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-. -. -. Enlightenment Ideas of the Enlightenment. -. -. American Revolution. “the revolution was not the war…the war was a result of the revolution”. -. French Revolution. PARIS Heart of the Enlightenment. Middle Ages vs. Age of Reason. Middle Ages Age of Reason.
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- - - EnlightenmentIdeas of the Enlightenment - - American Revolution “the revolution was not the war…the war was a result of the revolution” - French Revolution
Middle Ages vs. Age of Reason Middle AgesAge of Reason
Middle Ages vs. Age of Reason Middle AgesAge of Reason Divine Right to Rule
Middle Ages vs. Age of Reason Middle AgesAge of Reason Divine Right to Rule Divine Right Irrational
Middle Ages vs. Age of Reason Middle AgesAge of Reason Divine Right to Rule Divine Right Irrational King answers only to God
Middle Ages vs. Age of Reason Middle AgesAge of Reason Divine Right to Rule Divine Right Irrational King answers only to God Kings answers to Social contract
Middle Ages vs. Age of Reason Middle AgesAge of Reason Divine Right to Rule Divine Right Irrational King answers only to God Kings answers to Social contract Aristocracy by birth
Middle Ages vs. Age of Reason Middle AgesAge of Reason Divine Right to Rule Divine Right Irrational King answers only to God Kings answers to Social contract Aristocracy by birth Social Justice
Middle Ages vs. Age of Reason Middle AgesAge of Reason Divine Right to Rule Divine Right Irrational King answers only to God Kings answers to Social contract Aristocracy by birth Social Justice Life, Liberty, and Property
Middle Ages vs. Age of Reason Middle AgesAge of Reason Divine Right to Rule Divine Right Irrational King answers only to God Kings answers to Social contract Aristocracy by birth Social Justice Life, Liberty, and Property Life, Liberty, and Pursuit of Happiness
Scientific Revolution Isaac Newton used mathematics to explain Gravity
Scientific Revolution Natural Laws Rules of conduct discoverable by Reason
Scientific Revolution Natural Laws Rules of conduct discoverable by Reason Utopia Perfect society
PHILOSOPHES • John Locke • People were reasonable and Moral • People had “Natural Rights” • People formed Government to protect their rights • Government has obligation to the people • If Government becomes oppressive, overthrow them Thomas Hobbes • Naturally cruel • Greedy and selfish • Needed powerful governmentto maintain order • Absolute Monarchy
PHILOSOPHES Montesquieu Separation of Powers
PHILOSOPHES Montesquieu Separation of Powers Checks and Balances
PHILOSOPHES Voltaire Freedom of Speech
PHILOSOPHES Rousseau Wrote “Social Contract” The balance of General Will vs Individual Rights
Mary Wollstonecraft Women should be educated
PHILOSOPHES Denis Diderot France Encyclopedia Put all beliefs into books of the Encyclopedia
PHILOSOPHES Adam Smith England The Wealth of Nations Free market based on Supply – Demand No government interference
PHILOSOPHES Adam Smith England The Wealth of Nations Free market based on Supply – Demand No government interference Laissez-faireeconomics Foundation of “Capitalism” in America
PHILOSOPHES Adam Smith England The Wealth of Nations. Governments role was to • Protect Society • Administer Justice
Censorship Authors often challenged the “Old Order’ • Novels • Story within the story • Candide • Exposes corruption, hypocrisy, and right to free speech • Gulliver's Travels
Enlightened Despots(Kings) Frederick the Great Prussia (1740 – 1786)
Enlightened Despots(Kings) Frederick the Great Prussia (1740 – 1786) “First Servant of the State” Religious Tolerance “Heaven in his own Fashion”
Enlightened Despots Joseph II Holy Roman Empire ( 1765 – 1790 ) “The Peasant Emperor” • Went out to the Pubs undercover… • Extended Tolerance to Protestants and Jews • Ended Censorship • Sold Monasteries and Convents • Ended Serfdom
All cancelled after he died But the seed had been planted
Most Europeans untouched by Middle Class or Courtly Culture
1700’s Eastern Europe Serfdom spread to Russia Peasants could be bought and sold with land Late 1700’s began to spread to peasant villages and across the ocean to a bunch of colonist
Trading Cards Thomas Hobbes John Locke Adam Smith Mary Wollstonecraft Montesquieu Voltaire Rousseau Denis Diderot Frederick the Great Joseph II