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Review
• What was an absolute ruler? Examples?• Which type of gov’t. did England have
when we left off? • Which type of gov’t. did France have when
we left off?
17.1 The Enlightenment
• The Enlightenment
The Enlightenment (Mid 1700’s)
• -“Age of Reason”• Begins in England. Why?• -Five core concepts of reason for all aspects of
life for enlightenment thinkers:– Reason– Natural Laws (rules governed by reason)– Happiness– Progress– Liberty
Thomas Hobbesp. 545
• Life without laws or control is, “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short”
• “Leviathan” (1651) was famous work. Outlook?
• “Social contract” concept
• Advocate for absolute monarchy.
John Lockep.545• Gov’t to protect rights
• More positive view/favored self-gov’t.
• Tabula Rasa• Gov’t. responsibilities-obligation to people it governs• Natural rights
– Life– Liberty– Property– “Two Treatises on
Government”
• Radical thought? What did Locke feel about gov’t that did not fulfill its obligation?
French Philosophes
• New ideas in France b/c of British Revolution which challenged status quo.
• Ideas spread in salons of Paris• British inspiration France Rest of
Europe• 4 Main: Montesquieu, Voltaire, Diderot,
Rousseau
“Encyclopedia” definition of philosophe
• …trampling on prejudice, tradition, universal consent, authority, in a word all that enslaves most minds, dares to think for himself, to go back and search for the clearest general principles, to admit nothing except on the testimony of his experience and his reason.
• http://www.historyguide.org/intellect/lecture9a.html
Montesquieu• “On the Spirit of Laws”
(1748)
– Separation of powers (legislative, executive, judicial)
– “Power should be a check to power” ------> checks and balances
Voltairep. 546
• Criticized the Church, Government, Establishment through parody, plays, books.
• Candide - satire • “All brothers in God” from
Treatise on Toleration • Imprisoned and exiled• “My trade…is to say what I
think.”
Diderot
• The Encyclopedia spread ideas of the enlightenment/salons to many others. (1751-1772)
• “Change the way of thinking”• Banned by many for promoting new ideas.
Rousseau• PERSONAL freedoms • Civilization corrupted/not
enlightened bc the strongest ended up taking advantage of the weak=freedoms lost
• “On the Social Contract” 1762 different from Hobbes. Contract among people nobility/titles wrong
• Only freely elected governments can impose minimal controls on citizens
• The General Will (what is in the best interest of the people)
Idea of Social Sciences Led to New Studies
• Adam Smith and Laissez-Faire economics
• “Wealth of Nations”: Gov’t has 3 roles– Protect from invasion– Police– Public works
Frederick the GreatEnlightened Despot
• Frederick II of Prussia• Tight control over his
subjects• Felt duty was to work
for the common good. • Praised many
enlightenment thinkers– Reduced torture– Allowed free press– Religious tolerance
Enlightened Despots
• Catherine the Great (Russia) 1762• Followed Peter the Great, married Tsar Peter III
-reformed government and some laws
-abolished torture
-religious tolerance
-Charter of rights for nobles
However; Catherine is viewed as a ruthless absolute leader – repressed peasants, expanded Russian borders via war with Turkey, partitioned Poland with Russia, Prussia, and Austria in 1772-1795 (Poland did not return until 1919)
Impact
• What was the main idea of the enlightenment?
• Who would have a problem with that? • Which group may not have been
represented in these ideas? Why?