 Describe an experience in your life where you learned a valuable lesson. It can be a small moment, or a very BIG life lesson. What happened? Who was.

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 Describe an experience in your life where you learned a valuable lesson. It can be a small moment, or a very BIG life lesson. What happened? Who was involved? Use vivid description! Who! What! Where! When! WHY!  At least 5 sentences!

 Describe an experience in your life where you learned a lesson. It can be a small moment, or a very BIG life lesson. What happened? Who was involved? Use vivid description.  At least 5 sentences!

 The age of the Enlightenment is also known as the age of reason.  Two principal beliefs of those who lived during the Enlightenment are: Many people came to believe that they could arrive at truth solely through human reason. Through rational, logical thinking, human beings could probe the secrets of the universe and understand the true relationship between themselves and God.

King Louis the XIV Where did he live? Versailles

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1. René Descartes (1596–1650): believed that the deductive method used in mathematics was the way to discover universal truths. 2. Sir Isaac Newton ( ) In Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy (1687), he describes a clockwork universe governed by absolute laws that can be expressed mathematically.

 It supported the idea that unchanging laws govern politics and morality. He advanced the social theory that people choose what is in their best interest. Hobbes argued that people’s common interests lead them to make a “social contract.” They accept their sovereign’s power over them in exchange for protection against their own greedy, evil nature.

Someone who believes that experience rather than logic is the only reliable source of knowledge.

His Philosphy: 3 Ideas…What Are They?

Thomas Paine Benjamin Franklin Thomas Jefferson

Humanity is naturally good but is corrupted by the environment, by education, and by government. He believed that governments must be subject to the will of the people. Free Will!

Jean de La Fontaine (1621–1695) wrote shrewdly satiric fables. Molière (1622–1673) wrote satiric dramas exposing the greed, hypocrisy, and faults of French society. Jonathan Swift (1667–1745)- Gulliver’s Travels and “A Modest Proposal” reflect Swift’s bitter outrage at the corruption he saw.

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