
In this concise yet powerful essay, a seminal Enlightenment thinker challenges us to break free from the comfortable “minority” of thought that relies on others to dictate what we believe. By defining enlightenment as humanity’s emergence from self‑imposed immaturity, the author urges each listener to summon the courage to use their own understanding without waiting for external guidance. The text paints a vivid picture of how laziness and fear keep many people tethered to the opinions of “guardians,” and it illustrates the obstacles that society erects to preserve that dependence.
Moving beyond critique, the work highlights the essential role of public freedom: the unrestricted, reasoned use of our intellect in all matters. It suggests that when a community is allowed to think openly, a slow but steady progress toward collective maturity becomes possible. Listeners will find the argument both historically grounding and strikingly relevant to contemporary debates about autonomy, authority, and the ongoing quest for genuine intellectual independence.
Language
de
Duration
~19 minutes (18K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jana Srna and Philipp Zeinlinger
Release date
2009-12-31
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1724–1804
A central figure of the Enlightenment, he reshaped philosophy by asking what the human mind can truly know and how moral duty should guide action. His ideas about reason, freedom, and ethics still shape debates far beyond philosophy classrooms.
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