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Enlightenment . A philosophy of human values and change. Causes. 30 Years War: 1618-1648: German writers began to criticize nationalism and war Hugo Grotius and John Comenius were two early Enlightenment thinkers Studies began in science, particularly astronomy
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Enlightenment A philosophy of human values and change
Causes • 30 Years War: 1618-1648: German writers began to criticize nationalism and war • Hugo Grotius and John Comenius were two early Enlightenment thinkers • Studies began in science, particularly astronomy • Johannes Kepler and Galileo Galilei • Rene Descartes and Francis Bacon revised the scientific method and physics with Isaac Newton
Hypotheses • Based on observation of the world and testing its validity • This caused scientist to be criticized and scorned
Enlightenment • Studied the world by defining ideas their own way, based on science • Perceived the universe as a machine governed by fixed laws • Believed in progress, or the idea that the world and its people could be improved • Philosophical, scientific, artistic and political revolution were valued
Philosophes • Spread new ideas, supporters of the political ideas of John Locke and scientific methods of Isaac Newton • Disapproved superstitions about new scientific endeavors • Believed in both freedom of speech and individual liberty • France was the center of these ideas in the 1600-1700s • Gathered in salons held in individual homes
Skepticism • Questioned whether human society could be improved by reason and denied the ability of rational thought to reveal universal truths • Believed that the perceived world is relative to the beholder and no one can be certain about truth • Immanuel Kant argued that man could not know observed objects or metaphysical concepts • The experience of these things depends on the psyche of the observer
End of the Enlightenment • Due to competing ideas such as Romanticism, Skepticism • French Revolution
Thinkers of the Enlightenment • Thomas Hobbes main concern was social and political order • Believed that we should give our obedience to an unaccountable sovereign otherwise the “state of nature” would be war • Wanted to avoid insecurity • Leviathan, 1651 • Felt that by nature, people were self-serving and preoccupied with gathering limited resources • Need a single absolute ruler to control these urges
John Locke • Man earns ownership and right to property when he labors for it • Government should be limited to securing the life and property of its citizens and is only needed in an ideal state • Believed in the right of conscience and religion, except when religion is intolerant • Two Treatises of Government,1690—promoted representative type of government
Charles de Montesquieu • Spirit of Laws explains separation of powers and checks and balances • Every government has 3 sorts of power: legislative, executive and judicial • Executive enacts laws and makes peace or war • Judicial punishes criminals and settles disputes • Political liberty arises from tranquil living and feeling of safety • If the legislature and executive are the same person, then there is no liberty, but tyranny • If judiciary cannot be separate, then there cannot be any fairness is punishment
Jean Jacques Rousseau • “Man is born free, but he is everywhere in chains” • Repressed physical freedom • Political authority comes from a social contract between the political power and the people under it • Sovereign (collective people) are one people and expresses public concerns for the good of all • Rousseau recommends a mediator between the government and people because they are always in conflict • WroteThe Social Contract, 1762 that favored a government based on small direct democracy, focused on the people
Voltaire • Tolerance of religions and ethnicities • “It does not require great art, or magnificently trained eloquence, to prove that Christians should tolerate each other. I, however, am going further: I say that we should regard all men as our brothers. What? The Turk my brother? The Chinaman my brother? The Jew? The Siam? Yes, without doubt; are we not all children of the same father and creatures of the same God?” • Voltaire wanted to bring social and political change through the use of satire and criticism. He wrote Candide
Terms of the Enlightenment • Salon: intellectual gatherings • Classicism: ideas that centered on Greek and Roman ideas • Philosophes: new ideas such as Locke’s political philosophy and Newton’s scientific method that believed in freedom to question, prove and supported freedom and individual rights. • Enlightened Despots: rulers who sought Enlightenment principles while still having royal powers • Metaphysics: branch of philosophy that is concerned with spiritual ideas
Terms of the Enlightenment • Romanticism: a cultural movement that celebrated emotion and the individual ending the Age of Enlightenment • Natural Law: a universal moral law that is understood by using reason • Natural Rights: rights belonging to all people from the time they are born • Deism: the belief in God, but not recognizing organized religion, declaring that it exploits people. Religion is based on reason and natural law • Scientific Method: developed by Francis Bacon in which the scientist begins with an observation of facts and images, then finds a hypothesis to explain them. Through the use of experimentation, the scientist tests the hypothesis to see if it is true. If proven true, it becomes scientific law through reason.
Resource • World History: The Human Experience, The Modern Era by Mounir A. Farah and Andrea B. Karls, Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, New York, New York, 2001.