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The Age of European Enlightenment

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Title: The Age of European Enlightenment


1
21
The Age of European Enlightenment
2
The Age of European Enlightenment
  • The Scientific Revolution
  • The Enlightenment
  • The Enlightenment and Religion
  • The Enlightenment and Society
  • Enlightened Absolutism

3
Enlightenment Salon
4
Introduction
  • Scientific Revolution
  • Transformed every part of the world
  • Impact of science on every area of life remains a
    dominant theme
  • Eagerness to embrace scientific change is one of
    the primary intellectual inheritances from that
    age

5
Introduction (contd)
  • Movement fostered by the Enlightenment
  • Confidence in reason, over tradition and religion
  • Innovation and improvement

6
Global PerspectiveThe European Enlightenment
  • How did Enlightenment values as well as
    Enlightenment admiration of science become one of
    the chief defining qualities of societies
    regarded as advanced, progressive, and modern?
  • How has the political thought of the
    Enlightenment influenced the development of
    modern political philosophies and modern
    governments?

7
Global PerspectiveThe European Enlightenment
(cont'd)
  • How could modes of thought developed to criticize
    various aspects of eighteenth-century European
    society be transferred to other traditions of
    world civilizations?

8
The Scientific Revolution
9
Scientific Revolution
  • A new view of the universe in 1500s, 1600s
  • Not everything actually new
  • Reexamined and rethought older knowledge and made
    new discoveries
  • Slow-moving, complex movement
  • Brilliant people suggested erroneous as well as
    useful ideas

10
Scientific Revolution (contd)
  • Limited to a few hundred people
  • Authority and application of scientific knowledge
  • Comes to define modern Western civilization
  • Achievements in many areas
  • Astronomy most captures attention

11
Ptolemaic system
  • Standard explanation of the place of the Earth in
    the heavens
  • Combination of mathematical astronomy of Ptolemy
    (Almagest, 150 C.E.) with the physical cosmology
    of Aristotle

12
Ptolemaic System (contd)
  • Geocentricism
  • Earth as center of universe
  • System of concentric spheres
  • Outer region was realm of God and angels
  • Numerous problems
  • Planets appeared to move backward
  • Ptolemy presented epicycles as the solution

13
The Ptolemaic System
14
Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543)
  • Polish astronomer
  • On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres
  • Challenged Ptolemaic universe
  • Ptolemaic ideas (i.e., epicycles) applied to
    heliocentric universe
  • Earth moved about sun in a circle

15
Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) (contd)
  • System no more accurate
  • A way of confronting some difficulties in
    Ptolemaic astronomy
  • Allowed people to think in new directions

16
Tycho Brahe (1546-1601)
  • Danish astronomer
  • Spent most of life opposing Copernicus
  • Suggested that moon and sun revolved around the
    Earth
  • Other planets revolved around sun
  • Astronomical observations with the naked eye
  • Constructed most accurate tables of observations

17
Tycho Brahe
18
Johannes Kepler (1571-1630)
  • German astronomer
  • Influenced by Renaissance Neo-Platonists
  • Kepler believed that to keep sun at center the
    concept of circular orbits had to be abandoned
  • Proposed that orbits had to be elliptical
  • Used Copernicuss sun-centered universe and
    Brahes empirical data

19
Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) (contd)
  • On the Motion of Mars (1609)
  • New problem Why were planetary orbits
    elliptical?

20
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)
  • Turned a telescope to the sky
  • Mountains on the moon
  • Spots moving across the sun
  • Moons orbiting Jupiter
  • Heavens far more complex than anyone knew
  • Concept of a universe totally subject to
    mathematical laws

21
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) (contd)
  • Dialogues on the Two Chief Systems of the World
  • Supported the Copernican system
  • Condemned by Catholic church

22
Francis Bacon (1561-1626)
  • Father of empiricism and experimentation
  • Novum Organum (1620), New Atlantis (1627)?
  • Attacked scholastic belief that knowledge was
    already discovered and only required explanation
  • Urged contemporaries to strike out on their own
    in search of new understandings of science

23
Francis Bacon (1561-1626) (contd)
  • Desirability of innovation and change
  • Human knowledge should produce useful results
  • Science had a practical purpose and the goal was
    human improvement
  • No major scientific contributions, simply
    directed people to new method and new purpose

24
Isaac Newton (1642-1727)
  • Addressed question of planetary motion
  • Basis for physics for 200 years
  • The Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy
    (Principia Mathematica)
  • Gravity physical objects moved through mutual
    attraction
  • Explained how planets moved in an orderly manner
  • Proved relationship mathematically

25
Isaac Newton (1642-1727) (contd)
  • Upheld importance of empirical data, observation
  • Observe before attempting to explain
  • Mathematic application to scientific investigation

26
Newtons Telescope
27
Women and the Scientific Revolution
  • General absence of women
  • Universities and monasteries institutions of
    celibate male clerical culture
  • Women got few opportunities
  • Generally through marriage or social standing
  • Noblewomen and women from artisan class

28
Women and the Scientific Revolution (contd)
  • Margaret Cavendish (1632-1673)
  • Observations Upon Experimental Philosophy (1666)
    and Grounds of Natural Philosophy (1668)
  • Only woman to attend Royal Society meeting
  • Criticized the Society for focusing on novel
    scientific instruments rather than solving
    practical problems

29
Women and Learning
30
Women of the Artisan Milieu
  • Artisan women had greater freedom
  • Astronomy was often studied under the tutelage of
    husbands or fathers in the workshop
  • Maria Cunitz book on astronomy
  • Two husband and wife astronomy teams
  • Elisabetha and Johannes Hevelius
  • Maria Winkelmann and Gottfried Kirch

31
Women of the Artisan Milieu (contd)
  • Women did acquire knowledge of science
  • Margaret Cavendish, A Description of a New World,
    Called the Blazing World (1666)
  • Designed to introduce women to science
  • The pursuit of natural knowledge was still
    considered a male vocation

32
John Locke (1632-1704)
  • Hoped to achieve for philosophy a lawful picture
    of the human mind similar to that which Newton
    had presented of nature
  • Most profound impact on European and American
    thought during eighteenth century

33
John Locke (1632-1704) (contd)
  • Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690)
  • Rejected idea of original sin
  • Knowledge derived from sense experience
  • Humans can take charge of own destiny
  • Letter Concerning Toleration (1689)
  • Each person responsible for salvation
  • Governments should not legislate on religion

34
Locke (contd)
  • Two Treatises of Government (1689)
  • Law is the voice of reason
  • Humans are equal and independent
  • People shouldnt harm one another because all
    people are images and property of God

35
Locke (contd)
  • Rulers are not absolute in their power
  • People enter political contracts with rulers
  • Rulers are empowered to judge disputes and
    preserve natural rights
  • Monarchs who broke trust could be overthrown
  • Argument used in Declaration of Independence

36
Overview
37
The Enlightenment
38
Enlightenment
  • Movement of the eighteenth century stating that
    change and reform were desirable through the
    application of reason and science

39
Enlightenment (contd)
  • Led by philosophes
  • Popularized seventeenth-century rationalism and
    scientific ideas
  • Exposed contemporary social abuses
  • Argued that reform was necessary, possible
  • Problems that they confronted included
  • Vested interests

40
Enlightenment (contd)
  • Political oppression
  • Religious condemnation
  • By mid-century they had brought enlightened ideas
    to the European public in a variety of ways

41
Voltaire (1694-1778)
  • François Marie Arouet (Voltaire)
  • Most influential of the philosophes
  • Believed that human society should be improved
  • Letters on the English (1733)
  • Praised English virtues criticized French
    society

42
Voltaire (1694-1778) (contd)
  • Elements of the Philosophy of Newton (1738)
  • Popularized the thought of Newton
  • Candide (1759)
  • Attacked war, religious persecution, and
    unwarranted optimism about the human condition
  • Reform, if achieved, might not be permanent
  • Hopeful but not certain
  • Pessimistic undercurrent

43
The Encyclopedia (1751-1772)
  • One of great monuments of Enlightenment
  • Denis Diderot (1713-1784)
  • Collective effort of more than 100 authors
  • Articles from all major French philosophes
  • Collective plea for freedom of expression
  • The most advanced critical ideas in religion,
    government, and philosophy
  • Looked to antiquity for intellectual models

44
Denis Diderot
45
The Encyclopedia (1751-1772) (contd)
  • Rather than to Christian centuries
  • Designed to secularize learning
  • Good life application of reason to relationships

46
The Encyclopedia Praises Mechanical Arts and
Artisans
47
The Encyclopedia Praises Mechanical Arts and
Artisans
48
Illustration from the Encyclopedia
49
Map 211. Subscriptions to Diderots Encyclopedia
throughout Europe
50
The Enlightenment and Religion
51
Deism
  • Philosophes
  • Religion should be reasonable
  • Should lead to moral behavior
  • Nature was rational
  • John Toland, Christianity Not Mysterious (1696)
  • Religion a rational, natural phenomenon
  • God as a divine watchmaker

52
Deism (contd)
  • Two major points
  • Belief in a rational God
  • Belief in life after death
  • Deism empirical, tolerant, reasonable

53
Toleration
  • Primary social condition was the establishment of
    religious toleration
  • Voltaire, Treatise on Toleration (1763)
  • Gotthold Lessing (1729-1781)
  • Nathan the Wise (1779)
  • Plea for toleration

54
Toleration (contd)
  • Belief that human life should not be subordinated
    to religion
  • Secular values, consideration more important

55
Chronology Major Publication Dates of the
Enlightenment
56
Islam and the Enlightenment
  • Islam seen as rival to Christianity
  • False religion and a divine Muhammad
  • Islam sometimes criticized on cultural and
    political grounds
  • Voltaire
  • Islam was simply another example of religious
    fanaticism
  • Deist John Toland
  • Islam as a form of Christianity

57
Islam and the Enlightenment (contd)
  • Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689-1762)
  • Lived in Constantinople with her husband
  • Book published posthumously praised Ottoman
    society
  • Rare voice in support of Muslim life and values
  • Muslims felt little could be learned from Europe

58
Map of Turkey and View of Constantinople
(Istanbul)?
59
The Enlightenment and Society
60
Printing Shops
61
Montesquieu (1689-1755)
  • The Spirit of the Laws (1748)
  • No single set of laws could apply to all people
    at all times and in all places
  • Good political life many variables
  • Monarchy limited by intermediary institutions
  • Including the aristocracy, towns

62
Montesquieu (1689-1755) (contd)
  • Division of power
  • Executive, legislative, judicial
  • Influence on later liberal democracies

63
Adam Smith (1723-1790)
  • Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth
    of Nations (1776)
  • Economic liberty foundation of natural economy
  • Mercantile system should be abolished
  • Best way to encourage economic growth
  • Allow people to pursue their own selfish economic
    interests
  • Resources of nature are limitless

64
Adam Smith (1723-1790) (contd)
  • Nations did not have to be poor
  • Founder of laissez-faire economic thought
  • However the state should provide schools, armies,
    roads, etc.
  • Four-stage theory justified economic and imperial
    domination

65
Rousseau (1712-1778)
  • Transcended thought and values of age
  • Antipathy toward world and society
  • Men could not achieve moral, virtuous, or sincere
    lives living according to commercial values
  • Civilization had contaminated human nature

66
Rousseau (1712-1778) (contd)
  • Questioned concepts of material and intellectual
    progress and morality
  • Said real purpose of society should be to nurture
    better people

67
Rousseau
68
Writings of Rousseau
  • Discourse on the Origin of Inequality (1755)
  • Evils blamed on uneven distribution of property

69
Writings of Rousseau (contd)
  • The Social Contract (1762)
  • All men are born free, but everywhere they are
    in chains.
  • Rousseau defended these chains, suggesting that
    society is more important than its individual
    members
  • Independent human beings can achieve little

70
Writings of Rousseau (contd)
  • The Social Contract (1762)
  • Law to be obeyed is that created by general will
    of majority who acted with adequate information
    and under virtuous customs and morals
  • People should be good even if it means being poor

71
Enlightened Critics of European Empires
  • Critics of imperialism were a minority
  • Denis Diderot, Immanuel Kant, and Johann Herder
  • Most frequent topics were the treatment of Native
    Americans and the enslavement of Africans

72
Enlightened Critics of European Empires (contd)
  • Arguments
  • No single definition of human nature should be
    made the standard throughout the world
  • Cultures should be respected and understood
  • Humans developed distinct cultures possessing
    values that cannot and should not be compared
  • Inner social and linguistic complexities make any
    comparison impossible

73
Women and the Enlightenment
  • Salons
  • Role of marquise de Pompadour important in
    opposing censorship of the Encyclopedia
  • However, philosophes not strong feminists
  • Montesquieu - traditional view of marriage
  • Diderot - few articles by women
  • Rousseau - women subordinate to men
  • separate spheres

74
Women and the Enlightenment (contd)
  • Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797)
  • A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792)

75
Enlightened Absolutism
76
Enlightened Absolutism
  • Many eighteenth-century rulers embraced reforms
    set forth by philosophes
  • Monarchical government dedicated to rational
    strengthening of central absolutism
  • Relationship between rulers and philosophes
  • Some of it purely public relations

77
Enlightened Absolutism (contd)
  • Still, these rulers wanted for their subjects
  • Better health
  • More accessible education
  • Economic prosperity
  • More rational government

78
AustriaMaria Theresa (1740-1780)
  • Habsburg ruler
  • Maintained control during War of Austrian
    Succession
  • More efficient tax system
  • Funds even from clergy and nobles
  • Central councils to deal with problems
  • Concerned with welfare of peasants
  • Extended authority of royal bureaucracy over that
    of nobilities to help the peasants

79
Austria Joseph II (1780-1790)
  • Habsburg Revolutionary Emperor
  • Increased power of central government
  • Freedom to Lutherans, Calvinists, Greek Orthodox
  • Jews gain rights of private worship
  • Josephinism Catholic church under control

80
Austria Joseph II (1780-1790) (contd)
  • Abolished legal status of serfdom
  • More freedom for peasants
  • Taxes across social lines
  • Too far and too fast

81
Russia Catherine the Great (1762-1796)
  • German princess married to Peter III
  • Peter III murdered with Catherines approval
  • Catherine familiar with Enlightenment
  • Russia must reform to be a great power

82
Catherine the Great
83
Charter of Nobility
84
Russia Catherine the Great (1762-1796) (contd)
  • Legislative Commission called in 1767
  • Catherine wrote series of Instructions
  • More than 500 delegates selected to advise on
    revising the law and government of Russia
  • Gathered information but dismissed before they
    made any revisions
  • Still firmly tied to absolutism
  • Continued expansion
  • Drive for warm water ports

85
Map 212. Expansion of Russia
86
Partition of Poland
  • Prussia, Russia, and Austria carve up Poland
  • First Partition, 1772
  • Second Partition, 1793
  • Third Partition, 1795
  • Poland disappears until after World War I

87
Partition of Poland (contd)
  • Representative of the power of the evolving
    states of Prussia, Russia, and Austria in Eastern
    Europe
  • Weakness of the antiquated Poland

88
Review Questions
  1. What was the Scientific Revolution? What were the
    major contributions of Copernicus, Brahe, Kepler,
    Galileo, Bacon, and Newton? Do you think they
    regarded themselves as revolutionaries?

89
Review Questions
  1. How and to what extent did women participate in
    the Scientific Revolution?

90
Review Questions
  1. Define the Enlightenment. Is it best seen as a
    single movement or as a series of related
    movements? What was the relationship of the
    Enlightenment to the New Science? How did the
    Enlightenment further the idea of progress and
    the superiority of European civilization?

91
Review Questions
  1. Why did the philosophes believe they must comment
    so extensively on religion? Why did they
    criticize Christianity? Why did some of them
    champion deism?

92
Review Questions
  1. What were the differing views of the philosophes
    toward Islam?

93
Review Questions
  1. Was there a single Enlightenment view of
    politics? Why could writers so dedicated to
    reform have so many different political paths to
    achieve reform?

94
Review Questions
  1. How has the political thought of the
    Enlightenment influenced the development of
    modern political philosophies and modern
    governments?

95
Review Questions
  1. Summarize the Enlightenment critique of European
    empires. Do you see any flaws in this line of
    reasoning? Why do you think it was not more
    influential?

96
Review Questions
  • What were the prevailing attitudes of the
  • philosophes toward women and womens roles? Do
    these attitudes present any contradiction to
    other Enlightenment positions? Explain.

97
Review Questions
  1. Define enlightened absolutism. What were the
    similarities in the policies of Frederick the
    Great, Joseph II, and Catherine the Great? To
    what extent do their policies actually seem to
    stem from the ideas of the Enlightenment
    philosophes?
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