The Enlightenment Review Questions

45
The Enlightenment Review Questions

description

The Enlightenment Review Questions. What was the Enlightenment?. The Enlightenment. A philosophical movement of the 18th century (1700s), in which philosophers began to apply reason and the scientific method to all aspects of society – government, religion, economics, and education. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Enlightenment Review Questions

Page 1: The Enlightenment Review Questions

The Enlightenment Review Questions

Page 2: The Enlightenment Review Questions

What was the Enlightenment?

Page 3: The Enlightenment Review Questions

The Enlightenment

A philosophical movement of the 18th century (1700s), in which philosophers began to apply reason and the scientific method to all aspects of society – government, religion, economics, and education.

Page 4: The Enlightenment Review Questions

What movement influenced the Enlightenment?

Page 5: The Enlightenment Review Questions

The Scientific Revolution paved the way for the Enlightenment.

• Scientists discovered laws that governed nature.

• Philosophers began to look for laws that governed human behavior.

• Philosophers began to apply reason and the scientific method to all aspects of society – government, religion, economics, and education.

Page 6: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Which two English philosophers began the Enlightenment?

Page 7: The Enlightenment Review Questions

The Enlightenment was started by two English political thinkers: Hobbes and Locke

Thomas Hobbes John Locke

Page 8: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Which English philosopher believed that the best form of government

was absolute monarchy?

Page 9: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Thomas Hobbes

Page 10: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Why did Thomas Hobbes believe that absolute monarchy was the best for of

government?

Page 11: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Thomas Hobbes believed that people were selfish and wicked; therefore

needed to be controlled.People are evil and wicked and need to

be controlled.

Page 12: The Enlightenment Review Questions

What book did Thomas Hobbes write?

Page 13: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Leviathan

Page 14: The Enlightenment Review Questions

What kind of social contract did Thomas Hobbes believe in?

Page 15: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Hobbes believed that government was a contract between the ruler and

the people. People gave up ALL of their rights in exchange for protection.

Page 16: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Which Enlightenment philosopher believed in self-government and that

people had natural rights?

Page 17: The Enlightenment Review Questions

John Locke

Page 18: The Enlightenment Review Questions

What book did John Locke write?

Page 19: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Two Treatise of Government

Page 20: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Who were 3 French Philosophes?

Page 21: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Voltaire

Montesquieu

Rousseau

Page 22: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Which enlightenment philosopher believed in separation of church and state?

Page 23: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Voltaire

“I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.”

Separation of Church and State

Page 24: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Which enlightenment philosopher believed in separation of powers

and checks and balances?

Page 25: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Montesquieu

You better check yourself!

Checks and Balances

Page 26: The Enlightenment Review Questions

What book did Montesquieu write?

Page 27: The Enlightenment Review Questions

The Spirit of Laws

Page 28: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Which enlightenment philosopher believed that direct democracy

was the best form of government and that everyone was equal?

Page 29: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Rousseau

Page 30: The Enlightenment Review Questions

What book did Rousseau write?

Page 31: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Rousseau wrote “The Social Contract.”You have got to read this!

It is not like Hobbes’ version of a social

contract. Mine gives people way more rights!

“Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains”

Page 32: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Who were two important women philosophers?

Page 33: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Mary Astell and Mary Wollstonecraft

Page 34: The Enlightenment Review Questions

What book did Mary Astell write?

Page 35: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Mary Astell wrote “A Serious Proposal to the Ladies.”

“If absolute sovereignty be not necessary in a state,

how comes it to be so in a family?…If all men are born

free, how is it that all women are born slaves?”

Page 36: The Enlightenment Review Questions

What book did Mary Wollstonecraft write?

Page 37: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Mary Wollstonecraft wrote “A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.”

“Let women share rights and she will emulate the virtues of men; for she must grow more perfect when emancipated.”

Page 38: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Why is the Enlightenment Important?

Page 39: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Democracies today are a result of the Enlightenment.

Full democracies are in green, flawed in yellow, hybrid regimes in orange and authoritarian regimes in red. Microstates and countries for which there was no data (Somalia) are in grey:

Page 40: The Enlightenment Review Questions

T

Thomas Jefferson

The Declaration of Independence

“among these rights are life, liberty, and the pursuit

of happiness”John Locke said that people were born with the right to life, liberty, and property

Page 41: The Enlightenment Review Questions

Enlightenment thinkers challenged the theory of divine right and the union of church and state.

We do not believe in divine right. Rulers don’t get their power from God. They get it from us, the people!

Page 42: The Enlightenment Review Questions

The American Revolution The French Revolution

Page 43: The Enlightenment Review Questions

The U.S. Constitution

The Constitution sets up three branches of Government, just as

Montesquieu recommended.

Page 44: The Enlightenment Review Questions

The Bill of Rights: First Ten Amendments to the U.S. Constitution

Page 45: The Enlightenment Review Questions

• religious tolerance, • a belief in progress, • the world becoming more secular• the rise of individualism