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Bellringer

Bellringer. Have out your homework! On a piece of paper, titled “ Bellringer 10/25/11”, please answer the following questions: What is an absolute monarch and how did they claim their power? Who is an example of an absolute monarch? Why does he fit this definition?

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Bellringer

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  1. Bellringer • Have out your homework! • On a piece of paper, titled “Bellringer 10/25/11”, please answer the following questions: • What is an absolute monarch and how did they claim their power? • Who is an example of an absolute monarch? Why does he fit this definition? • Objective: SWBAT describe the revolutions in thoughts from the Scientific Revolution and Enlightenment. • BJOTD: What is brown and sticky?

  2. The Scientific Revolution and Enlightenment

  3. Background • What did the Renaissance do? • The Renaissance sparked interest and curiosity about many things, allowing people to start to think for themselves • What did the Reformation question? • The Reformation led people to question and challenge the original views of God, the church, and salvation

  4. At the same time as the Reformation… • Individuals began to challenge the way people viewed their place in the Universe. This became known as the Scientific Revolution.

  5. The Scientific Revolution (1500-1700CE) • The Scientific Revolution was a new way of thinking about the natural world. • Based on: • careful observation of nature • a willingness to question widely accepted beliefs • reason and logic • Result: the expansion of scientific knowledge

  6. How did they Develop these Ideas? • Scientific Method • Created by Aristotle • A logical procedure for gathering and testing ideas

  7. The Enlightenment (1700s-1800s) • What was the Enlightenment? • An intellectual movement where enlightenment thinkers tried to apply reason and scientific methods to the HUMAN world as well as to the rest of the natural world • People wanted to build a society around the ideas of the Scientific Revolution

  8. How did these movements spread? • Salons—wealthy women and men would gather to discuss ideas • Encyclopedias published many Enlightenment ideas • Pamphlets and newspapers helped to spread the word about new ideas

  9. Bellringer • You have 12 minutes to: • Finish your license plate • Tape/staple the extra part of the chart to your “People of the Scientific Revolution and Enlightenment” Chart • Rearrange the room into two circles: an inner and an outer circle. • Objective: SWBAT distinguish individuals from the SR and Enlightenment based on their accomplishments and analyze their importance to society today. • BJOTD: How do we know that policemen are strong?

  10. Isaac Newton (1642-1680s) • By 24, Newton was certain all physical objects on Earth and in space were equally affected by the same forces • His big idea: linking motion in the heaven with motion on earth • Called the Law of Universal Gravitation • Every object in the Universe attracts every other object. The amount of attraction depends on the mass of the object and the distance between them.

  11. Nicolaus Copernicus—1500s • Did not agree with the geocentric model of the universe • First to study the idea that the sun was at the center of the universe • After 25 years, Copernicus proved that the sun was in the center of the stars and other planets • Called the heliocentric theory—sun-centered

  12. Johannes Kepler—1600s • Kepler expanded on Copernicus’ ideas—he wanted to know why and how the planets orbit the way they do • Proved that the planets revolve around the sun in elliptical orbits instead of perfect circles

  13. Galileo Galilei—1600s • 1609—he used a telescope to study the heavens • 1610—wrote Starry Messenger, which described his observations • Confirmed Copernicus’ theory of a heliocentric universe

  14. Galileo Tidbits • Galileo's ideas went against the church, so he was “encouraged” not to publish his book • Taken to court by the Church and put to torture • Under torture, he lied and claimed that Copernicus’ ideas were wrong • Jailed until his death, but his ideas still spread.

  15. William Harvey—1600s • Wrote On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals • Showed the heart acts as a pump to circulate the blood throughout the body • Described the function of blood vessels

  16. Other Important Inventions • Microscope • Edward Jenner invented a vaccine for Smallpox • First Fahrenheit Thermometer

  17. Thomas Hobbes • Wrote Leviathan • English philosopher • Believed all humans are naturally wicked • Absolute monarchy is the best form of government • Governments are created to protect people from their own selfishness

  18. John Locke • Wrote Two Treatises on Government • English philosopher • People have the ability to reason and to make good decisions if given the proper information • Governments should be formed with the approval of the people • Governments should exist to protect individual freedoms and liberties • People, not god, should choose leaders.

  19. Montesquieu • Wrote The Spirit of Laws • French political thinker • A monarchy with limited power makes a country stable and secure • Developed the idea of “separation of powers” • Government should be divided or spread out among different branches of government so no one individual or group has too much power and as a result threatens liberty.

  20. Voltaire • French writer • Believed in: • Tolerance • Reason • Freedom of religion • Freedom of speech • Supported the idea of separation of church and state

  21. Rousseau • Wrote The Social Contract • Swiss philosopher • Direct Democracy—where people vote in person to make all laws—was the way to protect individual freedom • Government should be a contract between rulers and the people

  22. Thomas Jefferson • Author of Declaration of Independence • All men should be guaranteed life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness

  23. CesareBeccaria • Wrote On Crimes and Punishments • Felt that many parts of the justice system were unfair: • Torture • Secret trials • Harsh sentences • Corrupt judges • His book called for punishments designed to preserve security and order

  24. Mary Wollstonecraft • Wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Women • Women should have an education because it’s the key to gaining equality

  25. After you’ve found all the license plates… • In a paragraph on a separate piece of paper, please complete the following statement in a paragraph (5 sentences): • I feel that__________________ from the (SR/Enlightenment) has been the most influential in our world because….

  26. Results of the Enlightenment • Stimulated religious tolerance • Helped to start democratic revolutions around the world • Rise of individualism—thinking for yourself • Rise of a more secular or worldly outlook

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