Science, the West and the Rest. 1.origins connection in Enlightenment 2.modern vs. pre-modern 3.Western vs. non-Western 4.how is science universal? 5.science.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Understanding Western Culture Where did it all begin?
Advertisements

Turkey: History 1500-present Turkey is located on the peninsula called _______ __________. It is part of the region called the _________ East, or _______west.
Essential Question: What were the important themes of Periodizations 1, 2, and 3? What are the important themes of Periodization 4: The Early Modern Era?
 Hammurabi was a king of Babylon who set up the first written law called Hammurabi’s code  It was a collection of 282 laws with the most famous.
■ Essential Question: – What were the important themes of Periodizations 1 and 2? – What are the important themes of Periodization 3: Transition to the.
PERIODIZATION, THEMES, AND ANALYSIS
Jeopardy Enlightenment Scientific Revolution Philosophers Revolution and a New Govt. Enlightened Etc. … Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300.
Ways of the World: A Brief Global History First Edition
Chapter 10 Summary (Western Europe)
Hosted by Your Favorite History Teacher Classical Greece Medieval Europe Rise of Rome to the Holy Roman Empire Mixed Bag
Greek Empire BC (650 years) Greeks created the City-State, a form of regional government loyal to one major city. Greek city-states made war with.
 Throughout history, the Greeks have had an everlasting impact on European society. Ancient Grecian empires paved the way for Europe’s future in several.
World History: Present. Africa and the Middle East After WWI.
A GIANT World History A Review. SSHS-S2C2-01. Describe the development of early prehistoric people, their agriculture, and settlements. Australopithecines,
Western Europe France, Monaco, Luxembourg, Belgium, Germany, Netherlands, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Austria.
Timeline of European History Ancient Medieval Modern History History History History History History (Middle Ages or Dark Ages) (Middle Ages or Dark Ages)
East Asia East Asia. One measure of scientific impact:
Chapter 18: A Revolutionary in Science Section 1: The Scientific Revolution Master Plan World History Period 6.
IB History The New Stuff. Aims  promote an understanding of history as a discipline, including the nature and diversity of its sources, methods and interpretations.
The Renaissance Rebirth of Greco-Roman learning Humanism - Man as a subject of culture, art and literature The Reformation Individualism in Christianity.
Absolute Monarchs. Absolute Monarchs - Kings or Queens who believed that all power within their state’s boundaries rested in their hands. Absolute Monarchs.
The Enlightenment in Europe
AP World History Periodization. 6 Historical Periods are studied. 1. Technological and Environmental Transformations Ancient Periods 8000 BCE to 600 BCE.
James 1:17 17 Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows.
The Scientific Revolution
Historical Background and Context for Middle East History Rise of Islam Early history – political implications Spread of Islam The Ottoman Empire circa.
The Enlightenment Europe (a.k.a. the Age of Reason)
Characteristics of a Scientist: Curiosity, Creativity, and Commitment
A.P. WORLD HISTORY: PERIODIZATION.
The Scientific Revolution Change in Worldview. The Scientific Revolution What: The developing belief that reason could be used to understand the natural.
  Location:  Capital: Istanbul  Turkey, extended into Europe and North Africa  Famous ruler:  Suleiman the Magnificent Ottomans.
“Dare to know. ‘Have the courage to use your own understanding,’ is therefore the motto of the Enlightenment.” - Immanuel Kant.
The Place of Science in Western Culture Lectures in the cultural history of science Geert Somsen, History Department, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.
Ancient African Kingdoms
Scientific Revolution & Age of Enlightenment ( )
“Dare to know. ‘Have the courage to use your own understanding,’ is therefore the motto of the Enlightenment.” - Immanuel Kant.
The Overview Sterns World Civilizations Chapter 4 Plato The Republic (146 and 149) Horace “Dulce et Decorum est Pro Patria Mori”(173) Classical Civilizations.
Homework HW #1 on the Unit #1 Assignment Sheet due Friday.
■ Essential Question: – What were the important themes of Periodization 1 and 2? – What are the important themes of Periodization 3: Transition to the.
Scientific Revolution and Enlightenment 1600-late 1700s.
Scientific Revolution. Dawn of Modern Science Ancient scholars could provide no information about new lands, people, animals Age of Exploration led scientists.
UNIT 1: EARLY MAN 1.1- I can describe the characteristics of the Paleolithic and Neolithic era I can compare and contrast the developments of the.
Homework Castle Learning #5 (sections 7 and 8 in the yellow packet) due Thursday at 11:59 pm. Extra credit thematic essay due Friday.
Scientific Revolution New Directions: 16 th and 17 th Centuries.
The Legacy of Rome  Republic Government  Roman Law  Latin Language  Roman Catholic Church  City Planning  Romanesque Architectural Style  Roman.
Timeline of European History Ancient Medieval Modern History History History History History History (Middle Ages or Dark Ages) (Middle Ages or Dark Ages)
WORLD HISTORY: PERIODIZATION. WHAT IS PERIODIZATION? Each period is defined by three conditions Each period is defined by three conditions A geographical.
THE MIDDLE EAST AND EUROPE
The Scientific Revolution & The Enlightenment
The Middle East The term is European in origin. First used in the mid-nineteenth century. It came to prominence in the early 20th century (after the collapse.
Essential Question: What were the important themes of Periodizations 1 and 2? What are the important themes of Periodization 3: Transition to the Modern.
The Enlightenment: The Age of Reason
20th Century History of the Middle East
Ancient African Kingdoms
AP World History Overview.
The Enlightenment The Enlightenment is one of the few movements in history to name itself Comes from the idea that its followers were more enlightened.
The Enlightenment and Scientific Revolution
European History 3300 BCE to 1950 CE.
Change in Europe Renaissance – Art and Lifestyle
Change in Europe Renaissance – Art and Lifestyle
RESHAPING OF GEOGRAPHY
AP WORLD HISTORY: PERIODIZATION.
* * * * * * OTTOMAN EMPIRE OTTOMAN EMPIRE
Essential Question: What were the important themes of Periodizations 1, 2, and 3? What are the important themes of Periodization 4: The Early Modern Era?
Essential Question: What were the important themes of Periodizations 1, 2, and 3? What are the important themes of Periodization 4: The Early Modern Era?
Essential Question: What were the important themes of Periodizations 1 and 2? What are the important themes of Periodization 3: Transition to the Modern.
Essential Question: What were the important themes of Periodizations 1, 2, and 3? What are the important themes of Periodization 4: The Early Modern Era?
Essential Question: What were the important themes of Periodizations 1, 2, and 3? What are the important themes of Periodization 4: The Early Modern Era?
Shifting Ideas about God and Man
Presentation transcript:

Science, the West and the Rest

1.origins connection in Enlightenment 2.modern vs. pre-modern 3.Western vs. non-Western 4.how is science universal? 5.science as a cultural phenomenon

Science, the West and the Rest Henry KissingerBarack Obama

Henry Kissinger (1966) “[The West] is deeply committed to the notion that the real world is external to the observer, that knowledge consists of recording and classifying data – the more accurately the better.” “Cultures which escaped the early impact of Newtonian thinking have retained the essentially pre-Newtonian view that the real world is almost completely internal to the observer. (…) [E]mpirical reality has a much different significance for many of the new countries than for the West because in a certain sense they never went through the process of discovering it.”

Barack Obama (2009)

1. Science and Enlightenment  adoration of Newton  power of science and human reason  science of man and society, improvement of society

Francesco Algarotti, Il Newtonianismo per le Dame ovvero Dialoghi sopra la Luce e i Colori (1737)

Tom Telescope, The Newtonian System, of Philosophy, Adapted to the Capacities of Young Gentlemen and Ladies (1761)

1. Science and Enlightenment  adoration of Newton  power of science and human reason  science of man and society, improvement of society

2. modern vs. pre-modern  belief in progress  Jean le Rond d’Alembert  Enlightenment vs. ‘dark’ Middle Ages

3. Europe vs. the rest  superiority  before: Europeans in awe of oriental courts, great empires of the East

François I ( ) Suleiman the Magnificent ( )

Suleiman the Magnificent to François I: “I, Sultan of Sultans, Leader of the Lords, Crown of the Sovereigns of the Earth, the Shadow of God in the Two Worlds, Shah of Baghdad, Sultan and Padishah of the Mediterranean, the Black Sea, Rumelia, Anatolia, Armenia, Karaman, Azerbaijan, Iran, Syria, Egypt, Mecca, Medina, and all the Arab lands, and you, Francis, King of the Province of France.” (ca. 1530)

3. Europe vs. the rest  From 18 th century: Europa as more/most advanced civilization  Tension: science as universal vs. science as European  Different conceptions of universality

4. history of universalism  Christianity: universal pretensions, regionally bound  after 16 th century wars of religion: Europe redefined by civilization, modernity, science  universality & regionality

4. history of universalism  17 th -18 th century: ideal of “Republic of Letters”: men of learning disregard differences of birth, nation and religion, and form a cosmopolitan community, open to everybody  reality Republic of Letters  European?

4. history of universalism  19 th century: nationalism in science science as product ofnational culture scientists as Kulturträger  combined with international organization and exchange cf. Olympic Games cf. World Expos

1. history of universalism

4. history of universalism 20 th century socialists: global science  H.G. Wells  Einstein, Manifesto to the Europeans  J.D. Bernal: science as part of any society  Joseph Needham: local streams into one universal “river of truth”

4. history of universalism mid-20 th century anti-communists: science is of “the West”  Butterfield  Gillispie (1960)  Floris Cohen (2008)

4A. Emphasis on the West/Europe: Herbert Butterfield “The scientific revolution we must regard (…) as a creative product of the West – depending on a complicated set of conditions which existed only in western Europe.” The Origins of Modern Science (1949)

4A. Emphasis on the West/Europe: Geoffrey Barraclough “ [A]ll the things which made Europe the focal point of historical events (…) – its science, its technology, its industrial strength – sprang in the end from the Scientific Revolution.” Turning Points in World History (1963)

4A. Emphasis on the West/Europe: Charles Gillispie “The hard trial will begin when the instruments of power created by the West come fully into the hands of men not of the West, formed in cultures and religions which leave them quite devoid of the Western sense of some ultimate responsibility. (…) [W]hat will the day hold when China wields the bomb? And Egypt? Will Aurora light a rosy-fingered dawn out of the East? Or will Nemesis?” The Edge of Objectivity (1960)

4A. Emphasis on the West/Europe: Henry Kissinger “they never went through the process of discovering”

4B. Emphasis on the universal: George Sarton “Science is mankind’s most precious patrimony.” “There is no German or French science; there is only one human science. Of course, there are French, German, English laboratories…, but their accomplishments are the results of innumerable efforts by scientists of all nationalities, and the discoveries made there are immediately added to the international patrimony of human thought.” Sarton (1913)

Barack Obama (2009) “Islam... paving the way for Europe’s Renaissance and Enlightenment.”

4B. Emphasis on the universal:  George Sarton  J.D. Bernal  Joseph Needham  Barack Obama  still one single standard: ours

5. Europe vs. de rest?  the Needham question: why did modern science emerge in Europe only?  also asked by non-Westerners  asking it for other areas  science as culture