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The Enlightenment Chapter Six. The Enlightenment Introduction  What does it mean to be enlightened?  What is a revolution? List and explain events that.

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Presentation on theme: "The Enlightenment Chapter Six. The Enlightenment Introduction  What does it mean to be enlightened?  What is a revolution? List and explain events that."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Enlightenment Chapter Six

2 The Enlightenment Introduction  What does it mean to be enlightened?  What is a revolution? List and explain events that you would think would happen during a revolution.  How has science helped your life? Give specific examples.  Why is education so important in our modern society

3 The Enlightenment – Why it matters now  Scientific advances are still used today  Scientific Method, use of vaccines  Freedoms we enjoy today are a result of the Enlightenment  Enlightenment arts and music are still expressed today  Novels and classical music  Tension between religious and scientific communities still exist today

4 An Overview of the 18th Century  Political History   Political History  Reform  Intellectual History    Intellectual History  Newtonian Physics  Reason  Cultural History   Cultural History  Individualism  Social History    Social History  Increased Literacy  Age of Aristocracy  Economic History   Economic History  Mercantilism to Capitalism

5 I. The Scientific Revolution  Roots of Modern Science  Most knowledge during the Middle Ages came from the Bible, Greeks, and Romans  Supported the geocentric theory  New Way of Thinking  Renaissance challenges long held beliefs  New ways of viewing the world  Based on observation and inquiry  Exploration opens up thinking

6 The Heliocentric Theory  Copernicus develops the heliocentric theory – planets revolve around the sun  His theory is proven correct  Galileo makes advances in astronomy  Supports the heliocentric theory  Catholic Church attacks heliocentric theory  Fears it will weaken people’s faith  Pope forces Galileo to declare his work wrong

7 Copernicus and his Theory

8 Galileo

9 Johannes Kepler  The work of Johannes Kepler proved beyond doubt that Copernicus’s theories were mathematically correct

10 The Scientific Method  The Scientific Method  Series of steps for forming and testing scientific theories  Thinkers Bacon and Descartes help to create the Scientific Method

11 Scientific Discoveries  Isaac Newton  Theory of motion  Law of gravity

12 Scientific Discoveries  Andreas Vesalius  Improves knowledge on anatomy

13 Scientific Discoveries  Edward Jenner  Produces the world’s first vaccine – smallpox

14 Scientific Discoveries  Robert Boyle  Interaction between volume, temperature, and gas pressure (Boyle’s Law)

15

16 The Enlightenment causes an increase in Education

17 Chemistry Labs & Botany Gardens

18 Natural History Collections Cocoa plant drawing Sir Hans Sloane (1660-1753) Collected from Jamaica

19 Zoology & Biology A dissection at the Royal Academy, London

20 II. The Enlightenment in Europe

21  Views on Government  Old way of thinking – absolute monarchy  New way of thinking – democratic ideas  Europeans seek insight into society  People reassess many prevailing ideas

22 Hobbes and Locke  Thomas Hobbes (Leviathan)  People are naturally greedy and selfish and should be treated as such  Favored a strong absolute monarchy  “Social Contract” – order by giving power to a monarch

23 Hobbes and Locke  John Locke (Two Treatises on Government)  Government must protect people’s “natural rights”  “Life, Liberty, and Property”  People have the right to overthrow an unjust government  Government gets power from the people

24 The Philosophes  The Philosophes  French social critics in the mid 1700s  They valued reason, nature, progress, & liberty  Wrote essays and novels on politics and society  Philosophes were not activists, but inspired others

25 The Philosophes  Voltaire (Francois Marie Arouet)  Imprisoned twice for his views  Champion of freedom of speech and religious toleration

26 The Philosophes  Rousseau  Favored individual freedom and direct democracy  Free people form a government (social contract) “Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains.”

27 The Philosophes  Montesquieu  Favored the separation of powers in government

28 The Philosophes  Mary Wollstonecraft  Wrote “A Vindication of the Rights of Women” (1792)  Went against Rousseau’s idea that women’s education is second to men’s  Her daughter wrote Frankenstein

29 Legacy of the Enlightenment  Scientific breakthroughs show the capacity to improve society  New knowledge leads people to question their governments and religion  People emphasize individual rights and abilities

30 III. The Enlightenment Spreads  The city of Paris was the center of the Enlightenment  Had many salons  Gatherings of the intellectual, social, political, and cultural elites  Discussions about ideas and philosophy  Denis Diderot – Encyclopedia  Set of books on Enlightenment ideas  Angers the French gov’t and Church  Spreads Enlightenment ideas throughout Europe

31 A Parisian Salon

32 Madame Geoffrin and her Salon

33 Denis Diderot

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35 Private collections were the original museums

36 New Artistic Styles  Music  More elegant and lighter  Mozart and Beethoven  Painting  Baroque style (1600-1700s)  Grand and ornate design  Neoclassical style (late 1700s)  Simple elegant style borrowed ideas from ancient Rome and Greece  Literature  Novels and works of fiction  Richardson’s “Pamela” the first true English novel

37 Beethoven

38 Mozart

39 Baroque

40 Neoclassical

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42 Enlightenment Literature  Books were very expensive  About one day’s pay  Many people would share literature  Novels, plays, journals, newspapers, and pamphlets

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44 Important Literature Works

45 Enlightenment and Monarchy  Enlightened Despots  Monarchs who embrace Enlightenment ideas and values to strengthen their rule

46 Enlightened Despots  Frederick the Great of Prussia  Reforms education and justice system  Grants religious freedom, abolishes torture  Fails to end serfdom

47 Enlightened Despots  Joseph II of Austria  Freedom of worship and the press  Abolishes serfdom (reinstated after his death)

48 Enlightened Despots  Catherine the Great of Russia  Expands Russian Empire (seizes Poland)  Gains port access thru Black Sea  Tries, but fails to:  Abolish capital punishment & torture  Reform the Legal System  Gives nobles more power over serfs  Serfs tried to revolt – Catherine brutally put it down

49 Catherine the Great

50 The Partition of Poland

51 Russian Expansion under Catherine

52 IV. The American Revolution  We are not discussing the American Revolution  This is why you take United States History I  THE END


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