1 / 24

Enlightenment Thinkers & Their Ideas

Enlightenment Thinkers & Their Ideas. A revolution in intellectual activity changed Europeans’ view of government and society. Finish Bug’s Life… Then, take out vocabulary charts and journals…. Enlightenment.

adara
Download Presentation

Enlightenment Thinkers & Their Ideas

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Enlightenment Thinkers & Their Ideas A revolution in intellectual activity changed Europeans’ view of government and society.

  2. Finish Bug’s Life…Then, take out vocabulary charts and journals…

  3. Enlightenment • Movement where thinkers used the principles (ideas) of reason to all aspects of society • Led to people challenging long-held ideas; Directly led to the American and French Revolution

  4. Separation of powers • Division of power between the branches of government • Important concept in our government (Legislative, Judicial, and Executive)

  5. Social contract • The people and the government have made an agreement together (each have rights and responsibilities) • Led to new forms of democratic governments

  6. Enlightened despot • An absolute leader who believed the new ideas and made reforms that related to the Enlightenment • Led to a new idea of what was a good leader (examples: Frederick the Great and Catherine the Great)

  7. Frederick the great • King of Prussia from 1740-1786, called himself “the first servant of the state”, goal was to serve and strengthen the country • More religious freedom, reduced censorship, improved education, abolish torture

  8. Catherine the great • Ruled Russia from 1762 to 1796; read many of the philosophers’ works; wrote to Voltaire, recommended changes but never passed • Expanded Russia but did little to accomplish reform life for the peasants in Russia.

  9. Checks and balances • Each branch of governments checks the power of the other branches • Decreased the chance of an absolute monarch gaining power; major component of Democracy

  10. Take notes in journal now… stick vocab. chart in journals…

  11. Thomas Hobbes • Saw the English Civil War and because of this he thought people were naturally bad, greedy • If people did not have government, then human life would be “nasty, brutish & short” • Government is necessary • People should create the government (social contract)

  12. John Locke • People are naturally good • Everyone is born with natural rights (life, liberty, and property) • Government’s purpose is protect these rights • If a government fails, then it is the duty or responsibility of the people to overthrow it

  13. Baron de Montesquieu • Admired British government • Called for a division of power (Separation of powers) • Checks and balances between the government will keep the branches from taking too much control

  14. Voltaire • Admired British government • Wanted to reform the church • Pro-freedom of speech • Sought to create enlightened despots • “I may not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it”

  15. Jean-Jacques Rousseau • Man is good naturally but society makes us evil • We are not born to steal, but are forced to steal because of our environment • If we must have a government, then a democracy is the only acceptable one.

  16. Enlightenment Homework Questions • Which leader’s philosophy do you agree with most? Give two solid reasons for why. • Write down a quote that each of the philosophers might say. • How did the Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment lead to conflict? (3-5sentences)

  17. Enlightenment Period 4 and 6

  18. Thomas Hobbes • Wrote Leviathan (1651) • Pessimistic view of people in their natural state • People are bad, greedy, immoral, violent, and lazy • Left alone, human life would be “nasty, brutish, & short” • To avoid this, people must give up their freedom to an absolute ruler and strong government he called “leviathan” after a mystical monster • This voluntary agreement to be ruled by a government he called social contract

  19. John Locke • Two Treatises on Government (1689) • Began writing to support William and Mary’s ascension and the birth of constitutional monarchy in England • Humanity is good and is shaped by its experiences (tabala rasa) • Role of government is to serve people and protect their natural rights (inborn rights to life, liberty, and property) • People give up SOME of their freedoms in the social contract to ensure that others are retained • Governments to failed to protect should be deposed

  20. Baron de Montesquieu • The Spirit of the Laws (1748) • Admired British government’s constitutional monarchy • Thought despotism (aka tyranny) could be avoided if political power were divided and shared by diverse classes • Power must check power, so a government should be broken into parts, each with ability to oversee the others (separation of powers)

  21. Voltaire • Wrote Philosophical Letters on the English(1733) • Enthusiastic supporter of English gov’t and institutions • Mocked the monarchy/church in satire, hoping to reform them, not destroy them • Sought to create enlightened despots • “I may not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it”

  22. Jean-Jacques Rousseau • Wrote The Social Contract (1762) • Man by nature was solitary, good and free • Any bad is produced by society • Society should reflect the good nature of man through the collected “general will” of people • Government is a necessary evil • People through their “general will” grant some power to the government, but government serves only at the will of the people, for the people • Thus, democracy is the only good government

  23. Mary Wollstonecraft • Wrote A Vindication of the Rights (1792) • Male philosophes during this period contradicted themselves: • Opposed arbitrary power of monarchs but upheld arbitrary power of men over women • Job to be wives and mothers and intellectually inferior • Some women began to show them wrong • Wollstonecraft was well-educated • Writer, founded a school, advocated for women to do what was best for them • Women should be educated because they are the primary teachers in society

  24. Thinking Questions • How was the Scientific Revolution related to the Enlightenment? • How did monarchs react to the ideas of the Enlightenment? • How did the government of the United States reflect Enlightenment ideas?

More Related