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Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

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Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary
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Page 1: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789

Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary

Page 2: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Nicolas Copernicus

• - a Renaissance astronomer, priest and the first person to formulate a comprehensive heliocentric cosmology, which displaced the Earth from the center of the universe.

Page 3: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Scientific Revolution

• – a major change in European thought, starting in the mid-1500’s in which the study of the natural world began to be characterized by careful observation and the questioning of accepted beliefs.

Page 4: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

heliocentric theory

• – the idea that the earth and the other planets revolve around the sun.

Page 5: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Johannes Kepler

• - German astronomer who first used mathematics to prove the laws of planetary motion. He sowed that the planes revolve around the sun in elliptical orbits instead of circles.

Page 6: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Galileo Galilei

• – Italian scientist who invented the telescope and contradicted several of Aristltles ideas, including the law of the pendulum, the rate of falling objects, and the surface of the moon. He got in trouble with the church for defending the ideas of Copernicus..

Page 7: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

scientific method

• – a logical procedure for gathering information about the natural world, in which experimentation and observation are used to test hypotheses.

Page 8: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Francis Bacon

• – English politician and writer who urged scientists to use experimentation to reach conclusions.

Page 9: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Rene Descartes

• - French scientist who developed analytical geometry, which linked algebra and geometry.

Page 10: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Isaac Newton

• – English scientist who worked out laws for the motion of the planet around the sun, the law of universal grvitaion..

Page 11: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Enlightenment

• – an 18th century European movement in which thinkers attempted to apply the principles of reason and the scientific method to all aspects of society.

Page 12: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

social contract

• – the agreement by which people define and limit their individual rights, thus creating an organized society or government.

Page 13: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

John Locke

• - Held a positive view of human nature, that people have natural rights and that citizens have the right to overthrow a government that doesn't protect those rights.

Page 14: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

natural rights

• – the rights that all people are born with –the rights of life, liberty , and property.

Page 15: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

plilosophe

• – one of a group of social thinkers in France during the Enlightenment.

Page 16: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Voltaire

• - Used satire against his opponents, he mocked the laws and customs of France. He fought for tolerance, freedom and freedom of religious belief.

Page 17: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Montesquieu

• - He believed in political liberty and separation of powers.

Page 18: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

separation of powers

• – the assignment of executive, legislative, and judicial powers to different groups of officials in a government.

Page 19: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Jean Jacques Rousseau

• - Comitted to individual freedom, believed in a direct democracy and that all people should be equal.

Page 20: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Mary Wolstonecraft

• - Believed in women's equality and argued for women's education and their right to participate in plitics.

Page 21: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

salon

• – a social gathering of intellectuals and artists, like those held in the homes of wealthy women in Paris and other European cities during the Enlightenment.

Page 22: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

baroque

• – relating to a grand, ornate style that characterized European painting, music, and architecture I the 1600’s and early 1700’s.

Page 23: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

neoclassical

• – relating to a simple, elegant style (based on ideas and themes from ancient Greece and Rome) that characterized the arts in Europe during the late 1700’s.

Page 24: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

enlightened despot

• – one of the 18th –century European monarchs who were inspired by Enlightenment ideas to rule justly and respect the rights of their subjects.

Page 25: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Catherine the Great

• - well educated ruler of Russia who tried to modernize and reform Russia based on enlightenment thinkers ideas.

Page 26: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Declaration of Independence

• – a statement of the reasons for the American colonies’ break with Britain, approved by the Second Continental Congress in 1776.

Page 27: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Thomas Jefferson

• - wrote the Declaration of Independence based on teh ideas of John Locke and the enlightenment.

Page 28: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

checks and balances

• – measures designed to prevent any one branch of government from dominating the others.

Page 29: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

federal system

• - a system of government in which power is divided between a central authority and a number of individual states.

Page 30: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Bill of Rights

• – the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution, which protect citizens’ basic rights and freedoms.

Page 31: Enlightenment and Revolution, 1550-2789 Ch. 6 World History Vocabulary.

Thomas Hobbes

• - Viewed humans as naturally selfish and wicked and he believed government should have an absolute ruler to keep citizens under control.


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