Ch.16/Ch.17
Boyle's law
States that the pressure of gas varies w/ volume
Western Europe
remained politically fragmented into smaller competitive nations
Espouse monism
the mind and body were united in one substance and that God and nature were two names for the same thing
Hallmark of Scientific Revolution
the union of math w/ natural philosphy
Gabrielle-Emilie Le Tonnelier de Breteuil, marquise du Chatelet (1706-1749)
A noblewoman who invited Voltaire to live w/ her Studied physics and math Was excluded from the Royal Academy of Sciences bc she was a woman Believed that women's limited role in science was due to their unequal education
Cartesian dualism
Descartes's view that all of reality could ultimately be reduced to mind and matter.
Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564)
Dissected human bodies to study anatomy Published On the Structure of the Human Body Disproved Galen
Immanuel Kant (1724-1804)
a German philosopher from East Prussia Published What is the Enlightenment? Argued that if intellectuals were granted the freedom to exercise their freedom publicly in print, then the Enlightenment would follow Said that individuals must obey all laws, even if they are unreasonable Tried to reconcile absolute monarchy authority and religious faith w/ a critical public sphere Wrote On the Different Races of Man--> claimed that there are four human races, each of which derived from an original race Believed that white inhabitants of northern Germany were the closet descendants of the original race
Beccaria (1738-1794)
a nobleman from Northern Italy Wrote On Crimes and Punishments--> passionate plea for reform of the penal system Spoke against arbitrary imprisonment, capital punishment Advocated the prevention of crime ver the reliance of punishment
Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778)
created the formal system of naming and classifying living organisms
Querelle des dames
debate over women's proper role in society and the nature of gender differences that started in the Renaissance and carried over into the Enlightenment
Scottish Enlightenment
emphasis on common sense and scientific reasoning Advances were partly stimulated by the creation of the first public educational system of Europe
Humanists in Italy
emphasized the value of acquiring knowledge for practical purposes of life
Triangular Trade
european commodities like guns and textiles to Africa--> enslaved Africans to the colonies--> cotton, tobacco, and sugar from the colonies to Europe
Galilei (1564-1642)
focused on deficiencies in Aristotle's theory of motion Gravity produced a uniform acceleration Law of Inertia--> an object contains in motion unless stopped by an external force Discovered first four moons of Jupiter Wrote The Sidereal Messenger
Didn't account for the motion of the stars and apparent backward motion of planets
holes in Aristole's philopshy
Coffeehouses
meccas of philosophical discussion
Aristotlelian philosophy
motionless earth stood at the center of the universe and was encompassed by ten separate concentric crystal spheres that embedded the sun, planets, and stars Heaven was beyond the spheres and angles kept the spheres moving Belived that an object moved at a constant speed and would stop as soon as a force was removed
What mideval scholors thought was the path to true knowledge
philiosphy
Rococo
popular in Europe between 1720 and 1780 Known for soft pastels, ornate interiors, sentimental portraits, and starry-eyed lovers protected by cupids Associated w/ the mistress of Louis XV, Madame de Pompadour bc she used her position to commission paintings, furniture, and other objects in the rococo style
Mary Astell
published A Serious Proposal to the Ladies Proposed the creation of a women's college Argued that husbands should not exercise absolute control over their wives in marriage Encouraged women to aspire to the life of the mind
How reading and books changed
reading became more private People read less religious and devotional books History and law were held constant Arts and sciences surged
Salons
regular social gatherings held by talented and rich Parisians in their homes, where philiosophes and their followers met to discuss literature, science, and philosophy
Math, astronomy, and natural philosophy
western university ciruculum
Sublunar world
world of the earth Consisted of a perfect quintessence--> fifth essence Made up of four elements: water, earth, air, and fire
Reasons for France becoming a hub of Enlightenment thought
1. French was the intellectual language of educated classes and France was the most populous and wealthiest country 2. Rising unpopularity of King Lous XV and his misteress--> generated discontent and reform among the educated elite 3. Philosophes made it their goal to reach a larger audience of elites
European Enlightenment
A broad intellectual and cultural movement Started bc of: 1. Opposition to absolutist rule 2. Religious conflicts between Protestants and Catholics and within Protestantism 3. European contacts with other cultures 4. The attempt to apply principles and practices from the Scientific revolution to human society
David Hume (1711-1776)
A central figure from Edinburgh Emphasis on civic morality and religious skepticism Applied Newton's experimental methods to the "science of man" Believed that the human mind is really nothing but a bundle of impressions Said that reason alone can't supply moral principles and that they derive from emotions and desires Emphasized human experience, rather than abstract principle
Philosophes
A group of French intellectuals who proclaimed that they were bringing the light of knowledge to their fellow humans in the Age of the Enlightenment
Natural philosophy
A minor branch of philosophy that was the study of the universe, its purpose, and how it functioned
Empiricism
Acquiring evidence through observation and experimentation, rather than speculation and deductive reasoning
Maria Thersea
After Fredrick the Great invaded Silesia after she inherited it when her father Charles VI died, she formed an alliance w/ the leaders of France and Russia--> Seven Years War Initiated church reform w/ measures aimed at limiting the papacy's influence, eliminating may religious holidays, and reducing the number of monasteries Administrative renovations that strengthened the central bureaucracy, smoothed out provincial differences and revamped the tax system--> taxing the lands of nobles The government sought to improve the lot of the agricultural population --> reduced the power of lords over their hereditary serfs
Public sphere
An idealized intellectual space that emerged in Europe during the Enlightenment, where the public came together to discuss important issues relating to society, economics, and politics Includes coffehouses, book clubs, Masonic lodges, salons, debating societies, and newspapers
Europe took the lead in scientific thought
Bc of multiple world sites of learning and scholorship
Johannes Kepler (1571-1630)
Beliefs: 1. orbits of planets are elliptical, not circular 2. planets do not move in uniform speed 3. time of orbit depends on the distance from the sun Proved a sun-center (solar) system through math
Persian Letters
By Montesquieu Used the Persian harem as a symbol of a despotic rule that he feared his own country was adopting Also used the oppression of women in a harem
Francois-Maire Arouet/ Voltaire (1694-1778)
Concluded that the best one could hope for in the way of government was a good monarch bc human beings are incapable of governing themselves Did not believe in social or economic equality Rejected Catholicism for deism Like most philosophes, he believed in religious toleration bc intolerance led to fanaticism and cruelty
Baruch Spinoza (1632-1677)
Dutch Jewish philosopher Applied natural philosophy to thinking abt human society Borrowed Descartes's emphasis on rationalism and his method of deductive reasoning, but rejected mind-body dualism Practiced espouse monism Believed that good and evil were relative values and that human actions were shaped by outside circumstance
Francis Bacon (1561-1626)
Early propagandist for scientific method Believed that new knowledge had to be pursued through empirical research Formalized empirical method Created Royal Society
Denis Dierot (1713-1784) and d'Alember (1717-1783)
Editors of the Encylopedia Wanted to change the general way of thinking--> think critically and objectively abt all matters Acknowledged Muslim scholars' contributions to the development of Western Science
The philsophes greatest achivement
Encylopedia
William Harvey (1578-1657)
English physician that discovered circulation of blood through veins and arteries First to say that heart works like a pump
Olaudah Equiano and Ottobah Cugoana
Former slaves who published memoirs testifying to the horrors of slavery and the innate equality of all humans
Rene Descartes (1596-1650)
French philosopher that discovered analytic geometry Believed that matter is made up of tiny particles Said that every action had an equal reaction, continuing in an eternal chain reaction--> false Used deductive reasoning Decided that it was necessary to doubt anything that could be reasonably be doubted Reduced all substances to matter and mind
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz (1646-1716)
German philosopher and mathematician who developed calculus independently of Issac Newton Refuted Cartesian dualism and Spinoza's monism An infinite number of substances that all matter is composed of Wrote Theodicy--> declared that our world is the best of all possible worlds bc it was created by an omnipotent God Ridiculed by Voltaire in Candide or Optimism
Galen
Greek physician that believed that the body has four humors and that illness is the result of an imbalance of humors--> doctors prescribed bloodletting
Robert Boyle (1627-1691)
Help create Royal Society Scientific work led to the development of modern chemistry First to create a vacum, disproved descartes's belief
Denounced relgious toleration; suggested that only a despot monarch, not a legitamate ruler, would deny religious leader
Huguenots in the Dutch Republic
Reason, scientific method could discover the laws of human society and nature, and that of they were armed w/the proper methods, they could create better societies and better people
Important Enlightenment concepts
Leopold II
Joseph's brother who canceled his radical edicts in order to re-establish order
Dutch Republic
Key crucible for Enlightenment thought Huguenots fled hereafter Louis XIV tried to convert protestants to Catholics
Ptomley
Made Geography Planets move in small circles--> epicycles Map only had Asia, Africa, Europe
Telescope, barometer, thermometer, pendulum clock, microscope, and air pump
New inventions that came from navigational problems during long voyages
Catherine the Great of Russia
Only married Peter III for the crown and her lover and his three brothers murder Peter Worked w/ Peter the Great's effort to bring the culture of western Europe to Russia Published the Encyclopedia in St.Petersburg and gave Diderot money Appointed a legislative commission to create a new law code--> restricted the practice of torture and allowed limited religious toleration After Pugachev started an uprising of Serfs, she gave nobles absolute control over the serfs and extended serfdom to new areas Her greatest coup was the partition of Poland--> acquired most of Poland's large Jew population Established the Pale of Settlement--> a territory including modern-day Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, Ukraine, and Belarus and required most Jews to live there
Rousseau (1712-1778)
Part of Parisian Enlightenment Rejected rationalism and civilized society Committed to individual freedom Said that the goodness of the indivual had to be protected from the cruel refinements of civilization Created The Social Contract--> general will and popular sovereignty Believed that men and women are radically different by nature Said that men were suited for politics and public life Said that a women's role was to attract a male sexual desire to get married and created families and then care for their home and kids in private Believed that a wealthy Persian women's love for attending social gatherings and pulling strings of power was unnatural and that is corrupted politics and society
Adam Smith (1723-1790)
Part of the Scottish Enlightenment Argued that social interaction produced feelings of mutual sympathy that led people to behave in ethical ways despite inherent tendencies toward self-interest Said that by observing others and witnessing their feelings, individuals imaginatively experienced such feelings and learned to act in ways that would elicit positive sentiments and avoid negative ones Wrote An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations--> attacked laws and regulations created by mercantilists governments bc they prevented commence from reaching its full capacity
How did race change?
People began to use it to designate biologically distinct groups of humans, akin to distinct animal species was new
Leibniz (1646-1716)
Philosopher and mathematician who corresponded w/ the Jesuit missionaries in China Believed that Chinese ethics and political philosophy was superior, but Europeans equaled China in science and tech
James Beattie (1735-1803)
Pointed out that Europeans started out as savage as non whites supposedly were
1. Put the stars to rest 2. Suggested a universe of staggering size 3. Used math instead of philosophy --> challenged traditional heiachry 4. Destroyed the basic ideas of Aristotelian physics
Religious implications of Copernican hypothesis
Tycho Brahe (1546-1601)
Rudolphine Tables Agreed w/ Copernicus, but the mix between Ptomley and Copernicus Believed all the planets except the earth revolved around the sun and that the entire group of sun and planets revolved in turn around the earth-moon system Holy emperor Rudolph II was his patron
General will
Sacred and absolute Reflecting the common interests of all of the people, who have displaced the monarch as the holder of sovereign power At times it can go against the will of the majority of people when the long-term needs of people are correctly interpreted
Francisco Hernandez
Sent to New Spain by King Phillip II
Joseph II
Son of Maria Theresa and earned the title of "revolutionary emperor" Abolished serfdom Declared that peasants could pay landlords in cash rather tan labor on their land--> was violently rejected bc peasants lacked the necessary cash Among his edicts, there were measures that were intended to integrate Jews more fully into society--> eligible for military service, admission to higher education and artesian trade
Qing Dynasty
Stricter adherence to traditional ways to legitimize the authority
Copernicus (1473-1543)
Sun center universe Stars and planets, including earth, revolve around the fixed sun Made On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres
Heliocentrism
Sun is the center of the universe, not earth
Paracelus (1493-1541)
Swiss physician and alchemist Pioneered the use of chemicals and drugs to address what he saw as chemical imbalances, not humoral
Sensationalism
The idea that all human ideas and thoughts are produced as a result of sensory impressions Wrote Essay Concerning Human Understanding
Ottomans, Safavid Persians, and Mugallals
The three large empires of the Muslim world Imposed Islamic orthodoxy to restore order and assert the legitimacy
Why Enlightenment philosophes didn't direct their messages to peasants or urban laborers
Thought it would be dangerous and that they have no talent for philsiosphichal speculation
The marquis de Condorcet
Urged that women should share equal rights w/ men A rare position bc most philosophes accepted that women were inferior to men intellectually as well as physically
China
Vital center for scientific activity Achievements include papermaking, gunpowder, and compass
John Locke (1632-1704)
Wrote Essay Concerning Human Understanding Physician and member of the Royal Society Insisted that all ideas are derived from experience Said that the human mind at birth is like a blank tablet or tabula rasa Human development is determined by external forces, not innate characteristics Contributed to the theory of sensationalism
Pierre Bayle (1647-1706)
Wrote Historical and Critical Dictionary Huguenot who took Refuge in the Dutch Republic Skeptic--> Nothing ca ever be known beyond all doubt Made Dictionary
Abbe Raynal
Wrote History of the Two Indies--> attacked slavery and the abuses of European colonization
Newton
Wrote Principa Law of Universal gravitation Combined math w/ physics and astronomy
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689-1762)
Wrote letters that challenged prevailing ideas by depicting Turkish people as sympathetic and civilized Disputed the notion that women were oppressed in Ottoman society
Montesquieu (1689-1755)
Wrote the Persian Letters--> an influential social satire and was considered the first major work of the French Enlightenment Wrote Spirit of Laws after being disturbed y absolutism and was inspired by the physical sciences Believed that monarchies, republics, and despotisms were the three main types of governments Separation of Powers w/ political power divided among different classes and legal estates holding unequal rights and priveledges Concerned that France was drifting into tyranny and that strengthening the influence of intermediary powers was the best way to prevent it
Sensibilty
acute sensitivity of the nerves and brains outside stimuli, which produced strong, emotional, and physical reactions
Catholic Enlightenment
aimed to renew and reform the church from within Looked to divine grace rather than human will as the source of progress
Republic of Letters
an imaginary transitional realm of the critical thinkers and writers A concept that was inherited from the Renaissance
Republic of Letters
an international group of writers and scholars
Comte de Buffon (1707-1788)
argued that humans originated w/ one species that then developed into distinct races due to climatic conditions
Carl von Linne (1707-1778)
argued that nature was organized into a god-given hierarchy
Numerology/cosmic harmony
beleif in occualt qualities
Deism
belief in a distant noninterventionist deity
Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274)
brought Aristotelian philosophy in harmony w/ Christian doctrines
Frederick II/ the great (1740-1786)
built off the work of Fredrick William I When Maria Theresa of Austria inherited the Habsburg dominions by invading her providence of Silesia--> started the European War of the Austrian Succession Seven Years War--> when MAria Theresa formed an alliance w/ France and Prussia to gain Silesia back Tolerantly allowed his subjects to believe as they wished in religious and philosophical matters He improved country schools and permitted scholars to publish their findings Abolished torture and judges decided cases quickly Promoted the reconstruction of agriculture Accepted and extended the power of nobility bc they were the backbone of the army and the Prussian state Firmly opposed any emancipation for the Jews, as he did the serfs
Peter III
came to Russia throne in 1762 and called off the attack against Fredrick
Jesuit missionaries
served as a conduit for the transmission of knowledge to the west abt Chinese history and culture
Enlightented Absolutism
term coined by historians to describe the rule of eighteenth century monarchs who, w/o renouncing their own absolute authority, adopted Enlightenment ideas of rationalism, progress, and tolerance
Haskalah
the Jewish Enlightenment of the second half of the 18th century, led by the Prussian philosopher Moses Mendelssohn
Whom did Enlightenment thinkers from outside of Europe and the Netherlands believe could change politics from above?
the ruler
Cameralism
the view that monarchy was the best form of government, that all elements of society should serve the monarch, and in turn, the state should use its resources and authority to increase the public good Influential throughout the German lands