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Locke And Diderot Influence On The Enlightenment

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The Enlightenment was a time of great improvement and prosperous thinking which continued to spread ideas many years after it concluded. Traditional Western society was formatted around a social structure where the king was given all executive power and the rest of society remained below him. This government style left the rest of society stranded with no way to voice their opinions on government decisions and social resolutions. Eventually, individuals like John Locke and Denis Diderot began to question traditional Western society and voice their opinions on social structure and government style. Revolutionaries like Locke and Diderot acted as a catalyst to the start of the Enlightenment, a unique period of growth. As Western Societies began …show more content…

Locke’s ideas if human rights inspired the American revolution where the colonies declared their freedom from the king and wrote the Declaration of Independence which formally voiced the colonies complaints towards the king and Britain. The colonies believed a revolution was justified because “all men are born equal and…with certain unalienable rights [of] Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” (Jefferson). The idea of unalienable rights, as described in the Declaration of Independence, is derived from the ideas of John Locke’s human rights. Although John Locke’s ideas influenced the American Revolution, as Diderot and his ideas of a fair government inspired the French Revolution. Before the French Revolution, the king was able to enact any laws without any opposition from any other executive power and the majority of the population (lower class) was negatively affected. The lower class of France eventually gathered and declared themselves the National Assembly, who was the true government body in France because they were they majority. The National Assembly gathered and write the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen which outlined the basic rights that Man is entitled to and provided a fair way for France to be ruled. The Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen stated, “civil distinction, therefore, can be funded only on public unity” (National Assembly). This passage states that the government can only rule by the way that the governed depicts and suggests that the laws enacted by the king or the National Assembly should be made in the best interest of the country, and not specifically for an individual person. Diderot’s ideas of a fair rule and a revised government style influenced the French Revolution, as seen in the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen. The ideas derived from

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