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Conditions in Europe

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Some thinkers did end up corresponding with or advising European monarchs and eventually ... France Enlightened Despots Some monarchs accepted Enlightenment ideas. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Conditions in Europe


1
Conditions in Europe
  • 1) Catholic Church and Absolute Monarchs are
    strong
  • 2) Crusades -gt Renaissance leads to trade and
    cultural diffusion and Humanism

2
The Scientific Revolution (1500 1800 Age of
Reason)
  • A new way of thinking about the world develops
    based on observation and willingness to question
    assumptions
  • Questioned Greco-Roman ideas
  • Questioned Church teachings
  • Use of scientific method and human intellect.

3
Galileo
  • Supported Heliocentric Theory
  • Used a telescope that he made
  • Church did not like his ideas
  • Put on trial, threatened with death
  • Had to publicly deny his ideas

4
Copernicus
  • Heliocentric Theory
  • Sun is the center of the universe
  • Planets revolve around the Sun

5
Newton
  • Used math to prove the ideas of Copernicus and
    Galileo
  • Called the force gravity, or that all objects
    fall towards Earth
  • Said all of nature follows laws

6
Descartes
  • Believed in the power of human reason

7
Francis Bacon and the Scientific Method
  • The scientific method
  • Observation and experimentation
  • Testable hypothesis

Sir Francis Bacon
8
Question
  • Do you exist to provide for the government, or
    does the government exist to provide for you?

9
Definitions
  • What are natural/ unalienable rights?
  • What are natural laws?
  • What is a philosopher?

10
Scientific Revolution influences the Enlightenment
  • Use of reason
  • natural laws govern human behavior
  • Apply the scientific method to solving the
    problems of society
  • The Enlightenment rejected traditional ideas and
    supported a belief in human reason

11
What Was the Enlightenment?
  • The Enlightenment was an intellectual movement
    in Europe during the 18th century that led to a
    whole new world view. New theories about
    government, philosophy, economics and religion.

12
Enlightenment Principles
  • Religion, tradition, and superstition limited
    independent thought
  • Accept knowledge based on observation, logic, and
    reason, not on faith
  • Scientific and academic thought should be secular

A meeting of French Enlightenment thinkers
13
  • According to the 18th- century philosopher
    Immanuel Kant, the motto of the Enlightenment
    was Sapere aude! Have courage to use your own
    intelligence! (Kant, What Is Enlightenment?
    1784)

Immanuel Kant
14
Thomas Hobbes (15881679)
  • People are cruel greedy and selfish
  • If not strictly controlled they would fight, rob
    and oppose each other
  • The state of nature is cruel
  • The Leviathan publication

15
John Locke
  • More optimistic view of human nature
  • All people had natural or unalienable rights
  • The rights of life, liberty and property
  • Govts power should be limited
  • Should protect natural rights/ if not had a right
    to rebel
  • Two Treaties of Versailles
  • Influenced the Declaration of Independence and
    the US Constitution

16
Voltaire (16941778)
  • Championed social, political, and religious
    tolerance
  • Freedom of speech, freedom of religion,
    toleration, use of reason
  • I do not agree with a word you say but I will
    defend to the death your right to say it
  • His ideas found In the US Constitution except the
    abolition of slavery.

17
Baron de Montesquieu
  • Separation of Powers
  • Three branches of govt
  • Legislative, judicial, and executive branches
  • System of checks and balances/each branch will
    keep the other from getting too powerful
  • US Constitution
  • Separation of powers would prevent tyranny
  • Power Should be a check to Power

18
The U.S. Constitution
  • Separation of powers
  • Checks and balances
  • Bill of Rights

Painting depicting the Constitutional Convention
19
Jean Jacques Rousseau
  • Man is born free and everywhere he is in chains
  • Civilization corrupted mans natural goodness/
  • General will of the people creates a
    society/direct democracy
  • Wrote the Social Contract
  • Majority should work for the common good

20
Impact of the Enlightenment
  • People have confidence that human reason can
    solve social problems
  • A more secular outlook emerges as scientific
    thinking replaces superstition, fear and
    intolerance
  • The individual becomes more important as people
    use their own ability to reason and judge

21
Impact of the Enlightenment
  • Governments and the Church did not like the ideas
    of the Enlightenment and many books were burned
    and scholars tortured and killed
  • Influenced the American, French , and Latin
    American Revolutions.
  • Influenced the writing of the Declaration of
    Independence, the US Constitution, and The French
    Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
  • Political impacts such as the Separation of
    Powers and Enlightened Despots, or rulers who
    believed in Enlightenment ideals

22
Enlightened Monarchs
  • Most of Europe ruled by absolute monarchs
  • Receptive to Enlightenment ideas
  • Instituted new laws and practices
  • Enlightened Monarchs
  • Frederick II, Prussia
  • Catherine the Great, Russia
  • Maria Theresa, Austria
  • Joseph II, Holy Roman Empire
  • Gustav III, Sweden
  • Napoleon I, France

23
Enlightened Despots
  • Some monarchs accepted Enlightenment ideas. They
    were known as Enlightened Despots.
  • Maria Theresa of Austria improved the tax
    system/ Tax the clergy and the nobles/ made
    primary education available in her kingdom.
  • Joseph II practiced religious toleration, ended
    censorship and abolished serfdom.
  • Catherine the Great asked the nobles for advice,
    freed some of the peasants, built schools, and
    hospitals. Practiced religious toleration and
    promoted education for women.
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