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Enlightened Thought

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Title: Enlightened Thought


1
What's My Question
2
Goals
  • Reason applied to Natural Laws
  • Intellectual, Economics, and Political Causes
  • Political, Religious, Economics, Intellectual
    Effects.

3
Enlightened Thought
4
Apply Reason to the Nature of Mankind
5
Enlightened Ideas
  • Views of nature, mankind, society, government,
    and the value of freedom.
  • Progress restrained by social and political
    institutions.

6
Challenged the church and secularized
institutions.
7
Ruled by law, not rules, and a separation of power
8
Religion and Absolute Truth
9
What does it mean to be enlightened?
10
Spinoza
11
Deism
12
  • Philosophy becomes scientific method and critical
    inquiry.
  • Locke believed the scientific method could be
    applied to the study of society.

13
John Locke
14
Governments based on a Social Contract
15
Republic of Ideas
How can the pen be mightier than the sword?
16
Montesquieu
  • In Persian Letters, nature reveals a universal
    standard of justice that applies to all people.
  • Was against Slavery.

17
Spirit of Laws 1748
  • Applied the principles of observation,
    experimentation, and analysis to social and
    political foundation of state.

18
Voltaire Francois-Marie Arouet
  • Extolled Britain, it's commercial empire,
    relative religious toleration, and freedom of
    press.
  • Parliaments represented the interests of the
    nobility.

19
  • Looked toward Enlightened monarchs to protect
    their people against noble self-interest.
  • Believed the Church blocked the development of
    freedom.
  • Crush the Infamous Thing

20
Denis Diderot
  • Encyclopedia reflected the nature of the
    enlightenment.
  • Knowledge was rational, and therefore ordered,
    following the laws of nature.
  • Social and political institutions should be
    submitted to standards of rationality.

21
  • Published over a period of 20 years.
  • Consisted of 60,000 articles and 2,885
    illustrations in 28 volumes
  • Learning more could improve the world
  • Wanted the Enlightenment carried beyond the
    borders of France

22
Candide
23
Rousseau
24
The Social Contract
Men are born free yet everywhere they are in
chains.
25
In the Social Contract, individuals
surrendered their natural rights to the general
will in order to find order and security. The
General Will was the consensus of a community of
citizens with equal rights.
26
  • Social changes that affected the climate of
    opinion also laid the groundwork for the
    Enlightenment.
  • Emile

27
Painting
  • French nobles lavished more attention on
    decoration.
  • Elements drawn from nature replaced religious
    objects as decoration.
  • Paintings reflected satirical look at life.

28
(No Transcript)
29
Music
  • Operas associated with the nobility.
  • Franz Joseph Haydn conducted symphonies in public
    in London.
  • Mozart reflected the emergence of the public
    concert.
  • The operas The Marriage of Figaro (1786) and Don
    Giovanni (1787)

30
Spread of Enlightened Ideas
  • Salons, academies, and Masonic lodges
  • Salons were concentrated in Paris
  • Masonic lodges began in Scotland as stonemasons
    guilds
  • Masons shared a general faith in progress and
    toleration

31
Rejecting what they considered unnatural
hierarchies that fettered progress, they
proclaimed that the public had rights and that
freedom was good. Enlightenment thought helped
create opposition to absolutism.
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