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Revolution: Things Start to Change

Explore the transition from Reformation to Scientific Revolution, Enlightenment ideas of individual liberty, social contracts, and rights for women, challenging traditional beliefs and paving the way for modern ideologies.

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Revolution: Things Start to Change

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  1. Revolution: Things Start to Change Scientific Revolution: challenge previous ideas 1300’s: Renaissance 1492: Columbus sails 1517: Reformation begins 1543: Copernicus and the heliocentric theory 1610-1632: Galileo writes 1600s: Scientific Method 1687: Newton Late 1600s on: Scientific Thought Galileo Scientific Method: empiricism, get evidence before making theories Newton

  2. The Renaissance: Learnin’s Good -1300’s: Renaissance in Italy - Rediscovery of ancient Greek and Roman texts/ideas - Concept that becoming a good person involves more than being able to kill someone (crazy, I know)

  3. Martin Luther and the Reformation 95 Theses 1517: Reformation begins

  4. Geocentric Theory 1543: Copernicus and the heliocentric theory Heliocentric Theory

  5. 1600s: Scientific Method 1687: Newton Empiricism

  6. Revolution: Things Start to Change Enlightenment: take Sci. Rev. ideas and apply them to everything Wollstonecraft Enlightenment 1637: Descartes “I think, therefore I am” 1651: Hobbes and Leviathan (social contract) 1690: Locke and Natural Rights 1700s: Philosophes and Voltaire 1748: Montesquieu and Separation of Powers 1762: Rousseau and Freedom (social contract) 1764: Beccaria and Justice 1792: Wollstonecraft and Rights for Women 1700s and on: Belief in individual and liberty Montesquieu

  7. 1651: Hobbes and Leviathan (social contract) 1690: Locke and Natural Rights Hobbes: Life is Nasty, Brutish and Short Locke: Natural Rights

  8. Voltaire and Montesquieu • Voltaire and freedom of thought, speech • Montesquieu and power-checking

  9. Rousseau and Beccaria • Rousseau and freedom(Social Contract) • Beccaria and Justice

  10. Wollstonecraft • Why the sexism? Her daughter wrote this!

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