Enlightenment ideas

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    The ideas from the Enlightenment and its thinkers greatly influenced the world today, everything from our ideas of modern government to our view of everyday life. Important Enlightenment philosophes such as Locke, Montesquieu, Hobbes and Voltaire established controversial ideas and theories on human nature, natural rights, and how government should be run and which form of it was superior. These ideas were all never even thought of before, and shattered many of the previous notions of ideas, such

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    Good night ladies and gentleman, I’ve been given the honor to present the Enlightenment Award to a man well known by his valuable contributions: John Locke. As all of you know he cannot be present today but I’m sure he would be proud to see how we have kept his ideologies alive, how his political philosophies influenced the 18th century society and how his ideas affect the modern American Culture. I’m incredibly thankful because I get to talk about this man and his accomplishments like his most noted

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    formation of multitudes of new ideas that started various trends of modernization. With the growing support and practice of scientific methods and logic, new forms of thought began to dominate throughout European philosophy, ultimately resulting in the age of the Enlightenment during the 18th century. The prevalence of logical and rational thought characterized The Enlightenment , and new observations and theories replaced the traditional ways of classical thinking. Enlightenment philosophers rejected the

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    2017 "The Enlightenment’s ideas in the American Revolution" People in America were mad and broke. The colonies did not like the idea of paying high taxes to the King of England. In order to show their rage and anger, they did it by not paying taxes. The King of England was frustrated by the colonist 's action and send an army to the Americas to sort this problem out. However, the people of America wanted to be free from England, so with the help of the Enlightenment thinkers and the philosophers

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    From around 1650 to the late 1700’s, the Age of Enlightenment dominated philosophical thought in Europe and led to revolutionary changes in the structure of government and way of thinking. The intellectual and cultural movement provided a new way of thought that was based on reason, progress, and the scientific method. Certain thinkers and writers believed they were more enlightened than others and strived to create a more successful idea of how society should be run. They believed that human reason

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    to converse about interesting ideas. A salon would be filled with deep and lively discussion, which had fostered key ideas from the Enlightenment. John Locke belongs at a salon as he was a very influential thinker during the Enlightenment, bringing up many new and revolutionary ideas, such as the idea of limited government, social contrast, and the limits on human understanding. The Enlightenment was an era filled with revolutionary thinkers bringing up new ideas in science, philosophy, society

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    If the Enlightenment thinkers never shared their inspiring government and political ideas, it is expected that the United States would be extremely different then it is today. The Enlightenment was a time when many new ideas on the freedom of people, how governments should be ran, and how people should be involved in government decisions were introduced. The people who majorly voiced these ideas were John Locke, Voltaire, Montesquieu, Rousseau, and Adam Smith. Primary views that all these leading

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    The Enlightenment or new approach to society was created and shaped by philosophes. These men and women had persuasive ideas that altered society during the 1800’s and their high order thinking continues to influence society today. The motto of the Enlightenment, “Dare to Know,” challenged people to think for themselves and encourage them to step away from the previously unquestioned dogma of the times. Philosophers seized the power of human reason to uncover general laws of nature that outlined

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    During the Enlightenment, revolutionary thinkers called philosophes brought about new ideas as to how to better understand and improve their society. They were all modern thinkers and had the best interests of society in mind. Although each philosoph had his or her own ideas, they all centered around one main theme: equality and human freedom. One famous influential philosopher was John Locke. Locke was born in England in the mid 17th century and lived through both the English Civil War

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    The Enlightenment age encouraged everyone to use reason and science in order to rid the world of barbarism and superstition. In fact, Kant argued that the "public use of one's reason must always be free, and it alone can bring about enlightenment among men" (Kant 3). Enlightenment thinking not only influenced philosophy and the sciences, but also literature (especially in Pope's Essay on Man). In reaction to Enlightenment's strict empiricism, Romanticism was born. In Frankenstein, Shelley argues

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