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The Age of Reason & Enlightenment

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1 The Age of Reason & Enlightenment
By: Ms. Susan M. Pojer Edited by Mrs. Rhodes Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY

2 CONTEXT: An Overview of the 18c
Political History  Reform Intellectual History  Scientific Method  Reason Cultural History  Individualism Social History  Increased Literacy  “Age of Aristocracy” Economic History  Mercantilism to Capitalism

3 The Royal Academy of Sciences, Paris

4 A dissection at the Royal Academy, London.
Zoology & Biology A dissection at the Royal Academy, London.

5 Chemistry Labs & Botany Gardens

6 Natural History Collections
Cocoa plant drawing. Sir Hans Sloane ( ). Collected from Jamaica.

7 Natural History Collections
James Petiver’s Beetles (London apothecary)

8 The Origins of Modern Museums.
Private Collections The Origins of Modern Museums.

9 The Origins of Enlightenment?
RELIGIOUS: Deism: Recognized only a distant God, uninvolved in the daily life of man. Pantheism: The belief that God and nature are one and the same. Natural Law: God’s work as revealed through science, rather than through the Scriptures.

10 Centers of the Enlightenment

11 The Characteristics of the
Enlightenment

12 1. Rationalism/Reason=thinking
French Salon

13 2. Secularism=not religious
“Temple of Reason” Festival of the Cult of the Supreme Being, 1792

14 3. Scientific Method=observational science
An Experiment on a Bird in an Air Pump by Joseph Wright of Derby, 1768

15 4. Tolerance=religious, cultural
Pilgrims sign the Mayflower Compact in New World

16 5. Freedom=individual rights
Wedgewood China Abolitionism Plate

17 6. Education of the Masses= all classes & genders

18 7. Legal Reforms =no torture, due process

19 8. Equality=under the law

20 9. Constitutionalism= limits on gov’t & rights declared

21 Traditions and Superstitions
The “Great Debate” Reason & Logic Traditions and Superstitions rationalism empiricism tolerance skepticism Deism nostalgia for the past organized religions supernatural emotionalism

22 John Locke ( ) Two Treatises of Government, 1690

23 John Locke’s Philosophy (II)
Natural rights are endowed by God to all human beings. life, liberty, property! Divine Right of Kings was nonsense. Republic as the best form of government.

24 The American “Philosophes”
John Adams ( ) Thomas Jefferson ( ) Ben Franklin ( ) …life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness…

25 Voltaire ( ) AKA  Francois Marie Arouet. Candide, 1759

26 Voltaire’s “Wisdom” (I)
Every man is guilty of all the good he didn’t do. God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh. If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him. It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong. Love truth and pardon error.

27 Voltaire’s “Wisdom” (II)
Judge of a man by his questions rather than by his answers. Men are equal; it is not birth, but virtue that makes the difference. Prejudice is opinion without judgment. The way to become boring is to say everything. I may not agree with what you have to say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.

28 The Baron de Montesquieu (1689-1755)
On the Spirit of Laws, 1758

29 Montesquieu’s Philosophy
Three types of government: Monarchy. Republic. Despotism. A separation of political powers ensured freedom and liberty.

30 Jean Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)
The Social Contract, 1762.

31 Rousseau’s Philosophy (I)
“Man is born free, yet everywhere he is in chains.” Liberty, Equality, Fraternity. In The Social Contract: “General Will”: collective conscience of the whole gov’t Most free and moral under a republican form of government with direct democracy. Rousseau’s thinking influenced: French revolutionaries of 1789. Communists of the 19c such as Karl Marx.

32 Popularizing the Enlightenment

33 Denis Diderot ( ) All things must be examined, debated, investigated without exception and without regard for anyone’s feelings. We will speak against senseless laws until they are reformed; and, while we wait, we will abide by them.

34 Diderot’s Encyclopédie

35 Pages from Diderot’s Encyclopedie

36 Pages from Diderot’s Encyclopedie

37 Pages from Diderot’s Encyclopedie

38 Subscriptions to Diderot’s Encyclopedie

39 Reading During the Enlightenment
Literacy: 80 % for men; 60 % women. Books were expensive (one day’s wages). Many readers for each book (20 : 1) novels, plays & other literature. journals, memoirs, “private lives.” philosophy, history, theology. newspapers, political pamphlets.

40 An Increase in Silent, Individual Reading

41 An Increase in Reading

42 “Must Read” Books of the Time

43 “Enlightened Despotism”

44 Frederick the Great of Prussia (r. 1740-1786)
1712 -– 1786. Succeeded his father, Frederick William I (the “Soldier King”). He saw himself as the “First Servant of the State.”

45 Catherine the Great (r. 1762-1796)
German Princess Sophie Friederike Auguste of Anhalt-Zerbst. 1729 -– 1796.

46 Reformer? OR Despot?

47 The Partitions of Poland
- 1772 - 1793 - 1795

48 Russian Expansionism in the Late 18c

49 Joseph II of Austria (r. 1765-1790)
1741 -– 1790. His mother was Maria Theresa.

50 Joseph II of Austria

51 The Legacy of the Enlightenment?
The democratic revolutions begun in America in 1776 and continued in Amsterdam, Brussels, and especially in Paris in the late 1780s, put every Western government on the defensive. Reform, democracy, and republicanism had been placed irrevocably on the Western agenda.

52 The Legacy of the Enlightenment?
New forms of civil society arose –-- clubs, salons, fraternals, private academies, lending libraries, and professional/scientific organizations. 19c conservatives blamed it for the modern “egalitarian disease” (once reformers began to criticize established institutions, they didn’t know where and when to stop!)

53 The Legacy of the Enlightenment?
It established a materialistic tradition based on an ethical system derived solely from a naturalistic account of the human condition (the “Religion of Nature”). Theoretically endowed with full civil and legal rights, the individual had come into existence as a political and social force to be reckoned with.


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