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Applying Scientific & Enlightenment Principles. Mary Wollstonecraft. Wrote: A Vindication of the Rights of Women
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Mary Wollstonecraft Wrote: A Vindication of the Rights of Women • Mary Wollstonecraft was a well-known British social critic who believed that although a woman’s first duty was to be a good mother, a woman should also be able to decide what is best for her, and not be completely dependant upon her husband.
Mary Wollstonecraft • In her book, Wollstonecraft called for equal education for girls and boys. She believed that education could give women the tools to compete with men in public life.
Adam Smith Wrote: The Wealth of Nations • Adam Smith was a British economist who believed that the free market should be allowed to regulate business activity. • Laissez-faire – Policy allowing business to operate with little or no government interference.
Adam Smith • Smith believed that all economic growth was linked to the forces of supply and demand. • Smith believed that whenever there was a demand for goods or services suppliers would seek to meet it in order to try to make a profit • Smith’s ideas would gain great popularity, and would help to shape immensely productive economies in the 1800s and 1900s.
Denis Diderot Wrote: Encyclopedia • Another Enlightenment scholar, Diderot labored 25 years to produce his 28-volume Encyclopedia, which was a collection of articles by such Enlightenment thinkers as Montesquieu and Voltaire.
Denis Diderot • In the articles scholars denounced slavery, praised freedom of expression, and advocated education for all. They attacked divine right theory and traditional religions. • The Catholic Church threatened to excommunicate anyone who bought or read the Encyclopedia, and the French government said that reading the book was amoral. • Despite these efforts to ban the Encyclopedia, the book sold thousands of copies and helped Enlightenment ideas spread throughout Europe.
Impact of the Enlightenment • The Enlightenment had a major impact throughout Europe in the 1700s. • Greater numbers of people began to question established beliefs and customs. • Enlightenment beliefs affected leaders and the development of nations. • Many writers, such as Voltaire, were thrown into prison, and their books were banned and burned. • On the opposite side, many government and church leaders worked to defend the established systems.
Impact of the Enlightenment • One of the ways government and church leaders defended established ideas was by censoring the new ideas of the time. Censorship – A restriction on access to ideas and information.
Impact of the Enlightenment Another impact of the Enlightenment is a growth in the belief that democracy was the best form of government. • That happened because the Enlightenment inspired new ideas such as: • a sense of individualism • a belief in personal freedom • a sense of the basic equality of human beings. These concepts, along with other challenges to traditional authority, became important in the growth of democracy.
Impact of the Enlightenment Nationalism • As people in a country drew together to fight for a democratic government, strong feelings of nationalism arose. • In the late 1700s, Enlightenment ideas would contribute to an Age of Revolution.
Impact of the Enlightenment Enlightened Despot – An absolute ruler who used his or her power to reform society and bring about political or social change.
Maria Theresa Austria • She forced nobles and clergy to pay taxes, not just peasants. Maria Theresa also improved education for all people in her empire.
Joseph II Austria • Joseph II created legal reforms to benefit all of the people, called for religious toleration, ended censorship, and abolished serfdom.
Catherine the Great Russia • Asked for advice from nobles, freed many peasants and townspeople, built schools and hospitals, promoted women’s education, and religious tolerance throughout Russia.
Summary • The thinkers of the Enlightenment used human reason to suggest reforms in government and society. • Many Europeans, including several monarchs, were influenced by these ideas and tried to change things in their own nations. • These changes had an impact on all of Europe as democratic and nationalistic ideas grew and contributed to revolutions, such as the revolutions in America and France.