Chapter 10: Revolution and Enlightenment
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Transcript Chapter 10: Revolution and Enlightenment
CHAPTER 10:
REVOLUTION AND ENLIGHTENMENT
Section 1: The Scientific Revolution
BACKGROUND:
During
Middle Ages many
educated Europeans started to take
an intense interest in the world
around them.
These “natural philosophers” did
not observe and experiment,
instead they relied on the ancient
authorities such as Aristotle for
their knowledge.
Changes occur
16th Centuries
The
during the 15th and
mastery of Greek and Latin
language opened the door to use
other philosophers’ works such as
Ptolemy, Archimedes, and Plato.
Technological issues lead to
stimulated scientific activity
(wanted to improve ships,
agriculture, medicine, etc.)
The
invention of the printing press
allowed ideas so spread quickly
(much easier to print mass copies
than to handwrite them! Just think
about how fast ideas spread now!)
Advances in math helped to
revolutionize science, 4 important
mathematicians were major players
in these advances
Nicholas Copernicus, Johannes
Kepler, Galileo Galilei, and Isaac
Newton
REVOLUTION IN ASTRONOMY
Ptolemy, 2nd Century A.D.
known as the greatest
astronomer in antiquity
Philosophers of the Middle
Ages used his ideas (along
with some from Aristotle
and Christianity) to
construct a model of the
universe called the Ptolemic
System.
Geocentric- spheres one inside
the other, Earth at the center
Copernicus
Copernicus, May 1543
Published On the
Revolutions of the Heavenly
Spheres.
and Kepler
Heliocentric model: sun
centered, planets revolve around
sun, moon around Earth. More
accurate
Kepler
Confirmed the heliocentric
model
Laws of planetary motions
1st law: orbits of the planets
not circular, elliptical (eggshaped) with the Sun toward
the end.
Galileo
Galilei
Math teacher
1st European to make regular
observations of the heavens using a
telescope. He discovered:
mountains on the moon
4 moons of Jupiter
Sunspots
Church ordered him to stop studies
because his discoveries were
threatening church power
Isaac
Newton
Went
to Cambridge University,
became a professor of
Mathematics
Wrote Mathematical Principles of
Natural Philosophy or Principia
3 Laws that govern the planetary
bodies as well as objects on Earth
Universal law of gravitation
Created a new picture of the universe
BREAKTHROUGHS IN MEDICINE & CHEMISTRY
Revolution
in medicine 16th Century
Old
ideas dominated by the teachings of
Greek physician, Galen.
Relied on animal dissection (wrong in many
cases)
New
ideas based on the work of Andreas
Vesalius
1542 wrote On the Fabric of the Human Body
Discussed what he found when dissecting human
bodies as a professor of surgery at University of
Padua
William
Harvey
1628 wrote On the Motion of the Heart
and Blood
Heart not liver was the beginning point of
circulation of blood
Same blood flows in both veins and arteries
Most importantly showed that blood makes a
complete circuit as it passes through the body.
Robert
Boyle
One of 1st scientists to conduct controlled
experiments
Boyle’s Law: volume of a gas varies with
the pressure exerted on it.
WOMEN AND THE ORIGINS OF MODERN SCIENCE
Margaret
Cavendish
Wrote works on scientific matters
Observations Upon Experimental Philosophy
Critical of the idea that science could help humans
master nature
Women
14% of German astronomers
1650- 1710
Most famous: Maria Winkelmann
Trained by self-taught astronomer
Marries Prussia’s foremost astronomer and becomes
his assistant
Discovered a comet
Applied for position at Berlin Academy but was not
hired because she was a woman
DESCARTES AND REASON
Descartes
began thinking and writing
about the doubt and uncertainty
everywhere in the confusion of the 17th
Century
His philosophy dominated Western
thought until 20th Century
Most famous work Discourse on Method
Used reason to arrive at a second principle
“I think therefore, I am”
Mind and matter were completely separate
Called father of modern rationalism
System of thought that reason is the chief source of
knowledge
THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD
Systematic procedure for collecting and analyzing
evidence
Crucial to the evolution of science
Developed by Francis Bacon
English Philosopher
Believed that scientists should use inductive
reasoning to learn about nature
Systematic observations and carefully organized
experiments to test hypotheses would lead to correct
general principles
Practical not academic: Wanted science to benefit
industry, agriculture, and trade
He thought science could “conquer nature in action”
control and domination of nature became an
important concern of science and technology
CHAPTER 10:
REVOLUTION AND ENLIGHTENMENT
Section 2: The Enlightenment
PATH TO ENLIGHTENMENT
The
Enlightenment was an 18th
Century philosophical movement of
intellectuals who were impressed
with the achievements of the
Scientific Revolution.
Favored reason- using the scientific
method to understand all life.
Wanted to progress toward a better
society
Influenced
by two 17th century Englishmen
Isaac
Newton, believed that the
physical world and everything in it
worked like a giant machine
Intellectuals believed that if Newton could discover
the natural laws that governed the physical world
then they could discover the natural laws that
governed human society.
John
Locke, argued that everyone
was born with a tabula rasa, or blank
mind.
People were molded by the experiences that came
through their senses. If environments were changed
and people were exposed to the right influences, then
people could be changed and a new society created.
PHILOSOPHES AND THEIR IDEAS
The
intellectuals of the Enlightenment were
called philosophe (French: means
philosopher.)
writers, professors, journalists,
economists, and above all social reformers.
Came from the nobility and middle class.
Inspiration for the Enlightenment came
from the English, but most of the leaders of
the Enlightenment were French.
The ideas became a international movement
as their ideas spread.
The
role of philosophy was to
change the world
Rational criticism was to be
applied to everything, including
religion.
Philosophes often disagreed and
the Enlightenment evolved
Each succeeding generation
became more radical than the
last
Montesquieu
French
nobility
The Spirit of the Laws, 1748
Studied government trying
to use the scientific method
to find the natural laws
that govern social and
political relationships of
human beings
Montesquieu
identified 3
basic kinds of governments:
1. Republics
(small states)
2. Despotism (large states)
(**Tyranny, dictatorship)
3. Monarchies (moderate sized
states)
1.
2.
3.
Used England as an example of a
monarchy
Believed E’s gov’t had 3 branches
The executive (the monarch)
The legislative (parliament)
Judicial (courts of law)
The government functioned through a
separation of powers
Checks and balances
Provides freedom and security for the
state
American
philosophes worked these
ideas into the U.S. Constitution!
Voltaire
Greatest
figure of the
Enlightenment
Parisian, from prosperous middle-class
family
Wrote pamphlets, novels, plays, letters,
essays, and histories that brought him
fame and wealth
Known for criticism of Christianity and
his strong belief in religious toleration
Treatise on Toleration
Deism-
18th century
religious philosophy based
on reason and natural law.
Built
on idea of Newtonian
world-machine
Believed God was a mechanic or
clockmaker that made the world
and then let it run itself
according to natural laws
Diderot
Went to University of Paris
Freelance writer
father wanted him to be a lawyer or work in the
church
Encyclopedia, 28 volume collection of knowledge
he edited
Wanted to change the general way of thinking
Attacked religious superstition and promoted
tolerance
Sold to doctors, clergymen, teachers, and
lawyers thus spreading the ideas of the
Enlightenment
TOWARD A NEW SOCIAL SCIENCE
Enlightenment ideas led to the creation of what we call
social sciences: economics and political science
Economics
Physiocrats and Adam Smith
French group wanted to identify natural economic
laws that governed society
Believed that if individuals were free to pursue their
own economic self-interest, all society would benefit
The state should not interrupt the free play of
natural economic forces by imposing gov’t
restrictions on the economy
This becomes known as laissez-faire
“to let (the people) do (what they want)”
Beccaria
and Justice
Most European states had court
systems and punishments (often
cruel)
Needed to deter crime
Beccaria wrote On Crimes and
Punishments
Argued that punishments should not be
brutal
Opposed capital punishment (death
penalty)
He thought this just set a barbaric
example
THE LATER ENLIGHTENMENT
1760’s new generation
Most famous Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Discourse on the Origins of Inequality of Mankind
People had adopted laws and gov’ts to preserve
their private property. In the process, they had
become enslaved by government.
Most famous work: The Social Contract
Society agrees to be governed by its general will.
Emile- novel about education
Should foster and not restrict children’s natural instincts
Thought emotions along with reason were important to
human development
Balance between mind and heart
RIGHTS OF WOMEN
Male
intellectuals had argued that the
nature of women made them inferior to men
and made male domination necessary
Mary Wollstonecraft, English writers
Turned Enlightenment ideas against male
philosophers
If monarchs leading based solely on birth
right is wrong so is the domination of
women by men.
Women had reason and so they should be
equal
SOCIAL WORLD OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT
The Enlightenment included the
middle class but the peasants were
mostly unaware and little affected by
the Enlightenment
The Growth of Reading
More publishing and reading lead to a
faster way to spread ideas
Development of magazines
Daily newspapers
The
Salon
Elegant drawing rooms of the wealthy upper
class’s great urban houses
Guests gathered in salons and took part in
conversations that were often centered on the
new ideas of the philosophes
Brought writers and artists together with
aristocrats, gov’t officials, and wealthy
middle class people
Women who hosted had the opportunity to
sway political opinion and influence literary
and artistic taste
Helped to spread the Enlightenment ideas
RELIGION IN THE ENLIGHTENMENT
Many philosophes attacked Christianity
But…. Most Europeans were still Christian
Catholic
church still remained an important
center of life for community
Protestantism had settled into normal
patterns
New desire of Protestants for greater depths of
religious experience led to religious
movements
England-Methodism-John Wesley
mystical experience
Preached in open fields
Methodist church begins
CHAPTER 10:
REVOLUTION AND ENLIGHTENMENT
Section3: The Impact of the Enlightenment
THE ARTS
Architecture
and art
The Palace of Louis XIV at Versailles
had a great impact on Europe
Other
rulers built
grandiose residence
New
palaces were
modeled more on the
Italian baroque style of
the 1500s and 1600s
than on Versailles
Balthasar Neumann, architect
Church of the Fourteen Saints in Germany and
Residence (palace of prince-bishop of Wurzburg)
1730s
a new artistic style
known
as rococo
Emphasized grace, charm and
gentle action
Delicate designs colored in gold
with graceful curves
Highly secular, lightness and
charm spoke of the pursuit of
pleasure, happiness, and love.
Antoine Watteau, painter
Paintings of elegant world of upper-class pleasure
and joy. Underneath there is an element of sadness
suggesting the fragility and passing nature of
pleasure, love, and life.
Music
The 18th century was one of the greatest
periods in the history of European music
Johann
Sebastian Bach
Renowned organist from Germany
Mass in B Minor
One of greatest composers of all time
George
Fredrick Handel
From Germany, but spent a lot of time in
England
Best known for religious music, Messiah
Bach
and Handel perfected the baroque musical
style
Then in the late 18th century two new geniuses
show up, their music is called classical not baroque
Franz Joseph Haydn
Played for Hungarian princes until coming to
England and playing for public concerts
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
A child prodigy
Couldn’t get a patron to support him financially
but still wrote music
The Marriage of Figaro, The Magic Flute, and
Don Giovanni were most famous works
Literature
Development
of the novel- appealed to
middle class readers
Henry Fielding wrote about people
without morals who survive by their
wits
The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling
Adventures of a young scoundrel,
hilarious, about life in the slums to
aristocracy. Accurately reflects real types
of this period
ENLIGHTENMENT AND ABSOLUTISM
Enlightenment
thought had an effect on the
political life of European states in the 18th C
The philosophes believed in natural rights
for all people
These rights included
Equality before the law
Freedom of religious worship
Freedom of speech
Freedom of the press
Right to assemble
Right to hold property
Right to pursue happiness
Declaration of
Independence
Philosophes
believed that people needed to
be governed by enlightened rulers
Allow religious toleration, freedom of speech
and press, rights of private property
Nurture the arts, sciences, and education
Obey the laws and enforce them fairly for all
subjects
Historians believe that these ideas created a
new kind of monarch and lead to enlightened
absolutism
Governed by Enlightenment principles but
maintained power
Prussia:
Army and Bureaucracy
Prussian kings, Fredrick William I and Fredrick II made
Prussia a major European power in the 18th C
Fredrick William I
Strove to maintain a highly efficient bureaucracy
of civil service workers. Values were obedience,
honor, and service to the king.
Army
by the end of his reign he had doubled the
army’s size
One of the best in Europe
Members of nobility were officers
Believed in duty, obedience, and sacrifice
Fredrick
II, or Fredrick the Great
One of the best educated and most cultured
monarch in the 18th C. even invited Voltaire to live
at his court
Dedicated ruler
Enlarged the Prussian army and kept strict watch
over bureaucracy
Abolished the use of torture (except for treason or
murder)
Granted limited freedom of speech and press
Greater religious toleration
However, kept serfdom and rigid social structure
The
Austrian Empire
Was
one of the great European
states by the beginning of the
18th C
Difficult to rule
Sprawling (BIG)
Many different nationalities,
languages, religions, and cultures
Maria Teresa, 1740
Worked to centralize the Empire and strengthen the
state’s power
Not open to philosophes’ calls for reform, but worked
hard to alleviate the conditions of the serfs
Joseph II, Maria’s son
Reform program- abolished death penalty and
serfdom, established equality of all before the law
and religious toleration
Largely failed… alienated nobles and church with
reforms and serfs weren’t happy because the drastic
changes were confusing
Successors undid most reforms
Russia
under Catherine the Great
After a string of weak leaders who were
deposed or murdered Catherine II took the
throne
1762-1796
Favored Enlightenment reforms and invited
Diderot to Russia
But… she didn’t change much because she
knew she needed the nobles’ support
Favoring nobility led to worse conditions for
peasants and led to rebellion
Rural reform was halted and serfdom
expanded
Defeated Turks and gained territory in Poland
Enlightened
Absolutism?
Of the 3 rulers discussed only Joseph II made
truly radical changes based on Enlightenment
ideas.
Fredrick II and Catherine II talked about
reforms but did very little
Heightened state power in Prussia, Austria,
and Russia was not used to undertake
enlightened reforms. Rather, it was used to
collect more taxes and create armies, wage
wars, and gain power.
Philosophes thought war was a waste of life
and resources
WAR OF AUSTRIAN SUCCESSION
1740,
war broke out in
connection with the succession
to throne
Charles VI died then Maria
Theresa ruled, Fredrick II took
advantage and invaded Silesia
and France allied with Prussia
(Fredrick) so Maria allied with
Great Britain
The
War of Austrian Succession was
fought in 3 areas of the world
Europe
Prussia seized Silesia
France occupied Netherlands
France took Madras in India
North America
British captured French fortress Louisbourg
After
7 years everyone was tired
Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle 1748
Return of all occupied territories except Silesia
to original owners
THE SEVEN YEARS’ WAR
Maria Theresa couldn’t accept loss of Silesia, rebuilt army
and worked to separate from Prussia as ally
New
Britain and France over colonies
Austria and Prussia over Silesia
New
rivalries
Allies
French and Austria, Russia joins in because
they feel that Prussia has become a threat
Britain allies with Prussia
Another
worldwide war with 3 areas of
conflict
Europe, India, and North America
The
War in Europe
British
and Prussians against
Austrians, Russians and French
Prussia- superb army and military
skill
Peter III of Russia pulls his troops
from conflict creating a stalemate
European war ends 1763
Territories returned and Austria
officially recognized Prussia's
permanent control of Silesia
The
War in India
Britain
and France
Great War for Empire
Britain wins out not because
they are better but because
they were more persistent
Treaty of Paris 1763
French withdrew from India
The
War in North America
Greatest conflicts of the Seven Years’ War
took place in N.A.
French
and British Colonies were
set up differently
French- Canada and Louisiana
Run as a vast trading area
Fur, leather, fish and timber
Thinly populated
English
13 colonies
More populated
Fought over 2 primary areas
Waterways of the gulf of St. Lawrence
Unsettled Ohio River Valley
French
moving down from Canada and up
from Louisiana to set up forts in Ohio
River Valley, this would cut off British
expansion
French gained support from Native
Americans
French victories in the beginning
William Pitt the Elder becomes Britain’s
Prime Minister and refocuses on colonies
French had more troops but Britain had a
strong navy, cut off French reinforcements
British win 1759 under General Wolfe
British seize Montreal, Great Lakes area,
and Ohio River Valley
Treaty
of Paris
Transferred
Canada and the
lands east of MS to England
Spain transferred Florida to
British
Louisiana territory to Spanish
By 1763 Great Britain is worlds’
greatest colonial power
(***Doesn’t last long…***)
CHAPTER 10:
REVOLUTION AND ENLIGHTENMENT
Section 4: Colonial Empires and the
American Revolution
COLONIAL EMPIRES IN LATIN AMERICA
A. After the Spanish and Portuguese
colonized the Americas, a new civilization
arose that we call Latin America.
Colonies often developed differently from
the parent country.
B. Latin America was a multiracial society. Europeans
and Native Americans intermarried; their offspring were
known as mestizos.
Close to 8 million African slaves were brought to these
countries. Mulattoes—offspring of Europeans and
Africans—were also part of the unique society of Latin
America.
C. The Portuguese and Spanish sought ways to
profit from their colonies. One source of wealth was
gold and silver, but farming was more lucrative in
the long run. An important feature of Latin
American agriculture was the dominant role of the
large landowner. The system of large landowners
and dependent peasants has remained a lasting
part of Latin America.
THIS SYSTEM COULD NOT SURVIVE WITHOUT
SLAVES. SLAVE LABOR WAS USED EXTENSIVELY IN
THE LATIN AMERICAN COLONIES FOR MINING AND
AGRICULTURE.
A much higher
percentage of slaves
coming from Africa
were taken to the
Caribbean, Central
America, and South
America than British
North America.
Most commonly
worked in SUGAR
plantations and
silver mines.
D. Trade between the parent country and colony
also was profitable. Spain and Portugal both
regulated their colonies to keep others out.
By the beginning of the 18th century, both France
and Britain were getting too powerful to be kept
out of the lucrative Latin American markets.
E. The colonies of Portuguese Brazil and
Spanish Latin America lasted over three hundred
years. Colonial Latin America had much freedom
in carrying out their imperial policies.
F. The European rulers were determined
to spread Christianity. Catholic
missionaries spread throughout the
colonies.
They
brought the Native Americans into
missions, where the natives could be converted,
taught trades, and encouraged to farm. Missions
allowed the missionaries to control the lives of
the Native Americans.
G.
The Catholic
Church built schools in
the colonies, where
Native American
students were taught
the basics of reading
and writing and
arithmetic. Women
could enter convents
to become nuns.
H. Many nuns
worked outside
their convents by
running schools
and hospitals. One
of these nuns, Sor
Juana Inés de la
Cruz, urged that
women be
educated.
I.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz was a
well-known Latin American literary
figure. She converted and entered
the convent so she could write poetry
and plays. She had been rejected
from the University of Mexico
because she was a woman. She died
at the age of 43 while nursing the
sick during an epidemic in Mexico
City.
BRITAIN AND BRITISH NORTH AMERICA
A. The United Kingdom of Great Britain came
into being in 1707, when the governments of
England and Scotland united. The term British
came to refer to the English and the Scots.
B.
The monarch and Parliament shared power
in eighteenth-century Britain. Parliament was
gradually getting the upper hand. It had the
power to make laws, levy taxes, and pass the
budget.
C. A new dynasty, the
Hanoverians, took
power in 1714. From
the first Hanoverian
king, George I, their
chief ministers were
allowed to handle
Parliament and so were
powerful. Robert
Walpole was prime
minister from 1721 to
1742. The middles class
wanted Britain’s trade
and empire expanded.
D. One place for expansion was North America,
where Britain controlled Canada and 13 colonies on
the eastern coast of the present United States.
Merchants in the colonial ports of Boston,
Philadelphia, New York, and Charleston did not
want the British government to run their affairs.
Colonies had their own legislatures and often acted
independently.
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
A. After the Seven Years’ War, Britain needed more
revenue from the colonies. In 1765 Parliament imposed
the Stamp Act. Printed material such as legal documents
and newspapers had to carry a stamp showing that a tax
had been paid to Britain. After strong opposition, the act
was repealed in 1766.
B. The American colonies and Great Britain had
numerous crises throughout the 1770s. The First
Continental Congress convened in 1774. Fighting
between Britain and the colonists erupted at
Lexington and Concord in 1775. In 1776, the signing
of Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence formally
declared the colonies’ intent to be independent.
C. The help of foreign countries was essential to
the colonies’ cause. France supplied arms and
men, and formally recognized the American
state in 1777. It supplied troops and arms, and
the Spanish and Dutch joined in against Great
Britain.
The
volunteer American forces finally beat the
well-trained professional British army after
defeating Cornwallis at Yorktown (1781). The
Treaty of Paris (1783) recognized the
independence of the American colonies and gave
the Americans control of the western territory
from the Appalachians to the Mississippi River.
THE BIRTH OF A NEW NATION
A. The 13 former colonies were now states, having created
a new social contract. They had little interest in forming a
country with a strong central government. Each kept to its
own affairs, as the weak Articles of Confederation
showed. Soon it was clear the government under the
Articles lacked the power to deal with the new nation’s
problems.
B. In 1787 delegates met to revise the
Articles. That meeting became the
Constitutional Convention. The delegates
wrote a plan for a new national
government.
C.
The proposed Constitution created a federal
system. Power is shared between the national
and state governments. The national (federal)
government had the power to levy taxes, raise
an army, regulate trade, and create a national
currency.
D. The federal government was divided into three branches
in a system of checks and balances. The president
(executive) had the power to execute laws, veto the
legislature’s acts, supervise foreign affairs, and direct
military forces.
E. The second branch (the legislative) consisted of the
Senate, elected by the state legislatures, and the House of
Representatives, elected directly by the people. The
Supreme Court and other courts made up the third branch
(judicial). The courts were to enforce the Constitution as
the “supreme law of the land.”
F. The promise of a Bill of Rights helped get the
Constitution adopted. These 10 amendments
guaranteed freedom of religion, speech, press,
petition, and assembly. They gave Americans the
right to bear arms and to be protected from
unreasonable search and seizures. They
guaranteed a trial by jury, due process of law, and
the protection of property rights.
G. Many of these rights were derived from the
natural rights proposed by the 18th century
philosophes.