The Enlightenment Essay, Research Paper
The Age of Enlightenment saw many great changes in Western Europe. It was an age of reason and philosophes. During this age, changes the likes of which had not been seen since ancient times took place. Such change affected evert pore of Western European society. Many might argue that the Enlightenment really did not bring any real change, however, there exists and overwhelming amount of facts which prove, without question, that the spirit of the Enlightenment was one of change?specifically change which went against the previous teachings of the Catholic Church. Such change is apparent in the ideas, questions, and philosophies of the time, in the study of science, and throughout the monarchial system.
Previously, the Catholic Church had professed to the entire medieval world that faith in God was absolute. Indeed, the medieval world was truly an age of faith. As such, ideas that went against the teachings of God were ignored and their preachers subsequently murdered. After the Crusades brought back old Aristotelian learning from the middle east, all this changed. Advances in Geography were made with the introduction of Ptolemaic Geography. More importantly than the rediscovery of ancient geography was the beginning of skepticism in Western Europe. No longer would the Church?s word be taken on faith. The idea that the physical world could be understood through the use of empiricism?analytical thought?was also introduced. Ren? Descartes even began to doubt his own existence until coming to the conclusion: ?I think, therefore, I am.? In this age we see the rise of deism. No longer is a priest?s cryptic and dogmatic preachings the sole explanation for weather, personal failure, and scientific phenomena such as electricity. With deism, religion now merely server a spiritual purpose and science is free to begin exploring the world.
The Catholic Church, when confronted with the reintroduction of the Ptolemaic Universe proclaimed that it was in accordance with the Bible as it put a ?scientific? twist to the Church?s main beliefs: that God had created the Universe for man and man alone and that, as such, the Earth was at the centre of the Universe. During the Pre-Enlightenment and Enlightenment periods, man began to question that model of the Universe. Copernicus? revolutionary model of the Universe placed the Sun at the centre of the Universe. Though Copernicus? ideas were only allowed to b e published as he was on his deathbed, the Church grudgingly agreed to Copernicus? model of the Universe as it still placed man?s solar system in the centre of the Universe. Later, Tycho Brahe and Johannes Kepler adjusted Copernicus? model so that it fit both observation and mathematics. The final Enlightened blow to the Catholic Church came when Isaac Newton proposed?and subsequently proved?that not only is out planet and the solar system not at the centre of the Universe, but that the Universe itself is a machine: it can be governed only be natural and physical laws. This prese
Aside from the changes in science, the spirit of Enlightenment thought also separated the Church from the state. Previously, the monarchy ruled by the same right that the myth of King Arthur states that he ruled by. Kings throughout the Middle Ages and Renaissance ruled by divine right. Admittedly, none did anything as dramatic as lift a holy sword out of a stone, however, they all ruled in the same manner: with absolute control. All this, however, changed with the coming of Enlightenment thought. The idea of a Social Contract first appeared in Western Europe when the British Parliament, tired of religious wars and the expenses that were synonymous with them, replaced King James II who supported the Catholic Church, and replaced him with William of Orange. Essentially, Parliament was voting out one King and replacing him with a new one. This was known as the Glorious Revolution and it was, indeed, glorious. The Glorious Revolution gave John Locke the idea of a Social Contract. A Social Contract was an unwritten law which stated that monarchs are put in place by the people, for the people and that they can be subsequently removed by the people as well. John Locke also brought up the idea of equal rights for all. This was known as the ?Clean Slate Theory.? It stated that man and his mind are shaped by his own experiences and when born is a clean slate. Thus, as no one is unequal at birth, everyone is entitled to ?life, liberty, and property.? Any monarch which tried to take away such from a society would be violating the Social Contract and could be subsequently removed. This was known as Enlightened Absolutism. It was a great change from what had come before as no longer was a monarch appointed by God, but by the people for how can a monarch be removed if he was a representative of God? With the separation of God and the state, the idea that the monarch also had to obey all of the laws of the land were also introduced. Such was a great change from the ways of the past and embodied the spirit of the Enlightenment.
As can be seen from it effects on the philosophies of the time, the idea of science, and the monarchial system of Absolutism, the spirit of the Enlightenment was one of change and a rebellion against authority. This change was grand, indeed, for they have lasted through until the Modern Age and the 21st Century. Today?s system of government is simply an evolution of the revolution which took place during the Enlightenment. Perhaps, without the spirit of change brought on by the Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment, we would not have many of the advantages that man, today, enjoys.
32a