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The Enlightenment in Europe

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The Enlightenment in Europe Chapter 22, Section 2 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Enlightenment in Europe


1
The Enlightenment in Europe
  • Chapter 22, Section 2

2
Two Views on Government
  • Scientific Revolution spurs reassessment of many
    prevailing ideas
  • Europeans seek insights into society in the 1600s
    and 1700s
  • Leads to Enlightenment a movement stressing
    reason and thought

3
Hobbes Social Contract
  • Hobbes distrusts humans, favors strong government
    to keep order
  • Promotes social contract-getting order by giving
    power to monarch

4
Lockes Natural Rights
  • Philosopher John Locke says government gets power
    from the people
  • Stresses that people have a right to overthrow an
    unjust government

5
The Philosophes Advocate Reason
  • Beliefs of the Philosophes
  • The philosophes are French social critics in the
    mid- 1700s
  • Value reason, nature, happiness, progress, liberty

6
Voltaire Combats Intolerance
  • Voltaire influential philosophe, pen name of
    Francois Marie Arouet
  • Publishes many works arguing for tolerance,
    reason
  • Makes powerful enemies and is imprisoned twice
    for his views

7
Voltaire
  • Wrote more than 70 books of political essays,
    philosophy, and drama.
  • Used satire against his enemies, especially the
    clergy.
  • Beliefs
  • Tolerance
  • Reason
  • Freedom of religious belief
  • Freedom of speech
  • I do not agree with a word you say but will
    defend to the death your right to say it.

8
Montesquieu and the Separation of Powers
  • French writer who admires Britains government
    system
  • Favors separation of powers to keep one body from
    running government

9
Montesqieu
  • Believed Britain was the best-governed and most
    politically balanced country of his own day.
  • Proposed the separation of powers between
    executive, legislative, and judicial branches of
    government.
  • Proposed checks and balances.

10
Rousseau Champion of Freedom
  • Philosophe who favors individual freedom, direct
    democracy
  • Views social contract as agreement by free people
    to form government

11
Beccaria Promotes Criminal Justice
  • Italian philosopher Cesare Beccaria works to
    reform justice system
  • Calls for speedy trials, greater rights for
    criminal defendants

12
Cesare Bonesana Beccaria
  • Beliefs
  • Laws existed to preserve social order, not avenge
    crime.
  • Accused should receive speedy trials.
  • Torture should never be used.
  • Degree of punishment should match seriousness of
    crime.
  • Capital punishment (death penalty) should be
    abolished.

13
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14
Women and the Enlightenment
  • View on Womens Education Change
  • Many Enlightenment thinkers take traditional view
    of womens role
  • Prominent writer Mary Wollstonecraft urges
    greater rights for women
  • Argues women need quality education to be
    virtuous and useful
  • Urges women to go into traditionally professions
    like politics
  • Some wealthy women use their status to promote
    Enlightenment ideas

15
Legacy of the Enlightenment
  • Role of the Philosophes
  • The philosophes are not activists, but inspire
    major revolutions
  • Belief in Progress
  • Scientific breakthroughs show human capacity to
    improve society

16
  • A More Secular Outlook
  • New knowledge of the world leads people to
    question religious ideas
  • Voltaire and others criticize beliefs and
    practices of Christianity
  • Importance of the Individual
  • People place more emphasis on individual rights,
    abilities
  • Reason becomes a central concept for
    philosophers, rulers

17
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18
Mary Wollstonecraft
  • Women should be equally educated along with men.
  • Women should enter professions traditionally
    dominated by men like medicine and politics.
  • Wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

19
Mary Shelley
  • Daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft.
  • Mistress and later wife of poet Percy Bysshe
    Shelley.
  • Author of Frankenstein in the summer of 1816,
    Later published in 1818.

20
Frivolous But Interesting Information
21
Climate and the writing of Frankenstein
  • April 1815, Mount Tambora on the island of
    Sumbawa, Indonesia erupts. This was the worlds
    largest eruption in 1,600 years. (7 on the
    Volcanic Explosivity Index)

22
Climate and the writing of Frankenstein
(continued)
  • Immense amounts of volcanic dust ejected into the
    atmosphere.
  • In the summer of 1816 temperatures in northern
    Europe, Canada, and the northeastern United
    States were at record lows. Crop failures
    occurred when a May frost destroyed crops already
    planted.
  • 1816 has since been called The Year Without a
    Summer.

23
Climate and the writing of Frankenstein
(continued)
  • Effects of this volcanic winter throughout the
    world
  • Westward migration from the colder New England
    states in the United States in search of the
    richer soil of the upper Midwest
  • Food shortages, rioting and looting of food
    stores in Europe which was also recovering from
    the effects of the Napoleonic Wars
  • Storms and abnormal rainfall in Europe causing
    massive flooding of rivers
  • Unusually low temperatures, including summer
    snowfall in China causing famine
  • Brown and red snow falling in Hungary and Italy
    from the presence of volcanic ash in the
    atmosphere

24
Climate and the writing of Frankenstein
(continued)
  • Inventions sparked by this volcanic winter
  • Velocipede (now called bicycles) invented because
    of a lack of grain to feed horses
  • Chemist Justus von Liebig, who experience this
    famine as a child, researched and introduced
    chemical fertilizers into agriculture.

25
Climate and the writing of Frankenstein
(continued)
  • The Shelleys (Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin calling
    herself Mary Shelley though she is not yet
    married to Percy) spend the summer with Lord
    Byron at his villa by Lake Geneva in Switzerland.
  • The weather being too cold to carry out normal
    summer activities, the group reside indoors
    staying up all night in intellectual discussions.
    They often sit around the fire reading German
    ghost stories.

Illustration from the 1831 edition.
26
Climate and the writing of Frankenstein
(continued)
  • Lord Byron suggests that to entertain themselves
    indoors each of them write his or her own
    supernatural tale.
  • During this time Mary Godwin conceived of the
    idea for Frankenstein.
  • Therefore, being shut in due to the weather
    caused by a volcanic winter brought about the
    occasion of the writing of this famous novel.

Boris Karloff as the Monster in 1931.
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