Title: The spread of new ideas across Europe
1The Enlightenment
1
- The spread of new ideas across Europe
2Enlightenment
- ? Also known as The Age of Reason
- ? Individuals began to examine the standards by
which rulers governed. The principles of - this time held that everything, including
government, was worth examination and scrutiny.
3Divine Right
- The doctrine that kings derive their right to
rule directly from God and are not accountable to
their subjects.
4Natural Rights
- Innate rights of humanity, such as life, liberty,
equality, and the pursuit of happiness, that
cannot be denied by society -
5Laissez-Faire
- An economic theory from the 18th century that is
strongly opposed to any government intervention
in business affairs. - Sometimes referred to as "let it be economics.
- People who support a laissez faire system are
against minimum wages, duties, and any other
trade restrictions. - Laissez faire is French for "leave alone."
-
6Social Contract
- An agreement among the members of an organized
society or between the governed and the
government defining and limiting the rights and
duties of each.
7Natural Law
- A law applied to everyone and can be understood
by reason
8Absolutism
- A political theory holding that all power should
be vested in one ruler or other authority. - A form of government in which all power is vested
in a single ruler or other authority.
9Rationalism
- A system of rule in which monarchs held total
power and claimed to rule by the will of God.
10Background Age of Exploration
10
- New discoveries around the world aroused
curiosity - Exploration meant new scientific discoveries in
astronomy and mathematics - New discoveries contradicted common beliefs...who
was right?
11Background The Scientific Revolution
11
- A new way of thinking about the world
- Copernicus, Galileo, and Newton made new
discoveries about the universe - Conflict with the church
- The Scientific Method
- Allowed people to use reason in understanding
social problems
12Background English Civil War
12
- Political turmoil in England
- Rebellion against Monarchy ?beheading of Charles
I - Led to new ideas about how the English government
should be run
13What effects did the Enlightenment philosophers
have on government and society?
The spread of Enlightenment philosophers ideas
sparked changes in governments and society
throughout Europe. Encouraged by ideas such as
natural law and social contracts, people
challenged the structure of governments and
society in existence since the Middle Ages.
14By the early 1700s, European thinkers felt that
nothing was beyond the reach of the human mind.
The discoveries of the Scientific Revolution of
the 1500s and 1600s convinced educated Europeans
of the power of human reason.
Natural law governed forces such as gravity and
magnetism.
15Could human reason be used to better understand
social, economic, and political problems?
- This approach had been used to understand natural
forces such as gravity and magnetism. - In this way, the Scientific Revolution led to a
new revolution in thinking, known as the
Enlightenment.
16Different Views on Government Thomas Hobbes
16
- Leviathan
- Surrounded by the English Civil War
- Convinced that all humans were naturally selfish
and wicked - People must give up their rights to a strong
ruler in exchange for law and order (absolute
monarchy) - This agreement was called the Social Contract
17Different Views on Government John Locke
17
- Two Treatises on Government
- More positive view of human nature people could
learn from experience and improve themselves - All people are born with natural rights life,
liberty, property - Government should only exist to protect these
rights - The governments power comes from the consent of
the people. People have the right to overthrow
government
18What is philosophy?
- NOUN
- 1. examination of basic concepts the branch of
knowledge or academic study devoted to the
systematic examination of basic concepts such as
truth, existence, reality, causality, and freedom - 2. school of thought a particular system of
thought or doctrine - 3. guiding or underlying principles a set of
basic principles or concepts underlying a
particular sphere of knowledge - 4. set of beliefs or aims a precept, or set of
precepts, beliefs, principles, or aims,
underlying somebody's practice or conduct - 5. calm resignation restraint, resignation, or
calmness and rationality in somebody's behavior
or response to events
19New Philosophical Concepts The Big Five
19
- Reason Truth discovered through logical thinking
- Nature What is natural is good
- Happiness A person who lives by natures laws
will be happy - Progress Progress society to lead to perfection
- Liberty All men should have the liberties that
we take for granted
20New Philosophical Concepts Major Players
20
- Voltaire fought intolerance through his writing
and exposed government abuse with sarcasm. - Montesquieu believed in multiple branches of
government - Rousseau Government should be formed through
agreement of free individuals and humans are
naturally good.
21Enlightenment Ideas
- Power needed to be separated and balanced so that
individuals or groups did not become corrupt
through those powers. - The people wanted a change from absolutism and
the divine right of kings to constitutionalism. - Constitutionalism was the belief that the
government contract should be written down,
making clear what powers were given to whom.
22Enlightenment Ideas
- The philosophers believed that the government
"contract" and its supporting laws needed to
reflect the "general will" of the people. - Laws should be agreed upon by both the ruler and
those governed. - Assemblies of citizens should be formed with real
power to influence the government and judge
whether rulers acted properly.
23Enlightenment Ideas
- Rulers and governments that abused their power
and did not protect the rights of the citizens
were corrupt and the people had a right to rebel
and replace the ruler. - The ruler also had the right to expect that the
citizens would respect the government and laws
that were just.
24Enlightenment Ideas
- Enlightenment thinkers believed that science and
reason led to progress, that knowledge was
attainable by man (not just a revelation by God),
and that man wanted to free himself from the
existing religious worldview through scientific
understanding.
25Women and the Enlightenment
25
- Most enlightenment thinkers still took a
traditional view towards women - They thought womens education should focus on
how to be a wife and mother - BUT...women came up with their own ideas.
26Women and the Enlightenment
26
- Mary Astell called used enlightenment arguments
to criticize unequal relationships between men
and women If absolute sovereignty be not
necessary in a state, how comes it to be so in a
family? - Mary Wollstonecraft said that women deserved
equal education, this would help them become
better wives and mothers.