The early modern knowledge precariat and the precariousness of ‘orthodoxy’ in Martin Mulsow’s knowledge lost

History of European Ideas (forthcoming)
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Abstract

Martin Mulsow's Knowledge Lost is a magnificent contribution to early modern intellectual history and the history of knowledge. In the hope of stimulating further discussion, this article asks several questions, most of them circling around one meta question: have we perhaps overly caricatured early modern ‘orthodoxy’, and underestimated the plurality of its intellectual output?.

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