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The Enlightenment. Age of Reason. Hobbes The Leviathan Humans exist in a primitive “state of nature” and consent to government for self-protection. Locke: natural rights to life, liberty, and property Two Treatises on Government people are sovereign and rulers are not chosen by God
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The Enlightenment Age of Reason
Hobbes • The Leviathan • Humans exist in a primitive “state of nature” and consent to government for self-protection. • Locke: natural rights to life, liberty, and property • Two Treatises on Government • people are sovereign and rulers are not chosen by God • Montesquieu • The Spirit of Laws—The best form of government includes a separation of powers. • Government is a contract between rulers and the people. • Voltaire believed that religious toleration should triumph over religious fanaticism • separation of church and state • Enlightenment beliefs into the Declaration of Independence • The Constitution of the United States of America and Bill of Rights incorporated Enlightenment ideas • The Enlightenment influenced revolutions in America and France • What American incorporated Enlightenment beliefs into the Declaration of Independence? ___________ • What 3 American documents were influenced by Enlightenment ideas? __________________________
What was the Enlightenment? • The Enlightenment was an eighteenth-century philosophical movement built on the achievements of the Scientific Revolution • Applied reason to the human world, not just the natural world • Stimulated religious tolerance • Fueled democratic revolutions around the world
What was the Enlightenment? • Enlightenment thinkers believed that human progress was possible when they applied scientific knowledge and reason to issues of law and government. • Enlightenment ideas influenced the leaders of the American Revolution and the writing of the Declaration of Independence.
Enlightenment Terms • Philosophe: Enlightenment thinker. Most were writers, professors, economists, journalists, and social reformers. • Social Contract: members of society agree to be governed by the general will, which represents what is best for society as a whole • Deism: Deists believe the world is like a clock that God created and set according to his natural laws, and then let it run without his intervention
Enlightenment Terms • Rationalism-belief that human nature could be logically explained using reason and the Scientific Method • Secularism- the belief that religion should have no part in political or civic affairs or in running public institutions, especially schools • Individualism- the uniqueness and distinctiveness of each individual
René Descartes 1596 – 1650 • Descartes has been called the father of modern rationalism: reason is the chief source of knowledge. • Discourse on Method (1637) begins by calling all knowledge into question • He could rationally be sure of only one thing- his own existence: “Cogito, ergo sum” “I think therefore I am”
Where were these ideas exchanged? The Salon • Salons were gatherings in the elegant homes of the wealthy where the new ideas were spread. • The guests took part in conversations, often about the new philosophical ideas. • Nobles, thinkers, artists, and government officials attended these salons. Some became very famous.
Madame Geoffrin • Geoffrin was unable to receive a formal education. • It has been suggested that the salon acted as a schoolhouse • Madame Geoffrin's popularity in the mid-eighteenth century came at a decisive time as the center of social life was beginning to move away from the French court and toward the salons of Paris
Thomas Hobbes 1588 –1679 • Believed that humans exist in a primitive “state of nature” • Believed people consent to government for self-protection • Believed anarchy to be a state of nature. • Supporter of absolute monarchy • “Life is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short” • Wrote Leviathan - 1651
Leviathan -1651 • Written during the English Civil War • The book concerns the structure of society and legitimate government. • One of the earliest and most influential examples of social contract theory.
John Locke 1632 –1704 • Wrote Two Treatises on Government • People consent to government for the protection of natural rights • Natural rights: Life – Liberty – Property • Supporter of Democracy • Locke believed people are: • Sovereign (independent, self-governing)
John Locke • Argued that people are born with a mind that is a tabula rasa, or blank slate, and that knowledge comes to it through the five senses. • This meant that the right influences could create a new kind of society by creating a new way of understanding
The Social Contract • The social contract is the concept that human beings have made an agreement with their government, whereby the government and the people have distinct roles and responsibilities. • The theory is based on the idea that humans abandoned a natural (free and ungoverned) condition in favor of a society that provides them with order, structure, and most importantly, protection. • Agree to be governed by the general will.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau 1712 –1778 • Published The Social Contract in 1762 • According to Jean-Jacques Rousseau the Social Contract is between rulers and the people
Montesquieu 1689-1755 • His idea of checks and balances would influencethe U.S. Constitution • Published The Spirit of the Laws 1748 • Separation of power into three branches • Believed the best form of government included a separation of powers and was elected by the people
Voltaire1694 – 1778 • Believed that religious toleration should triumph over religious fanaticism • Believed in separation of church and state • Wrote: Candide & Philosophical Letters • Visited Catherine the Great of Russia “I do not agree with what you say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it.”
Denis Diderot 1713 –1784 • Leading philosophe who contributed articles on everything from criticizing aspects of society, the church, government, the slave trade, torture, taxes, and war • Edited The Encyclopedia: • Combined articles of leading Philosophes and scientists covering every subject possible.
Mary Wollstonecraft 1759 –1797 • Wrote: A Vindication of the Rights of Woman in 1792 • Early spokesperson for Women’s Rights • Governments should extend political rights to women • Ideals of equality should be extended to women • Women should enjoy educational freedoms
Enlightenment Influence in America • Thomas Jefferson was greatly influenced by European Enlightenment thinkers • Enlightenment beliefs were incorporated into the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution of the United States of America and Bill of Rights
Our Most Important Documents • Declaration of Independence: • "Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness” • A list of complaints against King George’s tyrannical rule • The Constitution: provides the structure for the government of the United States and limits the powers of the President • Bill of Rights: the first ten amendments to the Constitution
What are Natural Rights? • The right to: • religious worship • speech • press • assembly • property • the pursuit of happiness. • These rights are referred to in the American Declaration of Independence
Results of the Enlightenment • The Enlightenment influenced revolutions in: • America, France, Haiti and Mexico
Deists saw no point in any particular religion; they recognized only a distant God, uninvolved in the daily life of man
Culture During the Enlightenment • Representative artists, philosophers, and writers • Johann Sebastian Bach— Baroque Composer • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart— Classical Composer • Eugène Delacroix— Romantic School Painter • Liberty Leading the People • Voltaire—Philosopher • Miguel de Cervantes—Novelist • Don Quixote de la Mancha First modern novel • New schools of art and forms of literature • Paintings depicted classical subjects, public events, natural scenes, and living people (portraits). • New forms of literature evolved—the novel (e.g., Cervantes’ Don Quixote). • What civilizations influenced artists of the Enlightenment? • Classical period • Name two composers of the 18th century? • Bach and Mozart • Who was a painter of the Enlightenment? • Eugène Delacroix • Who wrote Don Quixote? • Cervantes • What new form of literature appeared after the Enlightenment? • The novel
Technology During the Enlightenment • All-weather roads improved year- round transport and trade. • New designs in farm tools increased productivity (agricultural revolution). • Improvements in ship design lowered the cost of transport.