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Published byEdmund Williamson Modified over 9 years ago
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CHAPTER 19 NEW IDEAS AND THEIR CONSEQUENCES, 1500-1789 SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION AND THE ENLIGHTENMENT
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Revolution in Science: The Laws of Nature New Ways of Thinking The Newtonian Universe The Popularity of Science
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The Sciences of Society The “Age of Reason” English and Dutch Phases The French Philosophes and the Radical Enlightenment Enlightenment Thought and Women
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The Sciences of Society International Responses to the French Enlightenment Faith or Reason? The Economic Critique: The Physiocrats and Adam Smith The Political Critique of the Old Regime
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The Enlightenment of the Heart Philosophical Movements Religious Movements Humanitarian Movements
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The Failure of Monarchical Reform The French Dilemma “Enlightened Despotism”: Frederick of Prussia, Catherine of Prussia, and Joseph of Austria
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Changing Visions: The Arts in Early Modern Europe The Sixteenth Century: Mannerism Continued The Baroque The Dutch Exception Classicism Rococo and Neoclassism Classical Poetry and the Arrival of the Novel
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YOU SHOULD UNDERSTAND The giant steps forward in science during the Age of Reason. How the scientific revolution affected philosophy and religion. Specific advances made in chemistry, medicine, and electricity.
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YOU SHOULD UNDERSTAND The impact of reason upon political thought, especially its critique of absolutism. The reaction against scientific reasoning.
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