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Key Terms The Enlightenment Thomas Hobbes Social Contract John Locke Tabula Rasa Natural Rights Baron de Montesquieu Separation of Powers Voltaire – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Key%20Terms%20


1
Key Terms The Enlightenment
  • Thomas Hobbes
  • Social Contract
  • John Locke
  • Tabula Rasa
  • Natural Rights
  • Baron de Montesquieu
  • Separation of Powers
  • Voltaire
  • Deist
  • Jean Jacques Rousseau
  • Noble Savages
  • Physiocrats
  • Laissez faire
  • Enlightened Despots

2
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
  • Hobbes ? political philosopher who supported
    absolutism
  • Believed that individuals entered into a social
    contract with governments.
  • Social Contract ? belief that people, out of fear
    of violent death, forfeit particular freedoms for
    security

3
John Locke (1632-1704)
  • Locke ? political philosopher who believed that
    people are born with reason and natural rights.
  • Locke posited that people are born as blank
    slates or tabula rasas and that the way they
    are treated and educated ultimately shapes who
    they will become.

4
Natural Rights
  • Locke believed that human nature is governed by
    natural laws.
  • Believed that reason is what allows people to
    know what is truly good for them.
  • To obey natural laws, people need to have and
    exercise natural rights ? rights one is born
    with.
  • right to life, liberty, and property.
  • Government must protect these rights and if they
    do not do so, the citizens have a right to remove
    it.

5
Baron de Montesquieu (1689-1755)
  • Montesquieu ? political philosopher who denounced
    despotism and argued for the separation of
    powers.
  • Separation of powers ? the breakdown of
    governmental powers and duties across multiple
    people or groups.
  • He believed that Parliament was the best example
    of good government.

6
Francois Marie Arouet, a.k.a. Voltaire (1694-1778)
  • Voltaire ? political philosopher who believed
    that few people were capable of governing
    themselves hence monarchy was the ideal system.
  • Voltaire was a deist ? believed that there was a
    planned order to the universe and that reason was
    the only way to find truth.

7
Jean Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)
  • Rousseau ? political philosopher who believed
    that reason and civilization ruined humanity,
    glorified the idea of the noble savage.
  • He believed that the creation of government
    destroyed what could have been ideal societies.

8
Rousseau's Theories
  • Rousseau believed that if civilization and reason
    had not met humanity, the noble savage would have
    endured and humanity would have been better off.
  • Noble savage ? precivilized people who are
    considered generous, free, spontaneous and
    sincere
  • Believed that members of this society would enter
    into a contract with one another where they
    forfeit some freedoms.
  • The general will would determine the common
    interest.
  • This general will can be determined by the
    majority or a small group with a better sense or
    idea of how to manage things

9
Physiocrats
  • Many people used enlightenment thinking on the
    field of economics.
  • These people would be known as physiocrats.
  • These thinkers believed that governments should
    not regulate economic activity very closely.
  • Laissez-faire economics ? belief that governments
    should leave economic activity alone and allow
    natural law to govern it.

10
Enlightened Despots
  • Rulers would adopt the enlightenment philosophies
    and would be considered enlightened despots.
  • Examples of enlightened despots are
  • Frederick the Great ? worked closely with
    Voltaire, made promises to end serfdom but failed
    to do so.
  • Catherine the Great ? Russian czarina who also
    sought to end serfdom and would attempt to do so
    but would recant after pressure from nobles.
  • Maria Theresa ? weakened the control of the
    Catholic Church, gave serfs more freedom, evened
    out the tax system in Austria.
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