The enlightenmentEnlightenment thinkers applied new methods of reasoning to politics, and human institutions
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Rejected the humoral theory and claimed that chemical imbalances caused disease, meaning chemical remedies could be used to cure people.
Consumer Revolution
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Francis Bacon
Nicolaus CopernicusChallenged the geocentric model of the universe through mathematics and put forward the heliocentric model, where everything orbits the sun.
Reading RevolutionThe transition in Europe from a society where literacy consisted of patriarchal and communal reading of religious texts to a society where literacy was commonplace and reading material was broad and diverse. Books also became less religious. So religious censorship increased
Galen
Scientific method
Built a telescope and observed that other planets and moons, existed, and weren’t just balls of light
Every body in the galaxy circled around the earth, including the sun. This was the Catholic Churches view and presumed model of the universe in midevil europe
William Harvey Further overturned Galen’s theory by proving how the circulatory system works
Social ContractA voluntary agreement among individuals to secure their rights and welfare by creating a government and abiding by its rules.
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Enlightened absolutists monarchsFrederick the great of Prussia: tried to help the people. Increased freedoms of press and speech to weaken the nobility and strengthen his power.
There is no morality in the state of nature. You need government to order the chaos of nature
Contagious Diseases ActThis allowed police officers to arrest any woman they suspected to be a prostitute. They were then permitted to give that woman an examination to prevent the spread of STDs. This is state-sponsered sexual assault.
UrbanizationThanks to new technologies, fewer people were required for farming, leading many to move to the cities.
DeismVoltaire argued that there was a god, but god didn’t intervene in human affairs.
Charter of towns 1792
Mary WollstonecraftEnglish writer and early feminist who denied male supremacy and advocated equal education for women
Denis Diderot
Enlightened Absolutisma system in which rulers tried to govern by Enlightenment principles while maintaining their full royal powers. Rulers only acted enlightened when it benefitted them.
Grew with the increased demand for leisure during the consumer revolution and helped spread enlightenment ideas
Jean-Jacques RousseauA French man who believed that Human beings are naturally good & free & can rely on their instincts. Government should exist to protect common good, and be a democracy. Similar ideas to John Locke. Idea of the social contract
Copernicus and keplers books ended up on the index of prohibited booksThese new ideas from Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo are challenging established beliefs of the Catholic Church during the catholic counter reformation. The geocentric model fit nicely with scripture so the church stuck with it.
PhilosophesFrench thinkers
Adam Smith, The Wealth of NationsAttacked mercantilist economics. Promoted laissez-faire, free-market economy, and supply-and-demand economics.
Voltaire
Diderot defined it as someone who knows about god, but actively rejects his existence
Salonprivate drawing rooms where wealthy Parisian women would have intellectual discussions with aristocrats
Thomas Malthus (1766-1834)
Enlightened absolutists monarchs
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Using general principles to determine specific consitions
Copernicus and keplers books ended up on the index of prohibited booksThese new ideas from Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo are challenging established beliefs of the Catholic Church during the catholic counter reformation. The geocentric model fit nicely with scripture so the church stuck with it.
DeismVoltaire argued that there was a god, but god didn’t intervene in human affairs.
Consumer RevolutionMiddle and upper classes had more income, rise in demand for goods increased. People began wanting larger homes and more privacy and new venues for leisure
Humoral theory of the bodyThe body is made up of 4 substances: blood, yellow bile, black bile, and flem? Imbalance of these 4 lead to disease. This is where blood letting came from
Tenamentsa cheap apartment building often crammed with people created in response to the influx of people moving into cities
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Natural rightsThe idea that human beings, just by virtue of being human, possess rights like life liberty and property
Inductive reasoning
Salonprivate drawing rooms where wealthy Parisian women would have intellectual discussions with aristocrats
John LockeArgued that natural rights were given by god, not a government, so a government couldn’t take them away. Therefore power originates with the people
Rising birth rates, improving medical technology, vaccines, and bubonic plague went away
Charter of towns 1792
There is no morality in the state of nature. You need government to order the chaos of nature
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Denis DiderotCollaborated with other enlightened thinkers to edit and publish an encyclopedia that contained a rational explanation for everything.
Contagious Diseases ActThis allowed police officers to arrest any woman they suspected to be a prostitute. They were then permitted to give that woman an examination to prevent the spread of STDs. This is state-sponsered sexual assault.
The enlightenment
Francis Bacon
Atheism
Coffee HousesGrew with the increased demand for leisure during the consumer revolution and helped spread enlightenment ideas
Adam Smith, The Wealth of NationsAttacked mercantilist economics. Promoted laissez-faire, free-market economy, and supply-and-demand economics.
Paracelsus
Thomas Malthus (1766-1834)Saw that the population was rising faster than the food supply, thought Europe was heading towards starvation
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GalenAncient Greek doctor who advanced the humoral theory of the body
Mary Wollstonecraft
William Harvey Further overturned Galen’s theory by proving how the circulatory system works
UrbanizationThanks to new technologies, fewer people were required for farming, leading many to move to the cities.
Nicolaus Copernicus
French thinkers
A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792)Argued that women and men were equal, and anything women seemed inferior at, it was only because they had been denied education and opportunities by men