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The Enlightenment in Europe

The Enlightenment in Europe. Chapter 22, Section 2. Thomas Hobbes. All humans were naturally selfish and wicked, therefore governments must keep order. People should hand over their rights to a strong ruler. This was what Hobbes called a social contract .

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The Enlightenment in Europe

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  1. The Enlightenment in Europe Chapter 22, Section 2

  2. Thomas Hobbes • All humans were naturally selfish and wicked, therefore governments must keep order. • People should hand over their rights to a strong ruler. This was what Hobbes called a social contract. • Strong ruler should have total power (an absolute monarchy). • This powerful government with awesome power is what he called a leviathan (sea monster) therefore he titled his book Leviathan (1651).

  3. John Locke • People were reasonable (though still selfish) and had the natural rights to life, liberty, and property. • Purpose of government is to protect these natural rights. • Government power comes from the consent of the people.

  4. Voltaire • Wrote more than 70 books of political essays, philosophy, and drama. • Used satire against his enemies, especially the clergy. • Beliefs: • Tolerance • Reason • Freedom of religious belief • Freedom of speech • “I do not agree with a word you say but will defend to the death your right to say it.”

  5. Montesqieu • Believed Britain was the best-governed and most politically balanced country of his own day. • Proposed the “separation of powers” between executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government. • Proposed “checks and balances.”

  6. Jean-Jacques Rousseau • Passionately committed to individual freedom. • Believed man was born free and good but easily corrupted. • Believed the only good government was the “general will” or direct democracy.

  7. Cesare Bonesana Beccaria • Beliefs • Laws existed to preserve social order, not avenge crime. • Accused should receive speedy trials. • Torture should never be used. • Degree of punishment should match seriousness of crime. • Capital punishment (death penalty) should be abolished.

  8. Mary Wollstonecraft • Women should be equally educated along with men. • Women should enter professions traditionally dominated by men like medicine and politics. • Wrote A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

  9. Mary Shelley • Daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft. • Mistress and later wife of poet Percy Bysshe Shelley. • Author of Frankenstein in the summer of 1816, Later published in 1818.

  10. Frivolous But Interesting Information

  11. Climate and the writing of Frankenstein (continued) • The Shelley’s (Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin calling herself Mary Shelley though she is not yet married to Percy) spend the summer with Lord Byron at his villa by Lake Geneva in Switzerland. • The weather being too cold to carry out normal summer activities, the group reside indoors staying up all night in intellectual discussions. They often sit around the fire reading German ghost stories. Illustration from the 1831 edition.

  12. Climate and the writing of Frankenstein (continued) • Lord Byron suggests that to entertain themselves indoors each of them write his or her own supernatural tale. • During this time Mary Godwin conceived of the idea for Frankenstein. • Therefore, being shut in due to the weather caused by a volcanic winter brought about the occasion of the writing of this famous novel. Boris Karloff as the Monster in 1931.

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