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The Scientific Revolution. A New Way of Thinking. Beginning in the 1500's, scholars began to challenge the ideas of ancient thinkers and the churchScientific Revolution- A new way of thinking about the natural world based on careful observation and the questioning of accepted beliefsRejection of beliefs of ancient Greece and Medieval scholarsFoundation of modern science.
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1. The Enlightenment
2. The Scientific Revolution
3. A New Way of Thinking Beginning in the 1500s, scholars began to challenge the ideas of ancient thinkers and the church
Scientific Revolution- A new way of thinking about the natural world based on careful observation and the questioning of accepted beliefs
Rejection of beliefs of ancient Greece and Medieval scholars
Foundation of modern science
4. Causes of the Scientific Revolution The Age of Exploration
Discovery of new lands meant there might be other unknown discoveries to be made
Research in astronomy and mathematics were fueled by the need for better navigational methods
The invention of the printing press helped spread challenging ideas among European thinkers
5. The Medieval (Geocentric) View of the Universe
6. Copernican Heliocentric Universe
7. Galileos Discoveries Galileo Galilei Italian scientist and astronomer
Stated that the moon and an uneven, rough surface
Galileos ideas challenged Aristotles view that the moon and the stars were made of perfect, pure substances
8. Galileo on Trial
9. The Scientific Method A logical procedure for gathering and testing ideas
Steps:
A problem or question arises from an observation
Scientists form a hypothesis, or unproved assumption
A hypothesis is then tested in an experiment on the basis of data
Scientists analyze and interpret data to reach a conclusion that either confirms or disproves the hypothesis
10. Important Thinkers of the Scientific Revolution
11. Newtons Principia Mathematica
12. Medicine and the Human Body
13. Expansion of Scientific Academies
14. The Enlightenment
15. A New Way of Thinking The Enlightenment A new intellectual movement that stressed reason and thought and the power of individuals to solve problems
Reached its height in France in the mid-1700s
Philosophes Social critics who believed that people could apply reason to all aspects of life
16. A New Way of Thinking Five concepts formed the core beliefs of Enlightenment thinkers:
Reason Truth could be discovered through reason or logical thinking
Nature What was natural was also good and reasonable
Happiness Rejected the medieval notion that people should find joy in the hereafter and urged people to seek well-being on earth
Progress- Society and humankind could improve
Liberty Called for the liberties that the English people had won in their Glorious Revolution and Bill of Rights
17. Centers of Enlightenment
18. French Salons
19. Diderots Encylopedie
20. Pages from Diderots Encyclopedie
21. Pages from Diderots Encyclopedie
22. Subscriptions to Diderot's Encyclopedie
23. Increases in Literacy
24. Enlightened Despots
25. Legacy of the Enlightenment Belief in progress.
A more secular outlook.
During the Enlightenment, people began to openly question religious beliefs and the teachings of the church.
Importance of the Individual.
The democratic revolutions of the late 18th century American, French, etc.