic perspectivism, not polytheism. Both acknowledge that Franklin's religious insights evolved throughout his long life, always reacting against the Calvinism proffered by Franklin's parents. |
2 |
|
Walters fixes on key documents to make his case, beginning with the Dissertation on Liberty and Necessity, Pleasure and Pain (1725). Published in England while Franklin was still a teenager, the treatise was starkly deistic in tone and content but strident in repudiating traditional Calvinistic understandings of Christianity. It represented a "false start," for Franklin quickly regretted what he wrote and moved in other directions. |
. . . |
There are about 566 more words in this article.
Please log in (or, if you are not yet an
authorized user, please go to the
User Setup page) to gain full access rights. Or if you're already logged in register your subscription.
|