Carl Lotus Becker (1873–1945) was an American historian. He was born in Waterloo, Black Hawk County, Iowa. He studied at the University of Wisconsin. Frederick Jackson Turner was his doctorial advisor there. Becker got his Ph.D. in 1907.
He was John Wendell Anderson Professor of History at Cornell University from 1917 to 1941.
He is best known for The Heavenly City of the Eighteenth-Century Philosophers (1932), four lectures on The Enlightenment delivered at Yale University. His assertion that philosophes in the 'Age of Reason', relied far more upon Christian assumptions than they cared to admit, is now widely accepted. It is an influential work, which has also subsequently been much attacked. Interest in it is partly explained by this passage (p. 47):
This isolation of vocabularies of the epoch chimes with much later work, even if the rest of the book is essayistic in approach. Johnson Kent Wright writes
Cornell has recognized his work as an educator by naming one of its five new residential colleges the Carl Becker House.
1945 deaths | 1873 births | American historians | Columbia University alumni | Cornell University faculty | Historians of the United States | Philosophers of history | People from Iowa
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