Unit 5 The Age of Enlightenment 1. AGE OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT a We can call the eighteenth century the age of the enlightenment because it was both a culmination and a new beginning Fresh currents of thought were wearing down institutionalized traditions. new ideas and new approaches to old institutions were setting the stage for great revolutions to come
Unit 5 The Age of Enlightenment ◼ 1. AGE OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT ◼ We can call the eighteenth century the age of the enlightenment because it was both a culmination and a new beginning. Fresh currents of thought were wearing down institutionalized traditions. New ideas and new approaches to old institutions were setting the stage for great revolutions to come
I. Social milieu The main figures of the enlightenment are fairly well known: Descartes, Pascal Bayle, Montesquieu, Voltaire, Diderot, and Rousseau. there were others whom we could call antagonists to the dominant note, people like Rousseau, Zinzendorf, Wesley, Vico, and Hume. The pervasive appeal, as expressed by Voltaire, was to the
◼ I. Social Milieu ◼ The main figures of the enlightenment are fairly well known: Descartes, Pascal, Bayle, Montesquieu, Voltaire, Diderot, and Rousseau.There were others whom we could call antagonists to the dominant note, people like Rousseau, Zinzendorf, Wesley, Vico, and Hume. The pervasive appeal, as expressed by Voltaire, was to the
1. autonomy of reason 2. perfectibility and progress 3. confidence in the ability to discover causality 4. principles governing nature, man and society a 5. assault on authority 6. cosmopolitan solidarity of enlightened intellectuals 7. disgust with nationalism
◼ 1. autonomy of reason ◼ 2. perfectibility and progress ◼ 3. confidence in the ability to discover causality ◼ 4. principles governing nature, man and society ◼ 5. assault on authority ◼ 6. cosmopolitan solidarity of enlightened intellectuals ◼ 7. disgust with nationalism
II. Intellectual Setting ■II. Method IV Enlightenment and Religion is the effort to humanize religion. Allat The central theme of the Enlightenme philosophers rejected original sin. ■V. History a VI. Social Science and Political Thought
◼ II. Intellectual Setting ◼ III. Method ◼ IV. Enlightenment and Religion ◼ The central theme of the Enlightenment is the effort to humanize religion. All philosophers rejected original sin. ◼ V. History ◼ VI. Social Science and Political Thought
Main themes 1. The Enlightenment had its origins in the scientific and intellectual revolutions of the 17c 2. Enlightenment thinkers felt that change and reason were both possible and desirable for the sake of human liberty. 3. Enlightenment philosophers provided a major source of ideas that could be used to undermine existing social and political structures
◼ Main Themes: ◼ 1. The Enlightenment had its origins in the scientific and intellectual revolutions of the 17c. ◼ 2. Enlightenment thinkers felt that change and reason were both possible and desirable for the sake of human liberty. ◼ 3. Enlightenment philosophers provided a major source of ideas that could be used to undermine existing social and political structures