SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  51
Ch. 15 Cultural
Transformations
Religion and Science
1450-1750
The Globalization of Christianity
Western Christendom Fragmented:
The Protestant Reformation
• The Reformation began in
Germany where Renaissance
ideals of the secular and
individual helped weaken the
authority of the church. Northern
European rulers also resented
the pope’s authority. However,
because Germany was divided
into many smaller competing
states, it was difficult for the pope
or emperor to impose control.
• Moreover, the church had become
corrupt with its leaders more
interested in worldly affairs than
spiritual duties. Popes spent money
patronizing the arts, on personal
luxuries and fighting wars. Many
priests and monks could barely read
and were unable to teach their
congregations. Others broke vows
by marrying, gambling or drinking in
excess.
Martin Luther
Martin Luther was the eldest son of a
copper miner. His father pushed him
to become a lawyer but Martin was
more interested in philosophy and
religion than the law. On a trip back to
school from home, Martin had a life
changing experience. Traveling in a
thunderstorm, lightening struck nearby.
Feeling scared and helpless, he
prayed to St. Anne for safety and
pledged to become a monk. His
deliverance from the storm led to his
withdraw from law school and
admittance to an Augustinian
• Luther witnessed the corruption of the church
first hand and was particularly upset with the
selling of indulgences or pardons for sins.
Johanna Tetzel sold these in an effort to raise
money to rebuild St. Peter’s Cathedral in Rome.
Tetzel and his priests gave people the impression
that by buying indulgences, they could buy their
way into heaven
• In response, Martin Luther wrote a set of formal
statements called his 95 Theses which he posted
to the door of the castle church in Wittenberg on
October 31, 1517. This document was copied
and reprinted all over Germany. Luther’s actions
are seen to begin the Reformation or a movement
for religious reform.
Luther’s 3 main Revolutionary ideas:
• People win salvation only by faith in God’s gift of forgiveness. The
Church taught that faith and “good works” were needed for salvation.
• All Church teachings should be clearly based on the words of the
Bible. The pope and church traditions were false authorities.
• All people with faith were equal. Therefore, people did not need
priests to interpret the Bible for them.
• These ideas were Revolutionary because they supported taking power and
authority away from the Church and placing it elsewhere.
Pope Leo X issued a decree in 1520
threatening to excommunicate Luther
if he did not take back his statements.
In response, Luther and some of his
students gathered around a bonfire in
Wittenberg where he threw the decree
in the flames. The pope later
excommunicated Luther.
1521- The Holy Roman Emperor,
Charles V (only 20 yrs old)
summoned Luther to Worms to
stand trial for his offences
against the church and was
ordered to take back his
statements. Luther refused and
issued an imperial order, the
Edict of Worms which declared
Luther an outlaw and a heretic.
The edict stated that no one in
the empire was to give Luther
food or shelter and all of his
books were to be burned. Prince
Frederick the Wise of Saxony
went against the edict by giving
Luther shelter in one of his
castles.
• 1522- Luther returned to Wittenberg to find that many
of his teachings had been put into practice by the
local clergy. Sermons in German and married
“ministers” made Luther and his followers a separate
religious group called the Lutherans.
• Luther and others emphasized common people
reading the Scriptures in their own language, not
priests interpreting the Latin texts for the masses.
Combined with the new technology of the printing
press, Luther’s message spread throughout Europe
in the form of pamphlets.
• Unfortunately, Most Protestant movements offered
little agency for women and in some cases even
limited women’s participation in the church.
However, it was the emphasis on reading the Bible
for oneself which stimulated education and literacy
for women.
Followers of Luther
The giant quill is supposed to represent the large
support for Martin Luther and the Ninety-five
Theses he posted on a church door in Wittenberg,
Germany, in 1517.
• Intense popular religious disputes led to
cases of popular unrest and mob violence
in France and Germany. Many political
actors (kings & other nobility) found
common cause with Luther’s theological
revolt against Rome. 1529- Many German
princes supported Luther and factions
supporting each side began hostilities.
Princes who supported Luther signed a
protest against the Catholic princes.
These protesting princes came to be
known as Protestants. Eventually, the term
Protestant was applied to Christians who
belonged to non-Catholic churches.
Peace Treaties
Schmalkaldic War Thirty Years’ War
• the Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648)
pitted the Roman Catholic Church and
the Holy Roman Empire against
Protestant kings and princes throughout
Europe who sought independence from
Rome and the Emperor. While the
Peace of Westphalia brought an end to
the fighting and established the modern
state system in Europe, it recognized
the end of Catholic religious unity in the
continent by allowing each German
prince to determine their land’s religion.
• Charles V goes to war against these
Protestant princes and defeated them
in 1547. Unrest would continue.
• 1555-Peace of Augsburg settled
religious differences amongst German
Princes by allowing the state princes to
select either Lutheranism or
Catholicism as the religion of their
domain and permitted the free
emigration of residents who dissented.
French Protestants
King Charles IX of France, under the sway of his
mother, Catherine de Medici, orders the
assassination of Huguenot Protestant leaders in
Paris.
• Calvinists in France were called
Huguenots. Persecution by the Catholic
crown in France occurred often.
Catholic-Huguenot violence tore France
apart from 1562 to 1598.
• Violence between the Catholics and
Huguenots peaked in the city of Paris
on August 24, 1572, the Catholic feast
of St. Bartholomew’s Day. More then
3,000 Huguenots were killed between
the 24th and 30th in Paris. Close to
70,000 were slaughtered throughout
France in the following 6 months.
Counter-Reformation
• The efforts of the Catholic Church to keep its
members loyal to the church and Rome.
Ignatius of Loyola was a prominent Catholic
reformer.
• He wrote Spiritual Exercises in 1522. This
laid out a day-by-day plan of meditation,
prayer and study. Ignatius would continue his
education and travel.
• Ignatius gained followers and most were
ordained by the pope in 1537. Later, 1540,
Pope Paul III approved the plan for the new
monastic order, the Society of Jesus.
Members of the order were commonly called
Jesuits.
Reforming Pope
Pope Paul III and grandsons by
Titian
• Pope Paul III (1534-1549) born into the noble
Farnese family, was a worldly and educated pope
who would endeavor to answer the concerns of the
Protestant Reformation.
• Faced with widespread revolt, the Roman Catholic
Church (Pope Paul III) took 4 important steps
toward reform:
1. Directed a council of cardinals to investigate
indulgence selling and other abuses.
2. Approved the Jesuit order
3. Used the Inquisition to seek out and punish
heresy in papal territory.
4. Called a great council of Church leaders to meet
in Trent, Italy with the goal of settling several
Catholic doctrines and reaffirm authority.
While there was an effort to end corrupt and abusive
practices, the church took a hard line against heresy and
dissent, approving militant orders such as the Society of
Jesus.
Christianity
Outward
Bound
The Virgin of Guadalupe
• This phrase was Vasco da Gama’s response to Hindu South Asian merchants and
princes who asked why the Portuguese had sailed to India. The phrase indicates the
close connection between Iberians’ imperial expansion (which was a combination of
feudal, crusading, and merchant activity) and the spread of Christianity. In the sixteenth
century, Catholicism became a world religion, but it was also an imperial religion.
”In search of Christians and spices”
Missionaries and Pilgrims
• Christianity spread through the world via colonization, but the specific
individuals who spread the faith were missionaries and religious dissenters
seeking to build their own communities. While Catholic missionaries
dominated the first group and found success in the New World and the
Philippines, Protestant pilgrims fled to North America and established
settler colonies in New England.
• Moreover, the absence of a literate world religion allowed some parts of
the world to be more receptive to Christianity.
Conversion and
Adaptation in
Spanish America
The spectacular collapse of the Aztec
and Incan empires led many Spanish
and indigenous people to believe that
the god of the Christians must be
stronger than the traditional gods of
the Americas. Millions converted and
were baptized throughout the New
World. While this was nothing new as
conquest in the Americas had long
been associated with the right to
impose the conquerors’ pantheon of
gods, the intolerance of the
monotheist Iberians (seen in their
refusal to recognize the existence of
pagan deities or allow local rituals)
was a break with precedent.
A painting by the Peruvian artist Antonio Vilca, Our Lady of the Rosary,
illustrates the cultural blending which occurred in Andean Christinaity .
They often reinterpreted Christian practices within the framework of
local customs.
Resistance and
Revival
• In response to foreign conquest, resistors often used the revival of pre-
Hispanic religious tradition as a method of mobilization. In Peru in the
1560s, the Taki Onqoy (dancing sickness) movement including traveling
teachers and performers who promised that the Andean gods would
inflict illnesses upon the Spanish and restore the old order.
Women in Catholic
Latin America
• As the institutions of the Catholic
church offered few opportunities for
women to assume roles of
leadership and authority, indigenous
American women who had once
served as priestesses found
themselves forced out of spiritual
roles in the new society. That said,
the popular veneration of the Virgin
Mary spread rapidly through the
Americas as it resonated with
notions of Divine Motherhood.
• Syncretism was the religious blending
of Iberian and indigenous traditions.
Throughout the Spanish colonies,
aspects of Catholicism such as the cult
of various saints fused with local
traditions, rituals, and spiritual figures
such as the Andean huacas or gods.
The result was a Mexican or Andean
variant of Christianity that showed clear
distinctions from Christian practices
and patterns in Spain.
Syncretism in Colonial
Latin America
Pachamama, the Andean Earth Goddess, is often conflated in Andean Catholic art with the Virgin
Mary, as seen here. Wherever the Virgin takes on a mountain-like shape, she is representative of
Pachamama.
An Asian
Comparison
China and the Jesuits
Ming (1368–1644) and Qing (1644–1912) prosperity
Woodblock
illustration
about the Life
of Jesus with
explanation in
Chinese
• Unlike the Americas, where powerful states
collapsed with the arrival of Europeans,
China had two strong and wealthy
dynasties, and the nation was never in
danger of being taken over by the West
before 1800. China’s political resilience
was unparalleled in its cultural strength,
including the socio-political philosophy of
Confucianism, which arguably achieved a
spiritual significance for some. Others
found their spiritual needs satisfied by the
centuries-old Buddhist and Daoist
traditions and practices. Aside from a few
hundred thousand converts in a population
of three hundred million, Christianity did
Matteo Ricci and the Chinese elite
• Italian Jesuit missionary who gained favor with
the Ming court through his intelligence and his
ability to speak and write in Chinese. Christianity
however was still opposed by many educated
Chinese.
• Ricci and other Jesuits targeted the elites and the
Chinese court. To convert the Chinese, they
studied Chinese culture, literature, and traditions
and made accommodations to make Christianity
more palatable (something unthinkable in the
Americas). The Chinese court found the technical
skills, such as astronomy and mapmaking, of the
Jesuits interesting and useful.
• In 1583 he entered the Chinese Empire, settling
in Kwantung province. After establishing
missions in different parts of the empire, in 1601
Ricci finally settled in Peking, where, under the
protection of the Emperor Wan-li, he remained
until his death.
• In 1704, the Pope sought to eliminate
Jesuit concessions to Chinese
ancestor veneration as “idolatry” by
issuing a decree condemning
Chinese rites and Confucian rituals.
This attack on a central feature of the
Chinese socio-political order angered
Emperor Kangxi who put an end to
the tolerance of Christian
missionaries and the privileged place
of Jesuits in the Chinese court.
Emperor Kangxi versus Pope Clement XI
Confucius, Philosopher of the Chinese, or, Chinese Knowledge
Explained in Latin, compiled by Philippe Couplet and three other
Jesuits and printed at Paris in 1687.
Persistence and Change in Afro-Asian
Cultural Traditions
Expansion and Renewal in the Islamic
World
Syncretism and diversity in South and
Southeast Asia
• While Aceh in northern Sumatra saw
an emphasis on Islamic legal
orthodoxy from the seventeenth
century on, Java was home to a
peasant population with a much looser
blending of Islamic practices with local
animism. Javanese women also
enjoyed much more agency, freedom,
and opportunities in the realms of
politics and business than their sisters
in Aceh. Javanese merchants
gravitated toward the orthodoxy of
their Arab trading partners.
• Rather than military conquest in this
period, Sufis, scholars, and
merchants played crucial roles in
spreading Islam in Sub-Saharan
Africa and Central, South, and
Southeast Asia. Flexible and
tolerant Sufi mystics frequently
blended Islam with local spiritual
practices. Traveling scholars offered
useful services for courts.
Merchants provided connections to
a wider world of commerce.
Aurangzeb and
Wahhabi Islam
• India’s Mughal Dynasty had made
various accommodations to Hindus, but
the emperor Aurangzeb sought to purge
the empire of this tolerance. In the
Arabian Peninsula, Muhammad ibn Abd
al-Wahhab launched a campaign to
purge the region of what he saw as
idolatrous practices such as sacred
tombs and sinful practices such as
tobacco and hashish use. He received
political backing from Muhammad ibn
Saud. After 1800, Wahhabi Islam would
be associated with resistance to
Western penetration of the Dar al-Islam.Spread of Wahhabi Islam
China: New Directions in an Old Tradition
Neo-Confucianism Kaozheng
• Meaning “research based on
facts” criticized the unfounded
speculation of Confucianism and
promoted detailed observation
and accuracy in the material
world and in historical
documents.
• The anti-Mongol Ming and the
Manchu Qing each sought support
from the Chinese people by using
Confucianism as the corner stone
of their legitimacy. However, Neo-
Confucianism incorporated insights
from Buddhism and Daoism and
encouraged lively debates from
scholars such as Wang Yangming
(who held that anyone could
achieve a virtuous life by
introspection and contemplation
insisting that intuitive moral
knowledge exists in people).
Urban Popular Culture
• With economic growth came a middle- and
lower-class urban population that desired
entertainment on the stage and in literature.
• The Neo-confuscous conservative shift was
reflected on the arts, and there was a general
turn against literature and stage plays that were
deemed subversive. Books were routinely
banned, and theaters shut down.
• Despite this oppressive atmosphere, some
creative work did gather attention, as with the
poetry of Yuan Mei and Cao Xueqin’s
novel Dream of the Red Chamber.
• It was a massive sprawling novel that dramatized
the life of an elite eighteenth-century family. The
Confucian elite looked at this popular culture with
disdain.
India: Bridging the Hindu/Muslim Divide
Bhakti
• This Hindu movement broke with the elite
ceremonies of Brahmanism and encouraged lower
castes to engage in rituals, dances, songs, and
prayers that would allow union with the divine.
Appealing especially to women, its followers
disregarded caste and engaged in social criticism
of inequality.
• Mirabai (1498–1547): A popular bhakti poet, this
high-caste northern Indian woman rejected caste
privilege and distinction as well as rituals. She
refused sati (widow burning) on her husband’s
death and took an untouchable shoemaker as a
guru. Her poems focused on union with the divine
in the form of Lord Krishna, a prominent Hindu deity.
• Coming out of the Bahkti movement, Guru
Nanak rejected Hindu ritual and Islamic
law, claiming that “there is no Hindu; there
is no Muslim; only God.” His monotheistic
faith sought a union of all mankind and
attracted peasants and merchants from
both faiths, primarily in the Punjab. The
Guru Granth (“teacher book”) became the
sacred text, and the Golden Temple at
Amritsar became Sikhism’s central site.
Sikh men adopted distinct dress, including
long hair and beards, a turban, and a
short sword. Faced with attacks from the
Mughal Empire, the Sikh community
developed a militant sect (later prized by
the British empire as an elite fighting
A rare early 19th
century mural
painting
from Gurdwara Baba
Atal depicting Guru
Nanak
Guru Nanak (1469–1539) and Sikhism
A New Way of
Thinking: The
Birth of Modern
Science
The Question of
Origins: Why
Europe?
Autonomous Universities and
Knowledge from other Cultures
• Coming out of the Middle Ages, Europe was a fragmented but
reinvigorated civilization with many independent institutions. Society
was organized into collective groups with various rights and
privileges, as well as forms of self-regulation. European universities
were autonomous, providing self-governance and freedom from
church and state authorities.
• Between 1000 and 1500, Europeans gained access to Greek, Arab,
and other texts that offered knowledge from outside cultures. After
1500, Europeans gained insight from various overseas adventures to
the New World and the Indian Ocean basin. Knowledge from outside
of Europe shook up the existing bodies of knowledge and led to a
critical view of inherited certainties and traditions.
In contrast to autonomous European
universities…
• …the schools of the Islamic world were madrassas
(educational institutions) where the Quran might be
viewed as the only source of wisdom and philosophy
and natural science might be viewed with skepticism.
• As mastery of the Confucian canon was crucial for
entry into the Chinese state bureaucracy, education
consisted of preparation for the rigid civil service
examinations and the state did not allow independent
institutions of higher learning.
• The 3 Theories of the Solar System described by Ptolemy, Kepler and
Copernicus led to questioning of the Church’s stance on the structure of the
solar system.
Three Theories Spark a Revolution
• Ptolemy’s universe:
The Catholic church
supported the classic
model of the universe
that put the Earth at the
center. This second-
century idea came from
the work of Ptolemy.
• Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo: In the
sixteenth century, a series of Europeans
took detailed measurements of the
movement of the stars and planets and
proved that the Earth was not at the
center of the universe but rather one of
many planets that revolved around the
sun. The Church was extremely hostile to
such revisionism as it challenged papal
authority and implied that the Earth and
humanity were not so special. Galileo
was forced to recant his ideas, and
Giordano Bruno was burned at the stake
in 1600.
Science as Cultural Revolution
Early Baroque artist’s
rendition of Claudius
Ptolemy.
The Scientific Method
• It was a new approach to science where
there is a logical procedure for gathering
and testing ideas.
• Frances Bacon – was an English
politician and writer who was interested in
science and developed empiricism or the
experimental method.
• This method urged scientist to observe
the world and gather information about it
first, then draw conclusions from that
information.
Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount St Alban 1561-
1626
Rene Descartes
French mathematician who believed
that everything should be doubted until
proved by reason, mathematics and
logic.
He is famous for writing “I think,
therefore I am.”
• Observation of a problem or
question.
• Formation of hypothesis or
educated guess.
• Testing of hypothesis in an
experiment or data
collection.
• Analyzing and interpretation
of the data to reach a new
conclusion.
From both of these men, the Scientific method
developed which include these basic steps:
Renee Descartes
• One of the greatest figures of the Scientific
Revolution, The English scientist, Newton
developed the concept of universal gravitation and
showed that mathematics could describe all the
forces of the natural world. His work promoted the
idea that the world had certain governing laws and
humans could discover these principles. The
Newtonian universe was knowable and provable
using mathematics.
• His ideas were published in 1687’s Mathematical
Principles of Natural Philosophy which described
the universe like a giant clock. Its parts all worked
together perfectly in ways that could be expressed
mathematically. Moreover, Newton believed that
God was the creator of this orderly universe and
was the clock master who set everything in motion.
Sir Isaac Newton
Zacharias Janssen (Dutch eyeglass maker) – 1590 – invented the first microscope.
Anton van Leeuwenhoek (Dutch drapery merchant) – 1670’s – used microscope to observe
bacteria swimming in tooth scrapings.
Evangelista Torricelli (student of Galileo) – 1643 developed the first mercury barometer
which was used to measure atmospheric pressure and predicting weather.
 Gabriel Fahrenheit (Dutch physicist) – 1714 made the first thermometer to use mercury in
glass and showed water freezing at 32 degrees.
Anders Celsius (Swedish astronomer) – 1742 created another scale for the mercury
thermometer which showed water freezing at 0 degrees.
Andreas Vesalius (Flemish physician) – 1543 dissected human corpses and published his
observations in On the Fabric of the Human Body which was filled with illustrations of
human organs, bones and muscle.
William Harvey (English doctor) – 1628 published On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in
Animals which showed that the heart acted as a pump to circulate blood throughout the
body.
Edward Jenner (English physician) – 1700’s used cowpox to produce the world’s first
vaccination that was used to inoculate humans for smallpox.
Robert Boyle – 1661 – published The Sceptical Chymist which proposed that matter was
made up of smaller primary [particles that joined together in different ways. He also
introduced Boyle’s law which explained how the volume, temperature and pressure of gas
The Scientific Revolution saw the rise of many
inventions and firsts.
Accommodating faith and tradition with science
• Despite a few exceptions, traditional gender
barriers to educating European women ensured
that men dominated the Scientific Revolution.
• While the church did not like to see its authority
undermined, many scientists such as Newton,
were faithful Christians who saw the hand of God
behind the making of the knowable universe.
Importantly, none of the early scientists rejected
Christianity or espoused atheism.
• Enlightenment thinkers and writers set the
stage for revolution by their encouragement
of people to judge for themselves what was
right or wrong in society and to rely on
human reason to solve social problems.
• Enlightenment figures saw the world as
understandable and perfectible once
humans figured out the rules that governed
society, economics, and morality. With
education and embracing reason, people
could become “enlightened.”
Science and Enlightenment
• Voltaire was the pen name of Francois Marie
Arouet who published more than 70 pieces of
work in which he would often use satire against
his opponents. He believed in tolerance,
reason and freedom of thought, expression
and religious belief. He fought against
prejudice and superstition.
• The Baron de Montesquieu was a French
aristocrat, writer and lawyer who devoted
himself to the study of political liberty. He
advocated the separation of powers in
government. He also believed that in order to
keep any individual or group from gaining
complete control of the government, a system
of checks and balances must be established.
Enlightenment thinkers
• Born poor and worked as an
engraver, music teacher, tutor and
secretary before moving to Paris and
winning fame as a writer of essays.
Rousseau was deeply committed to
individual freedom. He viewed
government as an agreement among
free individuals to create a society
guided by the “general will.” Unlike
other Enlightenment thinkers, he
believed that civilization corrupted
people’s natural goodness and
destroyed freedom and equality.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
• Cesare Bonesana Beccaria was an Italian philosophe who focused on criminal
justice. He believed that laws existed to preserve social order and he advocated
a criminal justice system based on fairness and reason. He argued that a person
accused of a crime should receive a speedy trial. He also worked to abolish
torture.
• Thomas Hobbes was an English thinker who wrote Leviathan in 1651. Hobbes’s
view, all humans were naturally selfish and wicked and would act in their own
self-interest. It is because of this selfishness that he believed that people needed
a social contract (or government) to keep the order. He believed that the best
form of government would be an absolute monarchy that could impose order and
demand obedience.
• John Locke was an English philosopher who wrote Two Treatises on
Government which served to justify the overthrow of James II and the Glorious
Revolution. Locke believed that people were reasonable beings with the natural
ability to govern themselves. He believed that people could learn from their
experiences and improve themselves. Moreover, Locke believed that all people
were born free and equal, endowed with 3 natural rights: life, liberty and property.
He believed that government’s responsibility was to protect these rights for its
Mary
Wollstonecraft
Self-taught and ran a school with her
sisters before joining a London publisher
and writing. She believed that women, like
men, need education to become virtuous
and useful. She argued for women’s rights
to become educated and to participate in
politics. Her essay called a Vindication of
the Rights of Woman was written in 1792
and disagreed with Rousseau’s assertion
that women’s education should be
secondary to men’s.
Despite various progressive ideas about
social equality and a common rejection of
aristocratic privilege, men dominated the
Enlightenment, and the movement took a
dim view of education for women. That
said, there were women who played key
roles in hosting Parisian salons, a few who
published in the Encyclopedie, and
intellectuals such as Mary Wollstonecraft
who criticized the patriarchal and
misogynistic ideas of Rousseau and
others.
Deism, Pantheism, and religious revivalism…
• Deism, the belief in a god that created the world and then left it up to
the world to run its course, was a common spiritual idea of the
Enlightenment. Deism was not atheism but it specifically rejected the
idea a god that intervened in human affairs and questioned the need
for a institutionalized religion.
• Pantheism, which viewed God or gods as being one with nature, had
even less use of rituals, sacred texts, and the clergy. Partially in
reaction to a perceived godlessness in the Enlightenment, a Protestant
religious awakening spread throughout northwest Europe and North
America in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
• Romanticism also embodied a reaction to science as being cold and
without feeling and deeper spiritual truths.
European Science
beyond the West
• There was a diffusion of technology but
not scientific thinking. An example of this
was the telescope which proved to be a
useful tool in China, Mughal India, and the
Ottoman Empire, but it failed to become a
“discovery machine” outside of Europe.
As China, India, Japan, and the Ottoman
Empire had strong states and cultural
systems, there was relatively little interest
in adopting foreign ways of thinking.
Johannes Hevelius, German astronomer livining
in Poland, constructed long telescopes which
were used to observe sunspots, the surface of
the moon and discover several comets.
China & Japan
China Japan
• In Japan, only the Dutch could
visit the islands and they were
limited to Nagasaki. Those
Japanese scholars who did
have contact with the Dutch
learned from various European
texts on medicine, astronomy,
and geography.
• Chinese scholars found
European astronomy and
mapmaking useful. The
kaozheng movement drew
much knowledge of the natural
world and mathematics from
contact with Europeans. The
Jesuits lost much face in China
after 1760 when it was
discovered that they had hid the
Copernican model of the
universe out of loyalty to church
Johann Adam Schall,von
Bell was a German Jesuit
astronomer active in China
The Ottoman
Empire
While the revelations of the
Copernican solar system did not
disturb the rich tradition of
Muslim astronomy, many works
of western scholars were not
translated. While practical
knowledge was welcome, there
were various traditions,
superstitions, and cultural
prejudices that blocked the
widespread acceptance of
western science.
The Observatory in
Constantinople would be
closed and later
destroyed through
bombardment by order of
the sultan in 1580.

Contenu connexe

Tendances

The atlantic revolutions and their echoes
The atlantic revolutions and their echoesThe atlantic revolutions and their echoes
The atlantic revolutions and their echoesColleen Skadl
 
AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 14: Economic transformations: Commerce and Consequ...
AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 14: Economic transformations: Commerce and Consequ...AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 14: Economic transformations: Commerce and Consequ...
AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 14: Economic transformations: Commerce and Consequ...S Sandoval
 
Chapter 21 english civil war
Chapter 21 english civil warChapter 21 english civil war
Chapter 21 english civil warKent Hansen
 
The Scientific Revolution
The Scientific RevolutionThe Scientific Revolution
The Scientific Revolutiontkester
 
World History Ch. 20 Section 1 Notes
World History Ch. 20 Section 1 NotesWorld History Ch. 20 Section 1 Notes
World History Ch. 20 Section 1 Notesskorbar7
 
Latin American Indpendence movements
Latin American Indpendence movements Latin American Indpendence movements
Latin American Indpendence movements Brighton Alternative
 
AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 17 Revolutions of Industrialization 1750-1914
AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 17  Revolutions of Industrialization  1750-1914AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 17  Revolutions of Industrialization  1750-1914
AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 17 Revolutions of Industrialization 1750-1914S Sandoval
 
Age of exploration
Age of explorationAge of exploration
Age of explorationKyle Davoust
 
AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 18 colonial encounters in asia and africa 1750 1950
AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 18 colonial encounters in asia and africa 1750 1950AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 18 colonial encounters in asia and africa 1750 1950
AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 18 colonial encounters in asia and africa 1750 1950S Sandoval
 
AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 16 Atlantic Revolutions: Global Echoes 1750- 1914
AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 16 Atlantic Revolutions: Global Echoes 1750- 1914AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 16 Atlantic Revolutions: Global Echoes 1750- 1914
AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 16 Atlantic Revolutions: Global Echoes 1750- 1914S Sandoval
 
The Early Modern Age. The Reformation: Protestant and Catholic Reformation
The Early Modern Age. The Reformation: Protestant and Catholic ReformationThe Early Modern Age. The Reformation: Protestant and Catholic Reformation
The Early Modern Age. The Reformation: Protestant and Catholic ReformationMaría Jesús Campos Fernández
 
Scientific revolutionpowerpoint
Scientific revolutionpowerpointScientific revolutionpowerpoint
Scientific revolutionpowerpointmsmapp
 
Industrial revolution part 1
Industrial revolution   part 1Industrial revolution   part 1
Industrial revolution part 1MrLaine26
 

Tendances (20)

The atlantic revolutions and their echoes
The atlantic revolutions and their echoesThe atlantic revolutions and their echoes
The atlantic revolutions and their echoes
 
Protestant Reformation
Protestant ReformationProtestant Reformation
Protestant Reformation
 
AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 14: Economic transformations: Commerce and Consequ...
AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 14: Economic transformations: Commerce and Consequ...AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 14: Economic transformations: Commerce and Consequ...
AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 14: Economic transformations: Commerce and Consequ...
 
Chapter 21 english civil war
Chapter 21 english civil warChapter 21 english civil war
Chapter 21 english civil war
 
The Scientific Revolution
The Scientific RevolutionThe Scientific Revolution
The Scientific Revolution
 
World History Ch. 20 Section 1 Notes
World History Ch. 20 Section 1 NotesWorld History Ch. 20 Section 1 Notes
World History Ch. 20 Section 1 Notes
 
Latin American Indpendence movements
Latin American Indpendence movements Latin American Indpendence movements
Latin American Indpendence movements
 
Ap ch 20
Ap ch 20Ap ch 20
Ap ch 20
 
Chapter22
Chapter22Chapter22
Chapter22
 
AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 17 Revolutions of Industrialization 1750-1914
AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 17  Revolutions of Industrialization  1750-1914AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 17  Revolutions of Industrialization  1750-1914
AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 17 Revolutions of Industrialization 1750-1914
 
Age of exploration
Age of explorationAge of exploration
Age of exploration
 
Martin luther and the reformation
Martin luther and the reformationMartin luther and the reformation
Martin luther and the reformation
 
AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 18 colonial encounters in asia and africa 1750 1950
AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 18 colonial encounters in asia and africa 1750 1950AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 18 colonial encounters in asia and africa 1750 1950
AP WORLD HISTORY - Chapter 18 colonial encounters in asia and africa 1750 1950
 
Strayer notes ch. 21
Strayer notes ch. 21Strayer notes ch. 21
Strayer notes ch. 21
 
La reforma protestante y contrareforma
La reforma protestante y contrareformaLa reforma protestante y contrareforma
La reforma protestante y contrareforma
 
AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 16 Atlantic Revolutions: Global Echoes 1750- 1914
AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 16 Atlantic Revolutions: Global Echoes 1750- 1914AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 16 Atlantic Revolutions: Global Echoes 1750- 1914
AP WORLD HISTORY: Chapter 16 Atlantic Revolutions: Global Echoes 1750- 1914
 
The Early Modern Age. The Reformation: Protestant and Catholic Reformation
The Early Modern Age. The Reformation: Protestant and Catholic ReformationThe Early Modern Age. The Reformation: Protestant and Catholic Reformation
The Early Modern Age. The Reformation: Protestant and Catholic Reformation
 
Scientific revolutionpowerpoint
Scientific revolutionpowerpointScientific revolutionpowerpoint
Scientific revolutionpowerpoint
 
AP Euro CH 14
AP Euro CH 14AP Euro CH 14
AP Euro CH 14
 
Industrial revolution part 1
Industrial revolution   part 1Industrial revolution   part 1
Industrial revolution part 1
 

Similaire à Ch. 15 cultural transformations 1450 1750

The reformation 1.3
The reformation 1.3The reformation 1.3
The reformation 1.3lesah2o
 
The Reformation and European Wars of Religion.pdf
The Reformation and European Wars of Religion.pdfThe Reformation and European Wars of Religion.pdf
The Reformation and European Wars of Religion.pdfDave Phillips
 
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
 -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jresteevillafuerte
 
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
 -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jresteevillafuerte
 
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
 -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jresteevillafuerte
 
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
 -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jresteevillafuerte
 
Lesson Two: Other Helpful Slides
Lesson Two:  Other Helpful SlidesLesson Two:  Other Helpful Slides
Lesson Two: Other Helpful Slidesmconover111
 
17 3 Luther Starts The Reformation
17 3   Luther Starts The Reformation17 3   Luther Starts The Reformation
17 3 Luther Starts The ReformationJohn Hext
 
A People’s History of Christianity May 24, 2015
A People’s History of Christianity May 24, 2015A People’s History of Christianity May 24, 2015
A People’s History of Christianity May 24, 2015typeknerd
 
6 protestant reformation in one page
6 protestant reformation in one page6 protestant reformation in one page
6 protestant reformation in one pagefasteddie
 
Reformation and religious wars
Reformation and religious warsReformation and religious wars
Reformation and religious warstjohnsonl
 
17.3 luther starts the reformation
17.3   luther starts the reformation17.3   luther starts the reformation
17.3 luther starts the reformationAshley Birmingham
 
Reformation reading
Reformation readingReformation reading
Reformation readingsudsnz
 
1.4 the reform continues
1.4 the reform continues1.4 the reform continues
1.4 the reform continueslesah2o
 
Describe Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. What did .docx
Describe Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. What did .docxDescribe Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. What did .docx
Describe Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. What did .docxsimonithomas47935
 

Similaire à Ch. 15 cultural transformations 1450 1750 (20)

Chapter 11
Chapter 11Chapter 11
Chapter 11
 
Ch14 ref
Ch14 refCh14 ref
Ch14 ref
 
Protestant reformation
Protestant reformationProtestant reformation
Protestant reformation
 
The reformation 1.3
The reformation 1.3The reformation 1.3
The reformation 1.3
 
The Reformation and European Wars of Religion.pdf
The Reformation and European Wars of Religion.pdfThe Reformation and European Wars of Religion.pdf
The Reformation and European Wars of Religion.pdf
 
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
 -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
 
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
 -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
 
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
 -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
 
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
 -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr -The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
-The protestant reformation- ernesto b. villafuerte,jr
 
Lesson Two: Other Helpful Slides
Lesson Two:  Other Helpful SlidesLesson Two:  Other Helpful Slides
Lesson Two: Other Helpful Slides
 
17 3 Luther Starts The Reformation
17 3   Luther Starts The Reformation17 3   Luther Starts The Reformation
17 3 Luther Starts The Reformation
 
A People’s History of Christianity May 24, 2015
A People’s History of Christianity May 24, 2015A People’s History of Christianity May 24, 2015
A People’s History of Christianity May 24, 2015
 
6 protestant reformation in one page
6 protestant reformation in one page6 protestant reformation in one page
6 protestant reformation in one page
 
Reformation and religious wars
Reformation and religious warsReformation and religious wars
Reformation and religious wars
 
THE REFORMATION
THE REFORMATIONTHE REFORMATION
THE REFORMATION
 
Celebrating 500 years of Reformation.
Celebrating 500 years of Reformation.Celebrating 500 years of Reformation.
Celebrating 500 years of Reformation.
 
17.3 luther starts the reformation
17.3   luther starts the reformation17.3   luther starts the reformation
17.3 luther starts the reformation
 
Reformation reading
Reformation readingReformation reading
Reformation reading
 
1.4 the reform continues
1.4 the reform continues1.4 the reform continues
1.4 the reform continues
 
Describe Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. What did .docx
Describe Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. What did .docxDescribe Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. What did .docx
Describe Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. What did .docx
 

Plus de lesah2o

5.5 parliament limits the english monarchy
5.5 parliament limits the english monarchy5.5 parliament limits the english monarchy
5.5 parliament limits the english monarchylesah2o
 
5.4 absolute rulers of russia
5.4 absolute rulers of russia5.4 absolute rulers of russia
5.4 absolute rulers of russialesah2o
 
Urbanization ch. 10.2
Urbanization ch. 10.2Urbanization ch. 10.2
Urbanization ch. 10.2lesah2o
 
The indian wars
The indian warsThe indian wars
The indian warslesah2o
 
Populism
PopulismPopulism
Populismlesah2o
 
Immigration ch. 10.1
Immigration ch. 10.1Immigration ch. 10.1
Immigration ch. 10.1lesah2o
 
Ch. 14.1 the united states enters world war i
Ch. 14.1 the united states enters world war iCh. 14.1 the united states enters world war i
Ch. 14.1 the united states enters world war ilesah2o
 
Ch. 13.4 woodrow wilson in office
Ch. 13.4 woodrow wilson in officeCh. 13.4 woodrow wilson in office
Ch. 13.4 woodrow wilson in officelesah2o
 
Ch. 13.3 the taft administration
Ch. 13.3 the taft administrationCh. 13.3 the taft administration
Ch. 13.3 the taft administrationlesah2o
 
Ch. 12.2 spanish american war
Ch. 12.2 spanish american warCh. 12.2 spanish american war
Ch. 12.2 spanish american warlesah2o
 
Ch. 12.1 building an empire
Ch. 12.1 building an empireCh. 12.1 building an empire
Ch. 12.1 building an empirelesah2o
 
Ch. 9.3 rise of big business
Ch. 9.3 rise of big businessCh. 9.3 rise of big business
Ch. 9.3 rise of big businesslesah2o
 
Ch 13.2 roosevelt in office
Ch 13.2 roosevelt in officeCh 13.2 roosevelt in office
Ch 13.2 roosevelt in officelesah2o
 
Ch 13.1 roots of progressivism
Ch 13.1 roots of progressivismCh 13.1 roots of progressivism
Ch 13.1 roots of progressivismlesah2o
 
12.3 new american diplomacy
12.3 new american diplomacy12.3 new american diplomacy
12.3 new american diplomacylesah2o
 
Ch. 21 revolution, socialism and global conflict
Ch. 21 revolution, socialism and global conflictCh. 21 revolution, socialism and global conflict
Ch. 21 revolution, socialism and global conflictlesah2o
 
Ch. 16 atlantic revolutions
Ch. 16 atlantic revolutionsCh. 16 atlantic revolutions
Ch. 16 atlantic revolutionslesah2o
 
Ch. 17 industrial revolution
Ch. 17 industrial revolutionCh. 17 industrial revolution
Ch. 17 industrial revolutionlesah2o
 
Chapter 18 age of imperialism
Chapter 18 age of imperialismChapter 18 age of imperialism
Chapter 18 age of imperialismlesah2o
 

Plus de lesah2o (20)

5.5 parliament limits the english monarchy
5.5 parliament limits the english monarchy5.5 parliament limits the english monarchy
5.5 parliament limits the english monarchy
 
5.4 absolute rulers of russia
5.4 absolute rulers of russia5.4 absolute rulers of russia
5.4 absolute rulers of russia
 
Urbanization ch. 10.2
Urbanization ch. 10.2Urbanization ch. 10.2
Urbanization ch. 10.2
 
Unions
UnionsUnions
Unions
 
The indian wars
The indian warsThe indian wars
The indian wars
 
Populism
PopulismPopulism
Populism
 
Immigration ch. 10.1
Immigration ch. 10.1Immigration ch. 10.1
Immigration ch. 10.1
 
Ch. 14.1 the united states enters world war i
Ch. 14.1 the united states enters world war iCh. 14.1 the united states enters world war i
Ch. 14.1 the united states enters world war i
 
Ch. 13.4 woodrow wilson in office
Ch. 13.4 woodrow wilson in officeCh. 13.4 woodrow wilson in office
Ch. 13.4 woodrow wilson in office
 
Ch. 13.3 the taft administration
Ch. 13.3 the taft administrationCh. 13.3 the taft administration
Ch. 13.3 the taft administration
 
Ch. 12.2 spanish american war
Ch. 12.2 spanish american warCh. 12.2 spanish american war
Ch. 12.2 spanish american war
 
Ch. 12.1 building an empire
Ch. 12.1 building an empireCh. 12.1 building an empire
Ch. 12.1 building an empire
 
Ch. 9.3 rise of big business
Ch. 9.3 rise of big businessCh. 9.3 rise of big business
Ch. 9.3 rise of big business
 
Ch 13.2 roosevelt in office
Ch 13.2 roosevelt in officeCh 13.2 roosevelt in office
Ch 13.2 roosevelt in office
 
Ch 13.1 roots of progressivism
Ch 13.1 roots of progressivismCh 13.1 roots of progressivism
Ch 13.1 roots of progressivism
 
12.3 new american diplomacy
12.3 new american diplomacy12.3 new american diplomacy
12.3 new american diplomacy
 
Ch. 21 revolution, socialism and global conflict
Ch. 21 revolution, socialism and global conflictCh. 21 revolution, socialism and global conflict
Ch. 21 revolution, socialism and global conflict
 
Ch. 16 atlantic revolutions
Ch. 16 atlantic revolutionsCh. 16 atlantic revolutions
Ch. 16 atlantic revolutions
 
Ch. 17 industrial revolution
Ch. 17 industrial revolutionCh. 17 industrial revolution
Ch. 17 industrial revolution
 
Chapter 18 age of imperialism
Chapter 18 age of imperialismChapter 18 age of imperialism
Chapter 18 age of imperialism
 

Dernier

Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global ImpactBeyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global ImpactPECB
 
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The BasicsIntroduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The BasicsTechSoup
 
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdfQucHHunhnh
 
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104misteraugie
 
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13Steve Thomason
 
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and ModeMeasures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and ModeThiyagu K
 
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdfKey note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdfAdmir Softic
 
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy ConsultingGrant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy ConsultingTechSoup
 
social pharmacy d-pharm 1st year by Pragati K. Mahajan
social pharmacy d-pharm 1st year by Pragati K. Mahajansocial pharmacy d-pharm 1st year by Pragati K. Mahajan
social pharmacy d-pharm 1st year by Pragati K. Mahajanpragatimahajan3
 
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdfQucHHunhnh
 
APM Welcome, APM North West Network Conference, Synergies Across Sectors
APM Welcome, APM North West Network Conference, Synergies Across SectorsAPM Welcome, APM North West Network Conference, Synergies Across Sectors
APM Welcome, APM North West Network Conference, Synergies Across SectorsAssociation for Project Management
 
Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...
Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...
Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...fonyou31
 
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdfHoldier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdfagholdier
 
Explore beautiful and ugly buildings. Mathematics helps us create beautiful d...
Explore beautiful and ugly buildings. Mathematics helps us create beautiful d...Explore beautiful and ugly buildings. Mathematics helps us create beautiful d...
Explore beautiful and ugly buildings. Mathematics helps us create beautiful d...christianmathematics
 
Arihant handbook biology for class 11 .pdf
Arihant handbook biology for class 11 .pdfArihant handbook biology for class 11 .pdf
Arihant handbook biology for class 11 .pdfchloefrazer622
 
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxThe basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxheathfieldcps1
 
BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...
BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...
BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...Sapna Thakur
 
General AI for Medical Educators April 2024
General AI for Medical Educators April 2024General AI for Medical Educators April 2024
General AI for Medical Educators April 2024Janet Corral
 
Kisan Call Centre - To harness potential of ICT in Agriculture by answer farm...
Kisan Call Centre - To harness potential of ICT in Agriculture by answer farm...Kisan Call Centre - To harness potential of ICT in Agriculture by answer farm...
Kisan Call Centre - To harness potential of ICT in Agriculture by answer farm...Krashi Coaching
 
Sanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdf
Sanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdfSanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdf
Sanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdfsanyamsingh5019
 

Dernier (20)

Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global ImpactBeyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
Beyond the EU: DORA and NIS 2 Directive's Global Impact
 
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The BasicsIntroduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
 
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf1029 -  Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
1029 - Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa 10 . pdf
 
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
 
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
 
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and ModeMeasures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
 
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdfKey note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
 
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy ConsultingGrant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
Grant Readiness 101 TechSoup and Remy Consulting
 
social pharmacy d-pharm 1st year by Pragati K. Mahajan
social pharmacy d-pharm 1st year by Pragati K. Mahajansocial pharmacy d-pharm 1st year by Pragati K. Mahajan
social pharmacy d-pharm 1st year by Pragati K. Mahajan
 
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi  6.pdf
1029-Danh muc Sach Giao Khoa khoi 6.pdf
 
APM Welcome, APM North West Network Conference, Synergies Across Sectors
APM Welcome, APM North West Network Conference, Synergies Across SectorsAPM Welcome, APM North West Network Conference, Synergies Across Sectors
APM Welcome, APM North West Network Conference, Synergies Across Sectors
 
Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...
Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...
Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...
 
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdfHoldier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
Holdier Curriculum Vitae (April 2024).pdf
 
Explore beautiful and ugly buildings. Mathematics helps us create beautiful d...
Explore beautiful and ugly buildings. Mathematics helps us create beautiful d...Explore beautiful and ugly buildings. Mathematics helps us create beautiful d...
Explore beautiful and ugly buildings. Mathematics helps us create beautiful d...
 
Arihant handbook biology for class 11 .pdf
Arihant handbook biology for class 11 .pdfArihant handbook biology for class 11 .pdf
Arihant handbook biology for class 11 .pdf
 
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxThe basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
 
BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...
BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...
BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...
 
General AI for Medical Educators April 2024
General AI for Medical Educators April 2024General AI for Medical Educators April 2024
General AI for Medical Educators April 2024
 
Kisan Call Centre - To harness potential of ICT in Agriculture by answer farm...
Kisan Call Centre - To harness potential of ICT in Agriculture by answer farm...Kisan Call Centre - To harness potential of ICT in Agriculture by answer farm...
Kisan Call Centre - To harness potential of ICT in Agriculture by answer farm...
 
Sanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdf
Sanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdfSanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdf
Sanyam Choudhary Chemistry practical.pdf
 

Ch. 15 cultural transformations 1450 1750

  • 2. The Globalization of Christianity Western Christendom Fragmented: The Protestant Reformation • The Reformation began in Germany where Renaissance ideals of the secular and individual helped weaken the authority of the church. Northern European rulers also resented the pope’s authority. However, because Germany was divided into many smaller competing states, it was difficult for the pope or emperor to impose control. • Moreover, the church had become corrupt with its leaders more interested in worldly affairs than spiritual duties. Popes spent money patronizing the arts, on personal luxuries and fighting wars. Many priests and monks could barely read and were unable to teach their congregations. Others broke vows by marrying, gambling or drinking in excess.
  • 3. Martin Luther Martin Luther was the eldest son of a copper miner. His father pushed him to become a lawyer but Martin was more interested in philosophy and religion than the law. On a trip back to school from home, Martin had a life changing experience. Traveling in a thunderstorm, lightening struck nearby. Feeling scared and helpless, he prayed to St. Anne for safety and pledged to become a monk. His deliverance from the storm led to his withdraw from law school and admittance to an Augustinian
  • 4. • Luther witnessed the corruption of the church first hand and was particularly upset with the selling of indulgences or pardons for sins. Johanna Tetzel sold these in an effort to raise money to rebuild St. Peter’s Cathedral in Rome. Tetzel and his priests gave people the impression that by buying indulgences, they could buy their way into heaven • In response, Martin Luther wrote a set of formal statements called his 95 Theses which he posted to the door of the castle church in Wittenberg on October 31, 1517. This document was copied and reprinted all over Germany. Luther’s actions are seen to begin the Reformation or a movement for religious reform.
  • 5. Luther’s 3 main Revolutionary ideas: • People win salvation only by faith in God’s gift of forgiveness. The Church taught that faith and “good works” were needed for salvation. • All Church teachings should be clearly based on the words of the Bible. The pope and church traditions were false authorities. • All people with faith were equal. Therefore, people did not need priests to interpret the Bible for them. • These ideas were Revolutionary because they supported taking power and authority away from the Church and placing it elsewhere.
  • 6. Pope Leo X issued a decree in 1520 threatening to excommunicate Luther if he did not take back his statements. In response, Luther and some of his students gathered around a bonfire in Wittenberg where he threw the decree in the flames. The pope later excommunicated Luther.
  • 7. 1521- The Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V (only 20 yrs old) summoned Luther to Worms to stand trial for his offences against the church and was ordered to take back his statements. Luther refused and issued an imperial order, the Edict of Worms which declared Luther an outlaw and a heretic. The edict stated that no one in the empire was to give Luther food or shelter and all of his books were to be burned. Prince Frederick the Wise of Saxony went against the edict by giving Luther shelter in one of his castles.
  • 8. • 1522- Luther returned to Wittenberg to find that many of his teachings had been put into practice by the local clergy. Sermons in German and married “ministers” made Luther and his followers a separate religious group called the Lutherans. • Luther and others emphasized common people reading the Scriptures in their own language, not priests interpreting the Latin texts for the masses. Combined with the new technology of the printing press, Luther’s message spread throughout Europe in the form of pamphlets. • Unfortunately, Most Protestant movements offered little agency for women and in some cases even limited women’s participation in the church. However, it was the emphasis on reading the Bible for oneself which stimulated education and literacy for women. Followers of Luther The giant quill is supposed to represent the large support for Martin Luther and the Ninety-five Theses he posted on a church door in Wittenberg, Germany, in 1517.
  • 9. • Intense popular religious disputes led to cases of popular unrest and mob violence in France and Germany. Many political actors (kings & other nobility) found common cause with Luther’s theological revolt against Rome. 1529- Many German princes supported Luther and factions supporting each side began hostilities. Princes who supported Luther signed a protest against the Catholic princes. These protesting princes came to be known as Protestants. Eventually, the term Protestant was applied to Christians who belonged to non-Catholic churches.
  • 10. Peace Treaties Schmalkaldic War Thirty Years’ War • the Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648) pitted the Roman Catholic Church and the Holy Roman Empire against Protestant kings and princes throughout Europe who sought independence from Rome and the Emperor. While the Peace of Westphalia brought an end to the fighting and established the modern state system in Europe, it recognized the end of Catholic religious unity in the continent by allowing each German prince to determine their land’s religion. • Charles V goes to war against these Protestant princes and defeated them in 1547. Unrest would continue. • 1555-Peace of Augsburg settled religious differences amongst German Princes by allowing the state princes to select either Lutheranism or Catholicism as the religion of their domain and permitted the free emigration of residents who dissented.
  • 11. French Protestants King Charles IX of France, under the sway of his mother, Catherine de Medici, orders the assassination of Huguenot Protestant leaders in Paris. • Calvinists in France were called Huguenots. Persecution by the Catholic crown in France occurred often. Catholic-Huguenot violence tore France apart from 1562 to 1598. • Violence between the Catholics and Huguenots peaked in the city of Paris on August 24, 1572, the Catholic feast of St. Bartholomew’s Day. More then 3,000 Huguenots were killed between the 24th and 30th in Paris. Close to 70,000 were slaughtered throughout France in the following 6 months.
  • 12. Counter-Reformation • The efforts of the Catholic Church to keep its members loyal to the church and Rome. Ignatius of Loyola was a prominent Catholic reformer. • He wrote Spiritual Exercises in 1522. This laid out a day-by-day plan of meditation, prayer and study. Ignatius would continue his education and travel. • Ignatius gained followers and most were ordained by the pope in 1537. Later, 1540, Pope Paul III approved the plan for the new monastic order, the Society of Jesus. Members of the order were commonly called Jesuits.
  • 13. Reforming Pope Pope Paul III and grandsons by Titian • Pope Paul III (1534-1549) born into the noble Farnese family, was a worldly and educated pope who would endeavor to answer the concerns of the Protestant Reformation. • Faced with widespread revolt, the Roman Catholic Church (Pope Paul III) took 4 important steps toward reform: 1. Directed a council of cardinals to investigate indulgence selling and other abuses. 2. Approved the Jesuit order 3. Used the Inquisition to seek out and punish heresy in papal territory. 4. Called a great council of Church leaders to meet in Trent, Italy with the goal of settling several Catholic doctrines and reaffirm authority. While there was an effort to end corrupt and abusive practices, the church took a hard line against heresy and dissent, approving militant orders such as the Society of Jesus.
  • 15. • This phrase was Vasco da Gama’s response to Hindu South Asian merchants and princes who asked why the Portuguese had sailed to India. The phrase indicates the close connection between Iberians’ imperial expansion (which was a combination of feudal, crusading, and merchant activity) and the spread of Christianity. In the sixteenth century, Catholicism became a world religion, but it was also an imperial religion. ”In search of Christians and spices”
  • 16. Missionaries and Pilgrims • Christianity spread through the world via colonization, but the specific individuals who spread the faith were missionaries and religious dissenters seeking to build their own communities. While Catholic missionaries dominated the first group and found success in the New World and the Philippines, Protestant pilgrims fled to North America and established settler colonies in New England. • Moreover, the absence of a literate world religion allowed some parts of the world to be more receptive to Christianity.
  • 17. Conversion and Adaptation in Spanish America The spectacular collapse of the Aztec and Incan empires led many Spanish and indigenous people to believe that the god of the Christians must be stronger than the traditional gods of the Americas. Millions converted and were baptized throughout the New World. While this was nothing new as conquest in the Americas had long been associated with the right to impose the conquerors’ pantheon of gods, the intolerance of the monotheist Iberians (seen in their refusal to recognize the existence of pagan deities or allow local rituals) was a break with precedent. A painting by the Peruvian artist Antonio Vilca, Our Lady of the Rosary, illustrates the cultural blending which occurred in Andean Christinaity . They often reinterpreted Christian practices within the framework of local customs.
  • 18. Resistance and Revival • In response to foreign conquest, resistors often used the revival of pre- Hispanic religious tradition as a method of mobilization. In Peru in the 1560s, the Taki Onqoy (dancing sickness) movement including traveling teachers and performers who promised that the Andean gods would inflict illnesses upon the Spanish and restore the old order.
  • 19. Women in Catholic Latin America • As the institutions of the Catholic church offered few opportunities for women to assume roles of leadership and authority, indigenous American women who had once served as priestesses found themselves forced out of spiritual roles in the new society. That said, the popular veneration of the Virgin Mary spread rapidly through the Americas as it resonated with notions of Divine Motherhood.
  • 20. • Syncretism was the religious blending of Iberian and indigenous traditions. Throughout the Spanish colonies, aspects of Catholicism such as the cult of various saints fused with local traditions, rituals, and spiritual figures such as the Andean huacas or gods. The result was a Mexican or Andean variant of Christianity that showed clear distinctions from Christian practices and patterns in Spain. Syncretism in Colonial Latin America Pachamama, the Andean Earth Goddess, is often conflated in Andean Catholic art with the Virgin Mary, as seen here. Wherever the Virgin takes on a mountain-like shape, she is representative of Pachamama.
  • 22. Ming (1368–1644) and Qing (1644–1912) prosperity Woodblock illustration about the Life of Jesus with explanation in Chinese • Unlike the Americas, where powerful states collapsed with the arrival of Europeans, China had two strong and wealthy dynasties, and the nation was never in danger of being taken over by the West before 1800. China’s political resilience was unparalleled in its cultural strength, including the socio-political philosophy of Confucianism, which arguably achieved a spiritual significance for some. Others found their spiritual needs satisfied by the centuries-old Buddhist and Daoist traditions and practices. Aside from a few hundred thousand converts in a population of three hundred million, Christianity did
  • 23. Matteo Ricci and the Chinese elite • Italian Jesuit missionary who gained favor with the Ming court through his intelligence and his ability to speak and write in Chinese. Christianity however was still opposed by many educated Chinese. • Ricci and other Jesuits targeted the elites and the Chinese court. To convert the Chinese, they studied Chinese culture, literature, and traditions and made accommodations to make Christianity more palatable (something unthinkable in the Americas). The Chinese court found the technical skills, such as astronomy and mapmaking, of the Jesuits interesting and useful. • In 1583 he entered the Chinese Empire, settling in Kwantung province. After establishing missions in different parts of the empire, in 1601 Ricci finally settled in Peking, where, under the protection of the Emperor Wan-li, he remained until his death.
  • 24. • In 1704, the Pope sought to eliminate Jesuit concessions to Chinese ancestor veneration as “idolatry” by issuing a decree condemning Chinese rites and Confucian rituals. This attack on a central feature of the Chinese socio-political order angered Emperor Kangxi who put an end to the tolerance of Christian missionaries and the privileged place of Jesuits in the Chinese court. Emperor Kangxi versus Pope Clement XI Confucius, Philosopher of the Chinese, or, Chinese Knowledge Explained in Latin, compiled by Philippe Couplet and three other Jesuits and printed at Paris in 1687.
  • 25. Persistence and Change in Afro-Asian Cultural Traditions Expansion and Renewal in the Islamic World Syncretism and diversity in South and Southeast Asia • While Aceh in northern Sumatra saw an emphasis on Islamic legal orthodoxy from the seventeenth century on, Java was home to a peasant population with a much looser blending of Islamic practices with local animism. Javanese women also enjoyed much more agency, freedom, and opportunities in the realms of politics and business than their sisters in Aceh. Javanese merchants gravitated toward the orthodoxy of their Arab trading partners. • Rather than military conquest in this period, Sufis, scholars, and merchants played crucial roles in spreading Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa and Central, South, and Southeast Asia. Flexible and tolerant Sufi mystics frequently blended Islam with local spiritual practices. Traveling scholars offered useful services for courts. Merchants provided connections to a wider world of commerce.
  • 26. Aurangzeb and Wahhabi Islam • India’s Mughal Dynasty had made various accommodations to Hindus, but the emperor Aurangzeb sought to purge the empire of this tolerance. In the Arabian Peninsula, Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab launched a campaign to purge the region of what he saw as idolatrous practices such as sacred tombs and sinful practices such as tobacco and hashish use. He received political backing from Muhammad ibn Saud. After 1800, Wahhabi Islam would be associated with resistance to Western penetration of the Dar al-Islam.Spread of Wahhabi Islam
  • 27. China: New Directions in an Old Tradition
  • 28. Neo-Confucianism Kaozheng • Meaning “research based on facts” criticized the unfounded speculation of Confucianism and promoted detailed observation and accuracy in the material world and in historical documents. • The anti-Mongol Ming and the Manchu Qing each sought support from the Chinese people by using Confucianism as the corner stone of their legitimacy. However, Neo- Confucianism incorporated insights from Buddhism and Daoism and encouraged lively debates from scholars such as Wang Yangming (who held that anyone could achieve a virtuous life by introspection and contemplation insisting that intuitive moral knowledge exists in people).
  • 29. Urban Popular Culture • With economic growth came a middle- and lower-class urban population that desired entertainment on the stage and in literature. • The Neo-confuscous conservative shift was reflected on the arts, and there was a general turn against literature and stage plays that were deemed subversive. Books were routinely banned, and theaters shut down. • Despite this oppressive atmosphere, some creative work did gather attention, as with the poetry of Yuan Mei and Cao Xueqin’s novel Dream of the Red Chamber. • It was a massive sprawling novel that dramatized the life of an elite eighteenth-century family. The Confucian elite looked at this popular culture with disdain.
  • 30. India: Bridging the Hindu/Muslim Divide Bhakti • This Hindu movement broke with the elite ceremonies of Brahmanism and encouraged lower castes to engage in rituals, dances, songs, and prayers that would allow union with the divine. Appealing especially to women, its followers disregarded caste and engaged in social criticism of inequality. • Mirabai (1498–1547): A popular bhakti poet, this high-caste northern Indian woman rejected caste privilege and distinction as well as rituals. She refused sati (widow burning) on her husband’s death and took an untouchable shoemaker as a guru. Her poems focused on union with the divine in the form of Lord Krishna, a prominent Hindu deity.
  • 31. • Coming out of the Bahkti movement, Guru Nanak rejected Hindu ritual and Islamic law, claiming that “there is no Hindu; there is no Muslim; only God.” His monotheistic faith sought a union of all mankind and attracted peasants and merchants from both faiths, primarily in the Punjab. The Guru Granth (“teacher book”) became the sacred text, and the Golden Temple at Amritsar became Sikhism’s central site. Sikh men adopted distinct dress, including long hair and beards, a turban, and a short sword. Faced with attacks from the Mughal Empire, the Sikh community developed a militant sect (later prized by the British empire as an elite fighting A rare early 19th century mural painting from Gurdwara Baba Atal depicting Guru Nanak Guru Nanak (1469–1539) and Sikhism
  • 32. A New Way of Thinking: The Birth of Modern Science The Question of Origins: Why Europe?
  • 33. Autonomous Universities and Knowledge from other Cultures • Coming out of the Middle Ages, Europe was a fragmented but reinvigorated civilization with many independent institutions. Society was organized into collective groups with various rights and privileges, as well as forms of self-regulation. European universities were autonomous, providing self-governance and freedom from church and state authorities. • Between 1000 and 1500, Europeans gained access to Greek, Arab, and other texts that offered knowledge from outside cultures. After 1500, Europeans gained insight from various overseas adventures to the New World and the Indian Ocean basin. Knowledge from outside of Europe shook up the existing bodies of knowledge and led to a critical view of inherited certainties and traditions.
  • 34. In contrast to autonomous European universities… • …the schools of the Islamic world were madrassas (educational institutions) where the Quran might be viewed as the only source of wisdom and philosophy and natural science might be viewed with skepticism. • As mastery of the Confucian canon was crucial for entry into the Chinese state bureaucracy, education consisted of preparation for the rigid civil service examinations and the state did not allow independent institutions of higher learning.
  • 35. • The 3 Theories of the Solar System described by Ptolemy, Kepler and Copernicus led to questioning of the Church’s stance on the structure of the solar system. Three Theories Spark a Revolution
  • 36. • Ptolemy’s universe: The Catholic church supported the classic model of the universe that put the Earth at the center. This second- century idea came from the work of Ptolemy. • Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo: In the sixteenth century, a series of Europeans took detailed measurements of the movement of the stars and planets and proved that the Earth was not at the center of the universe but rather one of many planets that revolved around the sun. The Church was extremely hostile to such revisionism as it challenged papal authority and implied that the Earth and humanity were not so special. Galileo was forced to recant his ideas, and Giordano Bruno was burned at the stake in 1600. Science as Cultural Revolution Early Baroque artist’s rendition of Claudius Ptolemy.
  • 37. The Scientific Method • It was a new approach to science where there is a logical procedure for gathering and testing ideas. • Frances Bacon – was an English politician and writer who was interested in science and developed empiricism or the experimental method. • This method urged scientist to observe the world and gather information about it first, then draw conclusions from that information. Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount St Alban 1561- 1626
  • 38. Rene Descartes French mathematician who believed that everything should be doubted until proved by reason, mathematics and logic. He is famous for writing “I think, therefore I am.”
  • 39. • Observation of a problem or question. • Formation of hypothesis or educated guess. • Testing of hypothesis in an experiment or data collection. • Analyzing and interpretation of the data to reach a new conclusion. From both of these men, the Scientific method developed which include these basic steps: Renee Descartes
  • 40. • One of the greatest figures of the Scientific Revolution, The English scientist, Newton developed the concept of universal gravitation and showed that mathematics could describe all the forces of the natural world. His work promoted the idea that the world had certain governing laws and humans could discover these principles. The Newtonian universe was knowable and provable using mathematics. • His ideas were published in 1687’s Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy which described the universe like a giant clock. Its parts all worked together perfectly in ways that could be expressed mathematically. Moreover, Newton believed that God was the creator of this orderly universe and was the clock master who set everything in motion. Sir Isaac Newton
  • 41. Zacharias Janssen (Dutch eyeglass maker) – 1590 – invented the first microscope. Anton van Leeuwenhoek (Dutch drapery merchant) – 1670’s – used microscope to observe bacteria swimming in tooth scrapings. Evangelista Torricelli (student of Galileo) – 1643 developed the first mercury barometer which was used to measure atmospheric pressure and predicting weather.  Gabriel Fahrenheit (Dutch physicist) – 1714 made the first thermometer to use mercury in glass and showed water freezing at 32 degrees. Anders Celsius (Swedish astronomer) – 1742 created another scale for the mercury thermometer which showed water freezing at 0 degrees. Andreas Vesalius (Flemish physician) – 1543 dissected human corpses and published his observations in On the Fabric of the Human Body which was filled with illustrations of human organs, bones and muscle. William Harvey (English doctor) – 1628 published On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals which showed that the heart acted as a pump to circulate blood throughout the body. Edward Jenner (English physician) – 1700’s used cowpox to produce the world’s first vaccination that was used to inoculate humans for smallpox. Robert Boyle – 1661 – published The Sceptical Chymist which proposed that matter was made up of smaller primary [particles that joined together in different ways. He also introduced Boyle’s law which explained how the volume, temperature and pressure of gas The Scientific Revolution saw the rise of many inventions and firsts.
  • 42. Accommodating faith and tradition with science • Despite a few exceptions, traditional gender barriers to educating European women ensured that men dominated the Scientific Revolution. • While the church did not like to see its authority undermined, many scientists such as Newton, were faithful Christians who saw the hand of God behind the making of the knowable universe. Importantly, none of the early scientists rejected Christianity or espoused atheism.
  • 43. • Enlightenment thinkers and writers set the stage for revolution by their encouragement of people to judge for themselves what was right or wrong in society and to rely on human reason to solve social problems. • Enlightenment figures saw the world as understandable and perfectible once humans figured out the rules that governed society, economics, and morality. With education and embracing reason, people could become “enlightened.” Science and Enlightenment
  • 44. • Voltaire was the pen name of Francois Marie Arouet who published more than 70 pieces of work in which he would often use satire against his opponents. He believed in tolerance, reason and freedom of thought, expression and religious belief. He fought against prejudice and superstition. • The Baron de Montesquieu was a French aristocrat, writer and lawyer who devoted himself to the study of political liberty. He advocated the separation of powers in government. He also believed that in order to keep any individual or group from gaining complete control of the government, a system of checks and balances must be established. Enlightenment thinkers
  • 45. • Born poor and worked as an engraver, music teacher, tutor and secretary before moving to Paris and winning fame as a writer of essays. Rousseau was deeply committed to individual freedom. He viewed government as an agreement among free individuals to create a society guided by the “general will.” Unlike other Enlightenment thinkers, he believed that civilization corrupted people’s natural goodness and destroyed freedom and equality. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  • 46. • Cesare Bonesana Beccaria was an Italian philosophe who focused on criminal justice. He believed that laws existed to preserve social order and he advocated a criminal justice system based on fairness and reason. He argued that a person accused of a crime should receive a speedy trial. He also worked to abolish torture. • Thomas Hobbes was an English thinker who wrote Leviathan in 1651. Hobbes’s view, all humans were naturally selfish and wicked and would act in their own self-interest. It is because of this selfishness that he believed that people needed a social contract (or government) to keep the order. He believed that the best form of government would be an absolute monarchy that could impose order and demand obedience. • John Locke was an English philosopher who wrote Two Treatises on Government which served to justify the overthrow of James II and the Glorious Revolution. Locke believed that people were reasonable beings with the natural ability to govern themselves. He believed that people could learn from their experiences and improve themselves. Moreover, Locke believed that all people were born free and equal, endowed with 3 natural rights: life, liberty and property. He believed that government’s responsibility was to protect these rights for its
  • 47. Mary Wollstonecraft Self-taught and ran a school with her sisters before joining a London publisher and writing. She believed that women, like men, need education to become virtuous and useful. She argued for women’s rights to become educated and to participate in politics. Her essay called a Vindication of the Rights of Woman was written in 1792 and disagreed with Rousseau’s assertion that women’s education should be secondary to men’s. Despite various progressive ideas about social equality and a common rejection of aristocratic privilege, men dominated the Enlightenment, and the movement took a dim view of education for women. That said, there were women who played key roles in hosting Parisian salons, a few who published in the Encyclopedie, and intellectuals such as Mary Wollstonecraft who criticized the patriarchal and misogynistic ideas of Rousseau and others.
  • 48. Deism, Pantheism, and religious revivalism… • Deism, the belief in a god that created the world and then left it up to the world to run its course, was a common spiritual idea of the Enlightenment. Deism was not atheism but it specifically rejected the idea a god that intervened in human affairs and questioned the need for a institutionalized religion. • Pantheism, which viewed God or gods as being one with nature, had even less use of rituals, sacred texts, and the clergy. Partially in reaction to a perceived godlessness in the Enlightenment, a Protestant religious awakening spread throughout northwest Europe and North America in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. • Romanticism also embodied a reaction to science as being cold and without feeling and deeper spiritual truths.
  • 49. European Science beyond the West • There was a diffusion of technology but not scientific thinking. An example of this was the telescope which proved to be a useful tool in China, Mughal India, and the Ottoman Empire, but it failed to become a “discovery machine” outside of Europe. As China, India, Japan, and the Ottoman Empire had strong states and cultural systems, there was relatively little interest in adopting foreign ways of thinking. Johannes Hevelius, German astronomer livining in Poland, constructed long telescopes which were used to observe sunspots, the surface of the moon and discover several comets.
  • 50. China & Japan China Japan • In Japan, only the Dutch could visit the islands and they were limited to Nagasaki. Those Japanese scholars who did have contact with the Dutch learned from various European texts on medicine, astronomy, and geography. • Chinese scholars found European astronomy and mapmaking useful. The kaozheng movement drew much knowledge of the natural world and mathematics from contact with Europeans. The Jesuits lost much face in China after 1760 when it was discovered that they had hid the Copernican model of the universe out of loyalty to church Johann Adam Schall,von Bell was a German Jesuit astronomer active in China
  • 51. The Ottoman Empire While the revelations of the Copernican solar system did not disturb the rich tradition of Muslim astronomy, many works of western scholars were not translated. While practical knowledge was welcome, there were various traditions, superstitions, and cultural prejudices that blocked the widespread acceptance of western science. The Observatory in Constantinople would be closed and later destroyed through bombardment by order of the sultan in 1580.