Title: Enlightenment (Age of Reason)
1Enlightenment (Age of Reason)
- The 18th century philosophical movement of
intellectuals who were greatly impressed with the
achievements of the Scientific Revolution. - This movement occurred in Europe from about 1650
until 1800 and it advocated the use of reason and
individualism instead of tradition and
established doctrine.
2Issac Newton (1642-1727)
- English mathematician and physicist who is
remembered for developing calculus, the law of
gravitation, and his three laws of motion.
Isaac Newton
3Issac Newton (1642-1727)
- Co-inventor of calculus. Discovered the law of
Universal Gravitation. Newton's 3 laws of motion.
Corpuscular theory of light. Law of cooling.
Professor, Theologian, Alchemist, Warden of the
Mint. Newton was a premature child and was very
small at birth. His father had died before
Newton's birth, and, when he was 3 years old, his
mother remarried and left him in the care of his
grandmother. He was somewhat sickly as a child,
and since he could not join the other children in
games he kept himself amused by building
mechanical toys such as wooden clocks and
sundials and a mouse-powered flour mill. He read
a great deal and kept a journal of observations.
Newton began his schooling in the village schools
and later was sent to Grantham Grammar School
where he became the top boy in the school. At
Grantham he lodged with the local apothecary and
eventually became engaged to the apothecary's
stepdaughter, Miss Storey, before he went off to
Cambridge University at the age of 19. But Newton
became engrossed in his studies, the romance
cooled and Miss Storey married someone else. It
is said he kept a warm memory of this love, but
Newton had no other recorded 'sweethearts' and
never married. In 1661, Newton entered Trinity
College, Cambridge as a student who earned his
expenses by doing menial work. Not much is known
of his college days, but his account book seems
normal enough -- it mentions several tavern bills
and two losses at cards. He received his B.A.
degree in 1664, the year that the bubonic plague
was sweeping Europe. The colleges closed for what
turned out to be two years, so Newton returned to
Woolsthorpe to think. Up until then Newton had
been somewhat precocious and had been a
successful student, but he had done nothing
really outstanding. Now things started to happen.
His two years at Woolsthorpe represent the
greatest recorded achievement of a human
intellect in a short period. In these two years,
this 'kid' extended the binomial theorem,
invented calculus, discovered the law of
universal gravitation and had enough time left
over to experimentally prove that white light is
composed of all colors. Then he had his 25th
birthday. If Newton had communicated these
results and then died, his reputation would be
almost a great as it is today. He lived for
another 60 years and made a few additional
contributions to the pool of knowledge, but, at
most, these later results would have earned him a
footnote in history. In two years he invented the
calculus which would quickly grow into the
largest and most important field in mathematics
and which would first have a tremendous impact on
physics and astronomy and more recently on fields
of biology, economics, business and even
political science. At the same time he discovered
the law of universal gravitation which explains,
on a large scale, how the universe operates.
When the plague subsided and the schools reopened
in 1667, Newton returned to Trinity College as a
Fellow (professor), and 2 years later Dr. Isaac
Barrow, Newton's teacher, resigned so Newton
could become Lucasian Professor of Mathematics.
He was now 26, and from here on it was mostly
downhill, at least intellectually. Newton
lectured on optics and calculus and physics he
built telescopes and observed Jupiter's moons,
and calculated orbits. But these areas became
secondary interests. His heart was really in
alchemy ("lead into gold," the forerunner of
chemistry) and theology and the spiritual
universe. He attempted to reconcile the dates of
the Old Testament with historical dates, became
very involved with astrology and attempted to
contact departed "souls." In hindsight, it is
easy to dismiss all of this as nonsense, but
these were serious attempts of a serious man to
understand the entire universe. It is
unfortunate, however, that Newton devoted so
little of the rest of his life to mathematics and
physics. The few times he did return to these
areas, he proved that he had not lost his genius.
Newton's great discoveries in physics were
finally published in 1687 as Philosophiae
Naturalis Principia Mathematica (usually just
called the Principia). By the late 1690s, the
followers of Newton and Leibniz were involved in
very heated nationalistic arguments over priority
in the invention of calculus, and these arguments
raged for over a century. Mostly, Newton and
Leibniz remained above the squabbling, and the
consensus is that each made the discoveries
independently. Newton was the first to make the
discoveries but he waited 20 years to publish
them. Leibniz did not delay as long and published
his results first. As a result of this squabble,
British mathematicians ignored the fruitful
developments in mathematics on the continent and
stagnated for almost a century. In developing
the calculus, Newton used the method of
"fluxions" (from the Latin "flow") functions
flowed and he considered their "rate of flow." He
routinely dealt with "infinitesimal" (infinitely
small quantities) and used dots above the
variable functions to denote derivatives. The
notations we use in calculus are primarily due to
the other inventor of calculus, Leibniz. Newton
and Leibniz both used an intuitive idea of
"limit," but neither seemed to have a precise
definition of it. Newton served in Parliament
twice. He was elected President of the Royal
Society and held that position for 24 years. In
1696 he was appointed Warden of the Mint and put
in charge of the system of coinage in the British
Empire. In 1705 he was knighted by Queen Anne.
Except for a few periods of severe insomnia and a
persecution mania (perhaps due to overwork or
mercury poisoning from his work at the Mint),
Newton's health was excellent until the last 3
years of his life. He died in his sleep at the
age of 85, and was buried with full national
honors in West Minster Abbey.
4Principia (1687)
- Book written by Issac Newton in which he laid out
in mathematical terms the principles of time,
force, and motion that have guided the
development of modern physical science.
5John Locke (1632-1704)
- English philosopher who used the ideas of natural
laws as it applied to government. - He stated people were reasonable and moral, and
that they would arrive at a cooperative and
workable form of government. - He also argued that people were molded by the
experiences that came through their senses form
the surrounding world.
John Locke
6John Locke (1632-1704)
- John Locke was born in Wrington in Somerset
County. He attended Oxford University. In 1666,
he met Anthony Ashley Cooper, who later became
the first Earl of Shaftesbury. The two men
became close friends. In 1679, the earl became
involved in plots against the king, and suspicion
also fell on Locke. The philosopher decided to
leave England. In 1683, he moved to the
Netherlands, where he met Prince William and
Princess Mary of Orange. William and Mary became
the rulers of England in 1689, and Locke returned
to England as a court favorite. Until his death,
he wrote widely on such subjects as educational
reform, freedom of the press, and religious
tolerance. - Locke's major work was An Essay Concerning Human
Understanding (1690). It describes his theory of
how the mind functions in learning about the
world. Locke argued against the doctrine of
innate ideas, which stated that ideas were part
of the mind at birth and not learned or acquired
later from outside sources. Locke claimed that
all ideas were placed in the mind by experience.
He declared that there were two kinds of
experience, outer and inner. Outer experience
was acquired through the senses of sight, taste,
hearing, smell, and touch, which provide
information about the external world. Inner
experience was acquired by thinking about the
mental processes involved in sifting these data,
which furnished information about the mind.
Locke believed that the universe contained three
kinds of things--minds, various types of bodies,
and God. Bodies had two kinds of properties.
One kind was mathematically measurable, such as
length and weight, and existed in the bodies
themselves. The second kind was qualitative,
such as sound and color. These properties were
not in the bodies themselves but were simply
powers that bodies had to produce ideas of colors
and sounds in the mind. According to Locke, a
good life was a life of pleasure. Pleasure and
pain were simple ideas that accompanied nearly
all human experiences. Ethical action involved
determining which act in a given situation would
produce the greatest pleasure--and then
performing that act. Locke also believed that
God had established divine law. This law could
be discovered by reason, and to disobey it was
morally wrong. Locke thought that divine law and
the pleasure principle were compatible. Locke
believed that people by nature had certain rights
and duties. These rights included liberty, life,
and ownership of property. By liberty, Locke
meant political equality. The task of any state
was to protect people's rights. States
inconvenience people in various ways. Therefore,
the justification for a state's existence had to
be found in its ability to protect human rights
better than individuals could on their own.
Locke declared that if a government did not
adequately protect the rights of its citizens,
they had the right to find other rulers.
7An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690)
- Book written by John Locke which describes his
theory of how the mind functions in learning
about the world. - Locke argued against the doctrine of innate
ideas, which stated that ideas were part of the
mind at birth and not learned or acquired later
from outside sources. Locke claimed that all
ideas were placed in the mind by experience.
8Two Treaties of Government (1690)
- Book written by John Locke where he believed that
people by nature had certain rights and duties. - These rights included liberty, life, and
ownership of property. By liberty, Locke meant
political equality. The task of any state was to
protect people's rights. States inconvenience
people in various ways. Therefore, the
justification for a state's existence had to be
found in its ability to protect human rights
better than individuals could on their own.
Locke declared that if a government did not
adequately protect the rights of its citizens,
they had the right to find other rulers.
9Philosophe
- French for philosopher it applied to all
intellectuals like writers, journalists,
economists, and social reformers, during the
Enlightenment.
10Philosophe
- The philosophes were a group of French
philosophers during the Age of Reason, a
historical period that extended from the late
1600's to the late 1700's. The group included
such great philosophers as the Marquis de
Condorcet, Denis Diderot, Claude Helvetius,
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Voltaire. Generally,
the philosophes believed in the ideal of
progress. They wished to apply science's
emphasis on reason to the study of people's moral
and social life. The philosophes believed that
knowledge could be acquired through experience.
They wanted to separate moral doctrines from
religious considerations, because they believed
that moral problems could be solved
independently. The philosophes were generally
anti-Christian, claiming that Christianity was
basically unreasonable and superstitious.
Generally, they opposed the political system in
France and argued for reforms. Thus, they became
forerunners of, and in some cases participants
in, the French Revolution--which lasted from 1789
to 1799.
11Baron de Montesquieu (Charles-Louis de Secondat)
(1689-1755)
- He used the scientific method to find the natural
laws that govern the social and political
relationships of human beings. - He identified three types of government and wrote
about the separation of powers. His analysis of
the system of checks and balances through
separation of powers was his most lasting
contribution to political thought. - The translation of Montesquieus work into
English made it available to American
philosophes, which took his principles and worked
them into the Untied States Constitution.
12Baron de Montesquieu (Charles-Louis de Secondat)
(1689-1755)
- Montesquieu believed that laws underlie all
things--human, natural, and divine. One of
philosophy's major tasks was to discover these
laws. It was difficult to study humanity because
the laws governing human nature were complex.
Yet Montesquieu believed these laws could be
found by empirical (experimental) methods of
investigation (see EMPIRICISM). Knowledge of the
laws would ease the ills of society and improve
life. Montesquieu said there were three basic
types of government--monarchal, republican, and
despotic. A monarchal government had limited
power placed in a king or queen. A republican
government was either an aristocracy or a
democracy. In an aristocracy, only a few had
power. In a democracy, all had it. A despotic
government was controlled by a tyrant, who had
absolute authority. Montesquieu believed legal
systems should vary according to the basic type
of government. Montesquieu supported human
freedom and opposed tyranny. He believed that
political liberty involved separating the
legislative, executive, and judicial powers of
government. He believed that liberty and respect
for properly constituted law could exist
together. Montesquieu, whose real name was
Charles de Secondat, was born near Bordeaux. He
inherited the title Baron de la Brede et de
Montesquieu. He gained fame with his Persian
Letters (1721), which ridiculed Parisian life and
many French institutions. He also criticized the
church and national governments of France.
Montesquieu was admitted to the French Academy in
1727. He lived in England from 1729 to 1731 and
came to admire the British political system.
13The Spirit of the Laws (1748)
- The major work written by Baron de Montesquieu.
Baron de Montesquieu
14Voltaire (Francois-Marie Arouet) (1694-1778)
- An author and philosopher who is known as the
greatest figure of the Englightenment, and the
best known of the philosophes. - He was a defender of free speech and wrote books
and essays that were satires. - I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend
to the death your right to say it.
Voltaire
15Voltaire (Francois-Marie Arouet) (1694-1778)
- Voltaire was the pen name of Francois Marie
Arouet, a French author and philosopher.
Voltaire's clear style, sparkling wit, keen
intelligence, and strong sense of justice made
him one of France's most famous writers. Candide
(1759), Voltaire's best-known work, is a
brilliant philosophical tale that has been
translated into more than 100 languages. On the
surface, the work describes the adventures of an
inexperienced young man as he wanders around the
world. Philosophically, Candide is recognized as
a complex inquiry into the nature of good and
evil. Voltaire, the son of a lawyer, was born in
Paris. He received an excellent education at a
Jesuit school. He showed little inclination to
study law, and his schooling ended at the age of
16. He soon joined a group of sophisticated
aristocrats who had little reverence for anything
except wit, pleasure, and literary talent. Paris
society sought Voltaire's company because of his
cleverness, his remarkable ability to write
verses, and his gift for making people laugh.
There are several theories about the origin of
Voltaire's pen name, which he adopted in 1718.
The most widely accepted one is that Voltaire
comes from an imperfect arrangement of the
letters making up the French equivalent of Arouet
the Younger. - In 1717, Voltaire was imprisoned in the Bastille
for satirical verses that he may or may not have
written ridiculing the government. During his 11
months in prison, he finished his tragedy Oedipe.
The success of the play in 1718 made Voltaire
the greatest French playwright of his time. He
maintained this reputation--with more than 50
plays--for the rest of his life. While in
prison, Voltaire also worked on La Henriade, an
epic poem about King Henry IV. This poem, written
in the style of the Aeneid by the Roman poet
Virgil, was published in 1723. Voltaire became
independently wealthy in his early 30's through
an inheritance and wise investments. He was also
a celebrity who had three plays performed in 1725
to help celebrate the wedding of King Louis XV.
Royal pensions and other honors followed. But
all this success ended abruptly in 1726 when the
Chevalier de Rohan, a powerful young nobleman,
scornfully asked "What is your name anyway?
Monsieur de Voltaire or Monsieur Arouet?" His
question implied that Voltaire was claiming to be
a nobleman while he was in fact of common origin.
Voltaire supposedly replied that whatever his
name was, he was bringing it honor, which was
more than Rohan could say for himself. This
answer cost Voltaire a beating by Rohan's men.
Challenged to a duel by Voltaire, Rohan had him
thrown into the Bastille again. A few days
later, Voltaire was allowed to choose between
continued imprisonment and exile. Exile and
return to France. Voltaire chose exile. From
1726 to 1729, he lived in England, for him a land
of political and religious freedom. There, he
met the writers Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift
and was attracted to the ideas of the philosopher
John Locke and the scientist Sir Isaac Newton.
It has been said that Voltaire went into exile a
poet and came back a philosopher. - Voltaire returned to France in 1729, and
published several works. The most important ones
were History of Charles XII (1731) and his
best-known play, Zaire (1732). In 1733, his
Letters Concerning the English Nation appeared in
England. This book appeared in France the next
year in an unauthorized edition called
Philosophical Letters. Voltaire's praise of
English customs, institutions, and style of
thought was an indirect criticism of their French
counterparts. French authorities condemned the
book, and Voltaire fled from Paris. Voltaire
found a home with the Marquise du Chatelet, one
of the most cultured and intelligent women of the
day. From 1734 to 1749, he lived in her chateau
at Cirey in Lorraine. During this period, he
wrote several plays, an essay on metaphysics, two
works on Sir Isaac Newton, and some poetry. He
also wrote two notable philosophical tales. One
of them, Zadig (1747), explores the problem of
human destiny. The other, Micromegas, was
started at Cirey and was published in 1752. In
it, Voltaire used giant visitors from a distant
star and from the planet Saturn to discuss the
relative insignificance of human pretensions in
answering religious questions. In this work,
Voltaire also encouraged the use of human reason
for the development of science. - Following Madame du Chatelet's death in 1749,
Voltaire accepted the invitation of Frederick the
Great to settle in Berlin. After three years of
living under the social and intellectual tyranny
of the "Philosopher King," as Voltaire called
him, Voltaire settled in Switzerland. He lived
near Geneva in a chateau that he named Les
Delices (The Delights). It is now the Voltaire
Institute and Museum. A severe earthquake in
Portugal in 1755 inspired Voltaire to write an
important philosophical poem, The Lisbon
Disaster. This work was published with his Poem
on Natural Law in 1756. In 1759, Voltaire
purchased an estate called Ferney on the
French-Swiss border. He lived there until just
before his death. In an effort to correct the
wrongs he saw in the world, Voltaire produced a
constant flow of books, plays, pamphlets, and
letters. Ferney soon became the intellectual
capital of Europe. There Voltaire wrote Candide,
added to his Philosophical Dictionary, and
completed his Universal History, also called
Essay on the Manners and Spirit of Nations
(1759-1766). He fought religious intolerance and
aided victims of religious persecution. His
rallying cry was "ecrasez l'infame" ("Crush the
evil thing"), referring to religious
superstition. Voltaire returned to Paris at the
age of 83 and was enthusiastically received.
There he saw his last play, Irene (1778), warmly
applauded. But the excitement of the trip was
too much for him, and he died in Paris. The
Roman Catholic Church, because of much criticism
by Voltaire, refused to allow him to be buried in
church ground. However, his body was finally
taken to an abbey in Champagne. In 1791,
Voltaire's remains were transferred to the
Pantheon in Paris, where many of France's
greatest are buried.
16Candide (1759)
- Voltaire's best-known work. It is a brilliant
philosophical tale that has been translated into
more than 100 languages. - On the surface, the work describes the adventures
of an inexperienced young man as he wanders
around the world. - Philosophically, Candide is recognized as a
complex inquiry into the nature of good and evil.
17Denis Diderot (1713-1784)
- A writer and author whose most famous work
Encyclopedia (1751-1772) reflected the
intellectual movement during the Age of Reason
(Enlightenment).
Denis Diderot
18Denis Diderot (1713-1784)
- Diderot strongly supported experimental methods
in philosophy and science. He believed that
nature was in a state of constant change and no
permanently adequate interpretation of it was
possible. Diderot was also a philosophical
materialist, believing that thought developed
from the movements and changes of matter. His
views on this subject were vague, as were his
religious opinions. At one time, he was an
atheist. At another time, Diderot was a deist,
believing that God existed independently of the
world and had no interest in it. But he later
suggested that all of nature was God. Diderot
was born in Langres, near Chaumont.
19Encyclopedia (1751-1772)
- The 28 volume work of Denis Diderot that helped
to spread Enlightenment ideas throughout Europe.
It included all known information about the
sciences, technology, history, government, and
politics. It also included a number of Diderots
revolutionary opinions.
20Adam Smith (1723-1790)
- A Scottish economist who is known as the Father
of Modern Economics. - He believed that the state should not interfere
in economic matters. - He developed laissez-faire economic theory.
Adam Smith
21Adam Smith (1723-1790)
- Adam Smith is generally regarded as the founder
of modern economics. Smith's major book was The
Wealth of Nations (1776)(full title An Inquiry
into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of
Nations). It was the first complete work on
political economy. The book discusses the
relationship between freedom and order, analyzes
economic processes, and attacks the British
mercantile system's limits on free trade. All
three aspects are woven together to create a
unified social theory. The book dealt with the
basic problem of how social order and human
progress can be possible in a society where
individuals follow their own self-interests.
Smith argued that this individualism led to order
and progress. In order to make money, people
produce things that other people are willing to
buy. Buyers spend money for those things that
they need or want most. When buyers and sellers
meet in the market, a pattern of production
develops that results in social harmony. Smith
said that all this would happen without any
conscious control or direction, "as if by an
invisible hand." Smith also believed that
labor--not land or money--was both the source and
the final measure of value. He said that wages
depended on the basic needs of workers, and rent
on the productivity of land. Profits, he said,
were the difference between selling prices and
the cost of labor and rent. Smith said profits
would be used to expand production. This
expansion would in turn create more jobs, and the
national income would grow. Smith believed that
free trade and a self-regulating economy would
result in social progress. He criticized the
British government's tariffs and other limits on
individual freedom in trade. He preached that
government need only preserve law and order,
enforce justice, defend the nation, and provide
for a few social needs that could not be met
through the market. Smith's argument for a
"hands off" government policy toward business,
along with his analysis of economic forces,
formed the basic ideas of economic liberalism.
Smith was born in Kirkcaldy, Scotland. He
studied at the University of Glasgow and Oxford
University. In 1751, he became a professor at
Glasgow. He wrote The Theory of Moral Sentiment
(1759) there. This philosophical work gained
Smith an appointment in 1764 as tutor of the
young duke of Buccleuch. The tutoring took Smith
to France, where he started writing The Wealth of
Nations. When Smith returned to England in 1766,
the duke's stepfather provided Smith with a
regular income. The money enabled Smith to
retire from teaching and devote the next 10 years
of his life to writing. The Wealth of Nations
went through five editions during Smith's
lifetime. But it had little major influence on
economic policy until the early 1800's.
22The Wealth of Nations (1776)
- Book written by Adam Smith where he expressed his
ideas on laissez-faire theory and free trade.
23Cesare Beccaria (1738-1794)
- He protested the severe punishments that were
common for criminals at that time. He argued
that the only purpose of punishment should be to
prevent future crime. - Beccaria assumed that criminals had free will and
that pleasure and pain determined their actions.
He believed crime could be prevented by the
certainty and speed of punishment, rather than
its severity. - According to Beccaria, everyone who violated a
specific law should receive the same punishment,
regardless of age, sex, wealth, or social
position. In modified form, the principles of
the classical school are the basis of criminal
law today in the United States, Canada, and many
other nations.
Cesare Beccaria
24On Crimes and Punishments (1764)
- Essay written by Cesare Beccaria where he argued
that punishments should not be exercises in
brutality.
25Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)
- He represents a new generation of philosophes
that emerged in the 1760s and is the most famous
philosopher of the later Enlightenment. - He believed that emotions, as well as reason,
were important to human development. He believed
that it was institutions and society that made
people evil. He also believed that government
should get its authority from the people.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
26Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau was a French philosopher.
He was the most important writer of the Age of
Reason, a period of European history that
extended from the late 1600's to the late 1700's.
Rousseau's philosophy helped shape the political
events that led to the French Revolution. His
works have influenced education, literature, and
politics. Rousseau was born in Geneva, in what
is now Switzerland. The Rousseau family was of
French Protestant origin and had been living in
Geneva for nearly 200 years. Rousseau's mother
died as a result of giving birth to him, leaving
the infant to be raised by his quarrelsome
father. As the result of a fight in 1722,
Rousseau's father was forced to flee Geneva. The
boy's uncle then took responsibility for his
upbringing. In 1728, Rousseau ran away from
Geneva and began a life of wandering, trying and
failing at many jobs. He was continually
attracted to music. For years, Rousseau was
undecided between careers in literature or music.
Shortly after leaving Geneva, at the age of 15,
Rousseau met Louise de Warens, a well-to-do
widow. Under her influence, Rousseau joined the
Roman Catholic Church. Although he was 12 or 13
years younger than Madame de Warens, Rousseau
settled down with her near Chambery in the Duchy
of Savoy. He described the happiness of their
relationship in his famous autobiography,
Confessions (written 1765 or 1766-1770, published
in 1782, 1788). However, the relationship did
not last and Rousseau eventually left in 1740.
In 1741 or 1742, Rousseau was in Paris seeking
fame and fortune and hoping to establish himself
in a musical career. His hope lay in a new
system of musical notation that he had invented.
He presented the project to the Academy of
Sciences, but it aroused little interest. In
Paris, Rousseau became friends with the
philosophes, a group of famous writers and
philosophers of the time. He gained the
patronage of well-known financiers. Through
their sponsorship, he served in Venice as
secretary to the French ambassador in 1743 and
1744. The turning point in Rousseau's life came
in 1749, when he read about a contest sponsored
by the Academy of Dijon. The academy was
offering a prize for the best essay on the
question Whether the revival of activity in the
sciences and arts was contributing to moral
purification. As he read about the contest,
Rousseau realized the course his life would take.
He would oppose the existing social structure,
spending the rest of his life indicating new
directions for social development. Rousseau
submitted an essay to the academy. His
"Discourse on the Sciences and the Arts" (1750 or
1751) attacked the arts and sciences for
corrupting humanity. He won the prize and the
fame he had so long desired. When Rousseau
converted to Catholicism, he lost his citizenship
in Geneva. To regain his citizenship, he
reconverted to Protestantism in 1754. In 1757,
he quarreled with the philosophes, feeling they
were persecuting him. Rousseau's last works are
marked by emotional distress and guilt. They
reflect his attempt to overcome a deep sense of
inadequacy and to find an identity in a world
that seemed to have rejected him. In three
Dialogues, also called Rousseau, Judge of
Jean-Jacques (written 1772-1776, published 1782),
Rousseau tried to answer charges by his critics
and those he believed were persecuting him. His
final work was the beautiful and serene Reveries
of the Solitary Stroller (written 1776-1778,
published 1782). Rousseau also wrote poetry and
plays in both verse and prose. His musical works
include many essays on music, an influential
opera called The Village Soothsayer (1752), a
highly respected Dictionary of Music (1767), and
a collection of folk songs entitled The
Consolation of My Life's Miseries (1781). In
addition, he wrote on botany, an interest he
cherished, especially during the last years of
his life. Rousseau criticized society in several
essays. For example, in "Discourse on the Origin
and Foundations of Inequality" (1755), he
attacked society and private property as causes
of inequality and oppression. The New Heloise
(1761) is both a romantic novel and a work that
strongly criticizes the false codes of morality
Rousseau saw in society. In The Social Contract
(1762), a landmark in the history of political
science, Rousseau gave his views concerning
government and the rights of citizens. In the
novel Emile (1762),
27Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)
- Rousseau stated that children should be taught
with patience and understanding. Rousseau
recommended that the teacher appeal to the
child's interests, and discouraged strict
discipline and tiresome lessons. However, he
also felt that children's thoughts and behavior
should be controlled. Rousseau believed that
people are not social beings by nature. He
stated that people, living in a natural
condition, isolated and without language, are
kind and without motive or impulse to hurt one
another. However, once they live together in
society, people become evil. Society corrupts
individuals by bringing out their inclination
toward aggression and selfishness. Rousseau did
not advise people to return to a natural
condition. He thought that people could come
closest to the advantages of that condition in a
simple agricultural society in which desires
could be limited, sexual and egotistical drives
controlled, and energies directed toward
community life. In his writings, he outlined
institutions he believed were necessary to
establish a democracy in which all citizens would
participate. Rousseau believed that laws should
express the general will of the people. Any kind
of government could be considered legitimate,
provided that social organization was by common
consent. According to Rousseau, all forms of
government would eventually tend to decline. The
degeneration could be restrained only through the
control of moral standards and the elimination of
special interest groups. Robespierre and other
leaders of the French Revolution were influenced
by Rousseau's ideas on the state. Also, many
Socialists and some Communists have found
inspiration in His literary influence. Rousseau
foreshadowed Romanticism, a movement that
dominated the arts from the late 1700's to the
mid-1800's. In both his writings and his
personal life, Rousseau exemplified the spirit of
Romanticism by valuing feeling more than reason,
impulse and spontaneity more than
self-discipline. Rousseau introduced true and
passionate love to the French novel, popularized
descriptions of nature, and created a lyrical and
eloquent prose style. His Confessions created a
fashion for intimate autobiographies.
28Discourse on the Origins of the Inequality of
Mankind (1755)
- Essay written by Jean-Jacques Rousseau where he
argued that people formed governments and laws to
protect their private property, but the
government relationship enslaved them.
29The Social Contract (1762)
- The work, written by Jean-Jacques Rousseau, where
he presented the idea of a social contract in
which members of society agree to be governed by
the general will, which represents what is best
for society as a whole. - It is a landmark in the history of political
science Rousseau gave his views concerning
government and the rights of citizens.
30Social Contract
- The concept, proposed by Jean-Jacques Rousseau,
that an entire society agrees to be governed by
its general will, and all individuals should be
forced to abide by the general will since it
represents what is best for the entire community.
- It is an implicit agreement among people that
results in the organization of society
individual surrenders liberty in return for
protection.
31Emile (1762)
- Novel written by Jean-Jacques Rousseau where he
argued that education should nurture, not
restrict, childrens natural instincts. - He stated that children should be taught with
patience and understanding. - Rousseau recommended that the teacher appeal to
the child's interests, and discouraged strict
discipline and tiresome lessons. However, he
also felt that children's thoughts and behavior
should be controlled.
32Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797)
- She was a British author who is considered the
founder of the European and American movement for
womens rights. - She argued that women were as rational as men and
as capable of being responsible free citizens.
Mary Wollstonecraft
33Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797)
- Mary Wollstonecraft was a British author who was
best known for her book A Vindication of the
Rights of Woman (1792). This book was one of the
first to claim that women should have equality
with men. Wollstonecraft said that men
considered women morally and mentally inferior to
themselves. She argued that women could live
happy, creative lives if they had better
educational opportunities. She based her book on
the democratic principles of the French
Revolution (1789-1799) and on her own
experiences. Wollstonecraft was born in London.
She educated herself by studying books at home.
For a brief period, she and her sisters ran a
school. From this experience, she wrote Thoughts
on the Education of Daughters (1787). In this
pamphlet, she criticized the cruel treatment of
young girls that was common at the time. She
also wrote other essays as well as stories and
translations. In 1797, Wollstonecraft married
William Godwin, a British political reformer.
Their daughter, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley,
wrote the famous horror novel Frankenstein (1818).
Mary Wollstonecraft
34A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792)
- Book written by Mary Wollstonecraft.
- She identified two problems with the beliefs of
many Enlightenment thinkers. Those who argued
men should rule women also argued against
government based on the arbitrary power of kings.
Power of men over women was equally wrong. She
also argued that because women are rational
beings, they should have the same rights as
menin educational, economic, and political life.
35- The Enlightenment ideas were most known among the
urban upper class. They spread among the
literate elite. Literacy and the availability of
books were increasing greatly during the 18th
century. Many titles were aimed at the new,
middle-class reading public, which included women
and urban artisans. - Magazines for the general public developed during
this time. The daily newspaper did as well. The
first was printed in London in 1702.
36Salons
- The elegant drawing rooms of great urban houses
where, in the 18th century, writers, artists,
artistocrats, government officials, and wealthy
middle-class people gathered to discuss the ideas
of the philosophes, helping to spread the ideas
of the Enlightenment. - One of the most famous was at the home of
Marie-Thérése de Geoffrin in Paris.
37- Most of the philosophes attacked the Christian
churches, but most Europeans of the time were
devout believers. The desire of ordinary
Protestants for a greater depth of religious
experience led to new religious movements.
38John Wesley (1703-1791)
- He was the founder of Methodism.
- He had a mystical experience in which the gift
of Gods grace assured him of salvation. He
became a missionary to bring the glad tidings
of salvation. - He preached to masses in open fields in England
an appealed most to the lower classes. His
sermons often caused people to have conversion
experiences. - After Wesleys death, Methodism became a separate
Protestant group.
John Wesley
39John Wesley (1703-1791)
- John Wesley was a clergyman of the Church of
England, was a founder of Methodism. He was the
foremost leader in England of the Evangelical
Revival, a movement in Protestant Christianity
during the 1700's that emphasized personal faith
and practical good works. In carrying out his
evangelical mission, Wesley traveled about
250,000 miles (400,000 kilometers) and preached
over 40,000 sermons, often as many as 4 in a day.
His concern for the poor led him to provide loan
funds, establish homes for widows and orphans,
extend ministries to prisons and the armed
forces, and open free medical dispensaries.
Early years. Wesley was born in Epworth in
Lincolnshire. He was the 15th of 19 children
born to Susanna Wesley and her husband, Samuel,
an Anglican clergyman. Both parents were firmly
committed to the Church of England, yet came from
Nonconformist families who had separated from the
Church of England. This background gave the
young Wesley a deep sense of two traditions in
English religious thought. One was the
importance of the organized church, with its
rules and teachings. The other was the vitality
of Puritan inward religion, with its focus on a
direct relationship with God. Wesley was
admitted to Christ Church College at Oxford
University in 1720 and was ordained a priest in
the Church of England in 1728. He returned to
Oxford in 1729 as a fellow of Lincoln College.
There he became spiritual adviser to some
students, including his brother Charles, who
gathered in small groups to help each other with
study, devotions, and practical good works. They
were ridiculed by other students as "The Holy
Club" and "Bible Moths," but the nickname that
prevailed was "Methodists." Their practice of
accountability in small groups for the spiritual
life of all their members became the basic
structure of the later Methodist movement. While
Wesley was a missionary to Georgia from 1735 to
1737, he was influenced by the Moravians, a
German church that stressed personal faith and
disciplined Christian living. Its influence on
Wesley led to a spiritual crisis that was not
resolved until he returned to England. In London
on May 24, 1738, he attended a small religious
meeting. There, according to his Journal, his
heart was "strangely warmed" as he experienced
the inward assurance of faith that so impressed
him about the Moravians. Leadership of the
Methodist societies. Wesley increasingly assumed
a leadership role in the Evangelical Revival. In
1739, at the invitation of George Whitefield,
another prominent evangelist, he began to preach
in the open air. For a number of years, he was
joined in this activity by his brother Charles.
Their "field preaching" became characteristic of
Methodism, drawing large crowds. Those who
responded to their message joined societies
patterned on the religious societies of the
Church of England dating back to the late 1600's.
Wesley's genius lay in organizing the Methodist
societies into a movement. In 1743, he drew up a
set of General Rules, which required members to
attend weekly "class meetings." At the meetings,
each member was asked to give an account of his
or her discipleship according to well-defined
guidelines. Wesley gave considerable
responsibility to the leaders of these classes,
who became a crucial link in the authority he
exercised over the movement. Wesley also adopted
lay (unordained) preachers as his assistants and
helpers, and in 1744 he started an annual
conference to consult on matters of doctrine and
practice. The minutes of these conferences,
along with Wesley's Letters and detailed Journal,
are perhaps the fullest record of any religious
movement. They were published as part of a
34-volume edition of The Works of John Wesley
(1976-...). Wesley's evangelical message created
controversy. It was opposed by many Anglican
clergy as religiously fanatical and politically
disruptive. The Calvinist wing of the
Evangelical Revival criticized it as being too
universal and putting too much emphasis on good
works. Wesley wanted Methodism to remain a
reforming movement within the Church of England,
and resisted separation from the church
throughout his life. The issue was forced,
however, by the need to provide for those who
belonged to Methodist societies in the newly
founded United States. In 1784, Wesley ordained
Methodist preachers for North America, a step
that led to the formation of the Methodist
Episcopal Church, and then of the Methodist
Church worldwide.
40Rococo
- An artistic style that replaced baroque in the
1730s it was highly secular, emphasizing grace,
charm, and gentle action.
41Rococo
- An artistic style that replaced baroque in the
1730s it was highly secular, emphasizing grace,
charm, and gentle action.
42Rococo
- Rococo is a style of art that flourished in
western Europe from about 1700 to 1780. The term
comes from a French word for a fanciful rock or
shell design. It implies a refined, elegant
feeling and style. Rococo found its fullest
expression in France, where the leading
representatives were the painters Francois
Boucher, Jean Honore Fragonard, and Antoine
Watteau. They worked primarily for royal and
aristocratic clients. Their paintings differed
greatly in style and subject matter from those of
the preceding baroque period. A typical baroque
painting was created on a heroic and grand scale,
and usually presented Christian religious
subjects. Rococo paintings were intimate in
scale and delicate in manner. They often
portrayed scenes from classical mythology.
Rococo artists also created a new category of
painting called the fete galante. Their
paintings showed gatherings of elegantly dressed
figures in parks and gardens. Outside France,
there were other artists during this period who
worked in a bright, lively style characteristic
of rococo. They included Giovanni Battista
Tiepolo in Italy and Thomas Gainsborough in
England. The ornate and decorative style of
rococo was also applied to architecture,
furniture, porcelain, tapestries, and opera and
theater scenery. In architecture, rococo reached
its greatest splendor in the palaces,
monasteries, and churches of southern Germany and
Austria.
43Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1760)
- A German born composer who was a great organist
and composer of the baroque music of the early
18th century. He is famous for Mass in B Minor.
Johann Sebastian Bach
44George Frederick Handel (1685-1759)
- He was a German-born composer of baroque music
who is known today mainly through his musical
compositions called oratorios. His most famous
work was Messiah.
George Frederick Handel
45Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)
- He was an Austrian composer. He ranks among the
most important composers to lead the development
of instrumental and vocal music during the middle
and late 1700's in the classical style. - Many of his compositions helped set standards for
musical style and taste in the late 1700's. - His most famous works is The Creation and The
Seasons.
Franz Joseph Haydn
46Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
- He was an Austrian composer, is considered one of
the greatest and most creative musical geniuses
of all time. With Franz Joseph Haydn, he was one
of the leading composers of the classical style
of the late 1700's. - Mozart died before his 36th birthday, but he
still left more than 600 works. - His three greatest operas were The Mariage of
Figaro, Don Giovanni, and The Magic Flute.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
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