Chapter 8 world history
What does laissez-faire mean?
(hands off) the concept that the state should not impose government regulations and should leave the economy alone
What two reasons did Mary Wollstonecraft present for giving women equal rights?
1. men's aribitary (based on random choice, not reason) power over women was wrong 2. women, as humans beings, who have reason deserved equal rights
According to The Wealth of Nations, what were the three main functions of government?
1. protect society from invasion 2. defend its citizens from injustice 3. keep up certain public works that are nessecary for trade and interation (roads, trains, etc.)
What did the states later approve to the Constitution?
10 amendments, known as the Bill of Rights
What did the French maintain in the Americas?
A large trading area
What did the Articles of Confederation create?
A weak central government
Who explained laissez-faire in the The Wealth of Nations?
Adam Smith
When did the British end the war?
After their defeat at Yorktown in 1781
When did fighting between colonists and the British Army start?
April 1775
What two rivalries emerged from it?
Britian and France (over colonial empires) and Austria and Prussia (over Silesia)
On July 4, 1776, the Second Continental Congress approved of what?
Declaration of Independence
the theory that says knowledge is achieved through observation
Empiricism
What did England and Spain gain from the Treaty of Paris?
England gained Canada, Spanish Florida, and all lands east of the Mississippi while Spain gained the Lousisana territory
In what system did rulers try to follow Enlightenment principles while keeping their royal powers?
Enlightened absolutism
Where did the War of the Austrian Succesion take place in?
Europe, Asia, and North America
Support from who helped the colonists win the American Revolution?
French, Spain, and the Dutch Republic
Where did Galen think the circulation of blood started and where did William Henry think it started?
Galen - liver Henry - heart (correct)
Earth-centered; a system of planetary motion in which the sun, moon, and other planets revolve around the Earth
Geocentric
How did Galileo revolutionize the field of astronomy?
He discovered that planets are solid material and not light orbs Helped switch view from geocentric to heliocentric; THE STARRY MESSENGER
What did Austria's Joseph do?
He implemented radical reforms; abolished serfdom and eliminated the death penalty
Why was Antoine Lavoisier important?
He invented a system of naming chemical elements "Father of Chemistry"
Why did Francis Bacon develop and promote the scientific method?
He thought that scientists should not rely on the ideas of ancient authorities
the doctrine that scientists should proceed from the particular to the general by making systematic observations and carefully organized experiments to test hypotheses or theories, a process that will lead to correct general principles
Inductive Reasoning
Who discovered the universal law of gravitation?
Isaac Newton, apples fell on his head
What did the Constitutional COnvention of 1787 create?
It created a federal system in which the national and state governments shared power
What made the rococo style of art different from the ealier baroque style?
It emphaszied grace, charm, and gentle action Expressed pleasure, happiness, and love
What did the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle do?
It guaranteed that all territories would return to their original powers, except Silesia which stayed with Prussia
What did the 18th century's rules concern with the balance of power among states lead to?
It led to them using their armies to conquer new lands
What did the Treaty of Paris do?
It left control of India to the British
What did the Treaty of Paris do for America?
It recongnized the colonies' independence
Using Montesquieu's ideas, what happened with the government?
It was divided into three branches, executive, legislative, and judicial
How did Locke's and Newton's ideas influence Enlightenment intellectuals?
Locke's ideas influenced by having thinkers begin to believe that if they changed their environment and influences, they could have a better society Newton's ideas influenced by allowing thinkers to believe that they could find the natural laws of human society
Which three philosophes were most important in the first half of the eighteenth century? What were their main works?
Montesquieu - Spirit of the laws (checks and balances) Voltaire - writings and critisim of Christianity (deism) Diderot - writing the Encyclopedia
French for "philosopher"; applied to all intellectuals during the Enlightenment
Philosophes
the right to govern through the consent of the people
Popular Sovereignty
Where was Earth in Ptolemy's and Copermicus's conceptions of the universe?
Ptolemy's- Earth was in the center (geocentric) Copernicus's- Earth rotated around the Sun, and the moon rotated around Earth (not perfect circles - heliocentric)
a system of thought expounded by Rene Descartes based on the belief that reason is the chief source of knowledge
Rationalism
Who wrote the phrase, "I think, therefore I am"? In what work did the phrase appear?
Rene Descartes wrote it, in Discourse of Method, in 1637 Had to do with rationalism
the elegant urban drawing rooms where, in the eighteenth century, writers, artists, aristocrats, government officials, and wealthy middle-class people gathered to discuss the ideas of the philosophes
Salons
a systematic procedure for collecting and analyzing evidence that was crucial to the evolution of science in the modern world
Scientific Method
What did Catherine the Great know?
She ruled Russia from 1762-1796 and she knew the works for the Enlightenment philosophes
What did Catherine do?
She tried to please the Russian nobles by not entacting reform (she took strong measures against Russian peasents), which led to their conditions worsening
one that follows, especially one who takes over a throne, title, estate, or office
Successors
What instruments made scientific discoveries possible and helped ideas spread quickly? How did they make an impact?
Telescope, microscope, printing press; helped spread new ideas quickly and allowed new ideas to be discovered (mass culture)
George Washington became the commander in chief of what army?
The Continental Army
What was Margaret Cavendish critical of?
The belief that humans were masters of nature
What did the Bill of Rights come from?
The concept of natural rights proposed by John Locke and other 18th century philosophes
How did Renaissance intellectuals view mathematics?
They saw mathematics as the key the undestanding the nature of things in the universe
Who were Haydn and Mozart?
Two music geniuses who wrote classical musical in the 18th century
it explains that planetary bodies continue in elliptical orbits around the sun because every object in the universe is attracted to every other object by a force called gravity
Universal Law of Gravitation
What did the British colonies in North America have that tended to act independently?
colonies
Who fought in the Great War for Empire, and where did it take place?
fought between Britian and France, and took place in India and North America
sun-centered; the system of the universe in which the Earth and planets revolve around the sun
heliocentric
How does Rousseau's The Social Contract describe liberty?
liberty is achieved by being forced to follow what is best for "the general will" because the general will represents what is best for the entire community
steps for the scientific method
observation, hypothesis, experiment, conclusion
What did both Frederick William I and Frederick II stress?
service to the king and enlarging the Prussian army
What did Empress Maria Theresa do?
she did not support enlightened reforms and focused on strengthening the state
What did Britain impose after the Seven Year's War?
the stamp act and other taxes in an effort to cover its expenses
What was the enlightened absolutists guided mostly by?
their interest in power and welfare of their state
Why did British colonies in the Americas hold an advantage?
they had vast populations
What group began widely reading for the first time?
women