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Revolutions 5/2/11 http://mrmilewski.com OBJECTIVE: Examine Making Waves . I. Administrative Stuff-Attendance II. The Day the Universe Changed – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Revolutions 5/2/11 http://mrmilewski.com


1
Revolutions 5/2/11http//mrmilewski.com
  • OBJECTIVE Examine Making Waves.
  • I. Administrative Stuff
  • -Attendance
  • II. The Day the Universe Changed
  • -questions on episode9 Making Waves
  • III. Homework due Tomorrow!
  • -Chapter17 Review
  • IV. Homework due Friday 5/6/11
  • -Chapter18 Sections 1,2,3
  • NOTICE Chapter17 Test Tomorrow!

2
Revolutions 5/3/11http//mrmilewski.com
  • OBJECTIVE Examine Philosophy in the Age of
    Reason.
  • I. Journal18 pt.A
  • -Read Chapter outline p.454
  • -What was the enlightenment?
  • II. Journal18 pt.B
  • -notes on the Enlightenment
  • III. Homework due Friday 5/6/11
  • 1.) Read Chapter18 section1 p.456-460
  • -Answer questions (1-7) p.460
  • 2.) Read Chapter18 section2 p. 461-465
  • -Answer questions (1-8) p.465
  • 3.) Read Chapter18 section3 p.466-469
  • -Answer questions (1-6) p.469
  • Pick 4 questions of your choice

3
The Enlightenment
  • A movement to shine the light of reason on
    traditional ideas about government and society.
  • Thinkers fought against superstition, ignorance,
    intolerance, and tyranny.
  • They promoted goals of social well-being, social
    justice, and worldly happiness.
  • They rejected divine-right to rule, social
    hierarchy, and a better life in heaven.

http//www.cccs.uq.edu.au/events/libertine/Images/
Wilkeslge72dpi-jpeg.jpg
4
How it started.
  • It grew out of the Scientific Revolution.
  • As human knowledge about the world grew, so did
    the belief that nothing was out of reach of the
    human mind.
  • Using the scientific method, reformers set out to
    combat the problems of society.

http//home.nc.rr.com/donaldwood/Newton.gif
5
Hobbes Locke
  • In the 1600s, English thinkers Thomas Hobbes
    John Locke lived through the English Civil War
    and concluded different things.
  • Hobbes said people were naturally cruel, greedy,
    and selfish.
  • If people were not controlled they would, fight,
    rob, oppress one another.
  • Life in the state of nature would be brutish
    short.

http//www.ps.ritsumei.ac.jp/shige2/index/img/hobb
es.jpg
6
Social Contract
  • Hobbes said in order to escape horrific life in
    the state of nature, humans enter into a social
    contract.
  • Social contract an agreement by which people
    give up the state of nature for an organized
    society.
  • He believed that ONLY a strong govt could ensure
    an orderly society.
  • He supported the belief in absolute monarchy.

http//www.scielosp.org/img/revistas/bwho/v84n11/a
21capa.jpg
7
Natural Rights
  • John Locke was more optimistic about humans.
  • He believed that people were basically
    reasonable moral.
  • He believed that people had natural rights,
    life, liberty, property.
  • He argued that people had formed governments to
    protect their natural rights that the best
    govt was limited in power and accepted by all.
  • He said that if a govt fails to protect peoples
    natural rights, the people had the right the
    duty to over throw that govt.

http//history2.professorpage.info/John20Locke20
and20Thomas20Hobbes_files/image003.jpg
8
Montesquieu
  • Baron de Montesquieu, a French guy, studied the
    governments of Europe.
  • He concluded that the powers of government should
    be divided into 3 separate equal branches.
  • In 1748, he published The Spirit of the Laws in
    which he said The best way to protect liberty
    is to separate power.

http//www.geocities.com/rationalargumentator/Mont
esquieu.jpg
9
Voltaire
  • Freedom of Speech I do not agree with a word
    you say, but I will defend your right to say it
    until my death.

http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f3
/Voltaire.jpg
10
Rousseau
  • 1762, The Social Contract.
  • He believed that people were basically good, but
    are corrupted by society.
  • In the perfect world people would make the laws
    would also follow them.
  • The general will will be directed towards the
    common good of the people.
  • He put the good of society first and the
    individual second.

http//cepa.newschool.edu/het/profiles/image/Rouss
eau.gif
11
Revolutions 5/4/11http//mrmilewski.com
  • OBJECTIVE Demonstrate Mastery of Chapter17.
  • I. Chapter17 Test
  • II. Homework due Friday 5/6/11
  • 1.) Read Chapter18 section1 p.456-460
  • -Answer questions (1-7) p.460
  • 2.) Read Chapter18 section2 p. 461-465
  • -Answer questions (1-8) p.465
  • 3.) Read Chapter18 section3 p.466-469
  • -Answer questions (1-6) p.469
  • Pick 4 questions of your choice

12
Revolutions 5/5/11 http//mrmilewski.com
  • OBJECTIVE Examine the concepts related to taxes.
  • I. Chapter18 Guided Readings
  • Complete the following activities due today!
  • -Chapter18 section1 Guided Reading
  • -Chapter18 section2 Guided Reading
  • -Chapter18 section3 Guided Reading
  • -Chapter18 section4 Guided Reading
  • II. Chapter18 Homework
  • -Complete homework for Chapter18
  • III. Homework due Thursday 5/12/11
  • 1.) Read Chapter18 section4 p.470-473
  • -Answer questions (1-6) p.473
  • 2.) Chapter18 Review
  • Pick 4 questions of your choice
  • NOTICE Chapter18 Test Thursday!

13
Revolutions 5/6/11http//mrmilewski.com
  • OBJECTIVE Examine how European rulers reacted
    to the ideas of the Enlightenment.
  • I. Journal19 pt.A
  • -Examine the picture on p.461
  • -Answer the caption question on p.461
  • II. Journal19 pt.B
  • -notes on the salon Britain in the 1700s
  • III. Homework Due Wednesday 5/11/11
  • 1.) Read Chapter18 section4 p.470-473
  • -Answer questions (1-7) p.473
  • 2.) Chapter18 Review
  • Pick 4 questions of your choice
  • NOTICE Chapter18 Test Wednesday!

14
Adam Smith
  • He is the father of Modern Economics
  • He wrote the Wealth of Nations in 1776
  • In it he said that governments need to stay out
    of the economy as much as possible. laissez-faire

15
The Invisible Hand
  • People and business operate in their own
    self-interest.
  • Competition acts like an invisible hand which
    will allocate resources to ONLY their most
    productive uses.

16
Salons
  • Salons informal social gatherings where
    writers, artists, philosophers, and others
    exchanged ideas.
  • In the 1700s middle class women started holding
    salons in their homes were the middle class could
    mingle with the nobility and discuss ideas.

http//www.burgmueller.com/SalonsPleyel.JPG
17
Enlightened Despots
  • Frederick the Great
  • Catherine the Great
  • Joseph II

18
The Limeys
  • The British believed in mercantilism
  • Mercantilism a policy by which nations sought
    to export more than it imported to increase their
    supply of gold silver.
  • At the same time the British out paced the
    Spanish in wealth empire and the Dutch in terms
    of trading power they built a constitutional
    monarchy.

http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thum
b/2/29/Lorrain.seaport.jpg/300px-Lorrain.seaport.j
pg
19
The United Kingdom
  • The 1707 Act of Union between England and
    Scotland saw the nations' individual Parliaments
    replaced by the new Parliament of Great Britain.
  • After the 1800 Act of Union with Ireland, the
    Dublin Parliament was abolished and Irish MPs and
    Lords were represented in the Westminster
    Parliament.

20
Whigs Tories
  • The growth of political parties occurred in the
    late 1600s.
  • Tories conservative landed aristocrats who
    sought to preserve older traditions supported
    royal authority the Anglican Church.
  • Whigs liberals they supported urban business
    interests, religious toleration for protestants,
    and supported Parliament over the crown.
  • The Whigs controlled Parliament for most of the
    1700s.

http//www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/PRtooke1.JPG
21
Cabinet System
  • In 1714, the new King of England wasnt English,
    but German.
  • To help King George I, who spoke no English, he
    relied on the leaders of Parliament to help him
    run the country.
  • His son, who was also German born also used this
    system, King George II.
  • This cabinet system gained official status.
  • The head of the Cabinet is the Prime Minister.

http//content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en-comm
ons/thumb/a/a4/262px-KING_GEORGE_II.jpg
22
Parliamentary System
http//www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/process/ho
use/guide/images/system-e.jpg
23
Parliamentary System
  • By the 14th century two distinct Houses, the
    Commons and the Lords, had developed.
  • The Commons involved representatives from
    counties, towns and cities,
  • The Lords consisted of members of the nobility
    and clergy.

24
King George III
  • In 1760, King George III begins his 60 year
    reign.
  • He was born in England, unlike dad and grandpa.
  • He spoke English loved Britain.
  • He was eager to recover powers lost by the crown
    and end Whig domination, chose his own ministers,
    and dissolve the cabinet system.
  • Cabinet rule was restored in 1788 following the
    loss of the American colonies.

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