VIRTUAL: American Freethinker: Elihu Palmer and the Struggle for Religious Freedom in the New Nation (Book Talk)
Event Details
Free & Virtual Kirsten Fischer, Associate Professor of History, University of Minnesota The first comprehensive biography of Elihu Palmer tells the life story of a freethinker
Event Details
Free & Virtual
Kirsten Fischer, Associate Professor of History, University of Minnesota
The first comprehensive biography of Elihu Palmer tells the life story of a freethinker who was at the heart of the early United States’ protracted contest over religious freedom and free speech. When the United States was new, a lapsed minister named Elihu Palmer shared with his fellow Americans the radical idea that virtue required no religious foundation. A better source for morality, he said, could be found in the natural world: the interconnected web of life that inspired compassion for all living things. Religions that deny these universal connections should be discarded, he insisted. For this, his Christian critics denounced him as a heretic whose ideas endangered the country.
Although his publications and speaking tours made him one of the most infamous American freethinkers in his day, Elihu Palmer has been largely forgotten. No cache of his personal papers exists and his book has been long out of print. Yet his story merits telling, Kirsten Fischer argues, and not only for the dramatic account of a man who lost his eyesight before the age of thirty and still became a book author, newspaper editor, and itinerant public speaker. Even more intriguing is his encounter with a cosmology that envisioned the universe as interconnected, alive with sensation, and everywhere infused with a divine life force.
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Time
February 9, 2022 5:30 pm - 7:00 pm(GMT-05:00)