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THE AGE OF REASON AND ENLIGHTENMENT

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Presentation on theme: "THE AGE OF REASON AND ENLIGHTENMENT"— Presentation transcript:

1 THE AGE OF REASON AND ENLIGHTENMENT

2 AN OVERVIEW AND ORIGINS OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT
Political History – Reform Intellectual History – Newtonian Physics and Reason Cultural History – Individualism Social History – Increased Literacy Economic History – Mercantilism to Capitalism POLITICS Britain – Constitutional Monarchy France – Absolutism Prussia, Habsburg Empire, Austria – Enlightened Despotism Ottoman Empire – Traditional empire

3 THE ORIGINS OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT
SCIENCE Newton’s system was synonymous with the empirical and the practical Scientific laws could be expressed as mathematical formulas Science allowed alternatives to be imagined in all subject areas

4 THE ORIGINS OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT
RELIGION Attempting to explain God’s work through his work in nature and not through biblical reference Support for a rational religion free from mysteries, miracles, and superstitions Deism – the belief in God (or supreme being) but not in any organized religion. One’s belief was based on nature and reason. God was uninvolved in the daily life of man. Pantheism – the belief that God and nature are the same. Believed that God’s work was revealed through nature and not through scripture.

5 ENLIGHTENMENT CHARACTERISTICS
Rationalism Cosmology Secularism Scientific Method Utilitarianism Tolerance Optimism and Self-Confidence Freedom Education of the Masses Legal Reform Constitutionalism Cosmopolitanism

6 THE PHILOSOPHE The philosophe was an enlightened individual who publicized reforms meant to correct the evils of society. They took advantage of the print culture and the more educated populace to promote their theories. The philosophes generated the great debate about the foundations of society: Logic and Reason or Traditions and Superstitions.

7 THE GREAT SOCIETY DEBATE
Logic and Reason vs Traditions and Superstitions Rationalism Nostalgia Empiricism Organized Religion Tolerance Irrationalism Skepticism Emotionalism Deism HOW SHOULD SOCIETY BE ORGANIZED? HOW SHOULD SOCIETY BE ORGANIZED?

8 THE GOALS OF ENLIGHTENMENT
“…freedom from arbitrary power, freedom of speech, freedom of trade, freedom to realize one’s talents, freedom of aesthetic response, freedom, in a word, of moral man to make his way in the world.” Peter Gay - historian

9 Denis Diderot (1713 – 1784) Diderot published the Encyclopedia. It was an exercise in freedom of expression and included critical ideas on religion, government, and philosophy. It also contained practical information about all human knowledge therefore secularizing learning and removing elitist attitudes

10 MARQUIS DE CONDORCET (1743-1794)
Progress of the Human Mind 1794 *Universal happiness *Reason leads to indepenedence *Free and equal education *Equal rights for women *Constitutionalism

11 JOHN LOCKE (1632 – 1704) Letter on Toleration, 1689 Two Treatises of Government, 1690 Some Thoughts Concerning Education, 1693 The Reasonableness of Christianity, 1695

12 JOHN LOCKE’S PHILOSOPHIES
*Individuals must become rational creatures *Virtue can be learned and practiced *Humans possess free will *Governments owe their power to a contract with the people *Neither kings or wealth are divinely ordained *Some natural rights are granted by God: Life, Liberty, and Property *A republic is the best form of government *The “Divine Right” of kings should not exist

13 IMMANUEL KANT (1724 – 1804) Critique of Pure Reason, 1781 What is Enlightenment?, 1784 Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Science, 1786

14 KANT’S PHILOSOPHIES *Dare to Know! *He introduced Transcendentalism – to learn by ways other than empiricism. It is the belief in the existence of non-rational ways to understand things. *The existence of time and space is determined by something other than empiricism. They transcend sensory experience They are pure and not empirical (similar to concepts of faith, pre-existence, and life after death)

15 THOMAS PAINE ( ) Common Sense, 1776 The Rights of Man, 1791

16 The American Philosophes
…Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness… Thomas Jefferson ( ) John Adams ( ) Ben Franklin ( ) …Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness…

17 FRANCOIS MARIE AROUET (1712 – 1778)
Essay on the Customs and Spirit of Nations, 1756 Candide, 1759 Philosophical Dictionary, 1764

18 VOLTAIRE’S PHILOSOPHIES
“Every man is guilty of all the good he didn’t do” “God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh” “If God didn’t exist, it would be necessary to invent him” “It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong” “Crush the Infamous Thing” (in reference to the Church) “Love truth and pardon error”

19 VOLTAIRE’S PHILOSOPHIES
“Judge a man by his questions rather than by his answers” “Men are equal: it is not birth, but virtue that makes the difference” “Prejudice is opinion without judgement” “The way to become boring is to say everything” “I may not agree with what you have to say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it”

20 Jewish Thinkers of the Enlightenment
Baruch Spinoza, in his work Ethics, stated the spiritual and material worlds were almost one and the same. His critics argued that there could be no personal, individual immortality of the human soul after death. His ideas were close to deism Even though he lived in the century before enlightenment he seemed to anticipate its coming

21 Jewish Thinkers of the Enlightenment
Moses Mendelssohn ( ) argued that a Jew could combine loyalty to Judaism with adherence to rational, Enlightenment values. In Jerusalem; or On Ecclesiastical Power and Judaism (1783) he argued that religious diversity within a nation did not harm loyalty to the government, therefore, governments should be religiously neutral and Jews should enjoy the same civil rights as other subjects.

22 Cesare Beccaria (1738 – 1794) In his book On Crimes and Punishments he wanted laws to conform with the rational laws of nature. He attacked torture and capital punishment and stated that the intent of punishment should be to deter further crime. The purpose of laws was not to impose the will of God, but to secure the greatest good or happiness for the greatest number

23 DAVID HUME (1711-1776) The Natural History of Religion, 1755
The belief in God was dependent on superstition and fear rather than reason.

24 EDWARD GIBBON ( ) The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (6 volumes) 1787 He pointed out the problems with contemporary England and urged reform

25 ECONOMICS AND ENLIGHTENMENT
Physiocrats argued against mercantilism Francois Quesnay ( ) argued that the role of government should be to protect property and permit its owners to use it freely. He believed that a nation’s wealth was measured in its land.

26 ECONOMICS AND ENLIGHTENMENT
Adam Smith argued against mercantilism and the physiocrats. In Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776) Smith argued that economic growth is achieved when people are free to pursue their own selfish economic interests. He said governments should practice Laissez-faire politics The invisible hand motivates all economic decisions The invisible hand motivates all economic decisions

27 BARON DE MONTESQUIEU (1689-1755)
Persian Letters, 1721 On the Spirit of Laws, 1758

28 MONTESQUIEU’S PHILOSOPHIES
There are three types of governments: Monarchy Republic Despotism A separation of powers in government ensures political freedom and personal liberty

29 JEAN JACQUES ROUSSEAU (1712-1778)
A Discourse on the Sciences and Arts, 1750 Emile, 1762 The Social Contract, 1762

30 ROUSSEAU’S PHILOSOPHIES
As civilization progresses the arts and sciences move away from morality Science and art raise artificial barriers man and his natural state Therefore the revival of science and the arts has corrupted social morals, not improved them.

31 ROUSSEAU’S PHILOSOPHIES
Virtue exists in a “state of nature” but is lost in society. Government must preserve “virtue” and “liberty” “Man is born free but is everywhere in chains” The “Noble Savage” concept Liberty, Equality, Fraternity Invest all rights and liberties into a society

32 ROUSSEAU’S PHILOSOPHIES
In the Social Contract The right kind of political order could make people truly moral and free. Individual moral freedom could be achieved only by learning to subject one’s individual interest to “The General Will” Individuals did this by entering into a social contract, not with their ruler but with each other. The social contract was derived from human nature, not from history, tradition, or the Bible.

33 ROUSSEAU’S PHILOSOPHIES
People would be most free and moral under a republican form of government with a direct democracy. However, Rousseau offered no legal protections for individual rights. His theories greatly influenced the revolutionaries of 1789.

34 THE SPREAD OF ENLIGHTENMENT THOUGHT
Suggestions for social reform came from salons - weekly social gatherings at the private house of an aristocratic lady, at which social, artistic, and scientific questions were discussed. Suggestions were also popularized in literature Efforts were made at self-improvement, therefore rates of literature increased (80% men 60% women), manners improved, and people sought to appear to be improving through fancier dress and home furnishings.

35 Typical rococo style for 18th century France
Typical style for 18th century France Typical rococo style for 18th century France

36 Typical rococo style for 18th century France

37 FASHION WAS ALSO TAKEN TO EXTREMES

38 Typical 18th century French Furnishings

39 Rococo Architecture Rococo Architecture

40 Rococo Architecture

41 A SALON OF MADAME GEOFFRIN

42 ROCOCO ART Artist Francois Boucher painted many versions of
Madame Pompadour. Rococo art celebrates the leisurely lifestyle of the wealthy

43 ROCOCO ART Antoine Watteau painted The Pleasures of the Ball

44 4th Duke of Marlborough and Family by Sir Joshua Reynolds

45

46 Rococo Art Rococo Art

47 Rococo decorations were all about being elaborate and pretty, not utilitarian or very functional


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