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Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment

Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

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Page 1: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Unit 6Chapter 18

Science and Enlightenment

Page 2: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened
Page 3: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you

picked upDefine: philosophes, Enlightened despot, & deism

How did the Enlightenment affect the French and American Revolutions (at least three ways)

On the back, discuss the rule of these monarchs/enlightened despots: Maria Theresa, Joseph II, Catherine the Great, Charles VI, Frederick the Great

Page 4: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

The Protestant Reformation Gave Way to Other

Revolutions

*Science

*Enlightenment

Page 5: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Scientific Revolution“Prove It”

Page 6: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Scientific Revolution Fueled By

Scholasticism of the Late Middle Ages

Humanism of the Renaissance

Growth of Universities

Growth of Literacy (printing press)

Protestant Reformation

Age of Exploration

Political Rivalries in Europe

Page 7: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Medieval View of the WorldSynthesis of Christian theology and scientific beliefs of the time

St. Thomas Aquinas studied Aristotle attempting to harmonize science with Christian thought (scholasticism)

Science was used to understand GodFour Elements of the Material World – earth, water, air and fire

Gave rise to alchemy – the idea that if you change those elements you get differences in the material world

Four Elements of the Human Body – blood, phlegm, yellow bile, black bile

Disease caused by evil spirits, punishment by GodPtolemy went unquestioned (“geocentric” theory - earth-centered universe)

Page 8: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Mini-Research Project

Research the person you are assigned. Be prepared to provide the class with the following info:

When and where did they live? What are their MOST IMPORTANT achievements or

“daring new ideas”? Think and respond: How did their achievements

challenge old ideas about science, politics, religion or philosophy of previous generations?

What one word would you use to summarize this person or their achievements?

Page 9: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Major Scientists

Astronomy

Copernicus 1473-1543

Tycho Brahe 1546-1601

Johannes Kepler 1571-1630

Galileo 1564-1642

Francis Bacon 1561-1626

Isaac Newton 1642-1727

Medicine and Chemistry

Paracelsus 1493-1541

Andreas Vesalius 1514-1564

William Harvey 1578-1657

Page 10: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

The Women-Folk

In the Middle Ages, women who sought learning were hampered by the idea that a woman’s appropriate role was that of a homemaker (unless they joined a convent)As a result of Humanism, some women were encouraged to read the classics and Christian textsBy the 17th century, however, this enthusiasm will wane, and education was only available to a privileged few

Margaret Cavendish Maria Merian Maria Winkelmann

Page 11: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Debates on the Nature of Women(querelles des femmes)

Middle Ages -Male view of women not very favorable Women inherently base Easily swayed an prone to vice Sexually insatiable

Early Modern Era – women began to speak out, argued that education was the key to women’s abilityScientific Revolution – Didn’t help much. Reaffirmed traditional medieval ideas about women

Anatomical skeletons of male and female pelvis reasserted the idea that women were only meant to be child bearers, and a males larger skull proved his intellectual superiority

As science and medicine were upgraded to professional crafts, women lost traditional roles as midwives

Widespread growth of literature allowed for the spread and continuation of sexist ideas

Page 12: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Typical for the Time

“which one shows to the curious, but which has no use at all, any more than a carousel horse”

-Jean de La Bryere on how an educated woman was like a gun that is a collectors item

Page 13: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Science and Religion

Deism – by product of the Scientific Revolution - Perceived god as a “watchmaker” who created the universe but has little influence

Blaise Pascal

Benedict de Spinoza

Page 14: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Key Concept

Church had to defend itself on two fronts Protestant Reformation which challenged the

Pope using theological grounds Scientific Revolution which challenged his

authority on scientific or mathematical grounds

Page 15: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Consequences of the Scientific Revolution

The growth of a well-respected, competitive scientific international community

The development of a rational method for obtaining scientific knowledge versus basing conclusions on ancient established sources

Its impact was on how people thought, however it was not applied to economic and social improvement until the 18th century (no improvement in the standard of living for most folks)

Page 16: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Enlightenment

Philosophers, Social Critics, et al develop new ideas on the role of mankind and government and applied it to social issues and politics (used new scientific methods from the scientific revolution) Models of government produced were imitated in later constitutions (including U.S.)Challenged absolute monarchies who aligned themselves with the church (confusing when Pope and monarch divinely appointed – what happens when they disagree?)

Page 17: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Enlightened Thinkers

PhilosophesRene Descartes – 1596-1650Jean-Jacques Rousseau – 1712-1778Voltaire – 1694-1778 Denis Diderot – 1713-1784Immanuel Kant – 1724-1804Thomas Hobbes – 1588-1679 John Locke – 1632-1704 Montesquieu – 1689-1755Adam Smith – 1737-1790Marquise de PompadourMary Wollstonecraft – 1759-1797

Page 18: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

(add)

David Hume – philosopher that says desire rather than reason governs human behavior

Edward Gibbon – criticizes Christianity

Cesare Beccaria – one of the first to condemn death penalty and torture; book On Crimes and Punishment (1764); shows overall theme of Enlightenment of humanitarianism

Page 19: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Enlightened MonarchsUsed enlightened ideas (often combined with absolute rule)

Toleration Justice Improvement of people’s lives

Examples

Frederick II of Prussia Catherine the Great of Russia Maria Theresa of Austria Joseph II of Austria1. Give examples of how they initiated “enlightened reform” within their respective

realms (pp.615-621)2. What overall effect did the Enlightenment have on France ? (summarize pp.

622-623)3. What was the overall influence of the Enlightenment ? (summarize pp. 623)

Page 20: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Thoughtful Exercises to Help You Achieve “Enlightenment”Which “philosophes” or other

enlightenment thinkers influenced each of the “enlightened absolutes”?

Page 21: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

Say What?

Identify which enlightened thinker would have said the following:

Page 22: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

“Dare to Know”Emmanuel Kant, defining the

“enlightenment”

Page 23: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

“I think, therefore I am”Renee Descartes, on deductive

reasoning

Page 24: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

The mind is a “tabula rasa”

John Locke, Essay Concerning Human Understanding

Page 25: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

“Ecrasez l’ infame!”(crush the horrible

thing!)Voltaire, on religion

Page 26: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

“All men are born free, but everywhere they are in

chains”

Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Social Contract

Page 27: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

it should be operated by and “invisible hand”Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations

Page 28: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

We should then love them with true affections,

because we should learn to respect ourselves”

Mary Wollstonecraft, Vindication of the Rights of Women

Page 29: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

“it’s against natural law”Montesquieu, on slavery

Page 30: Unit 6 Chapter 18 Science and Enlightenment. Enlightenment Exit Card – Answer the following on the index card you picked up Define: philosophes, Enlightened

“life is nasty, brutish and short”

Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan