The Age of Enlightenment

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Throughout the course of history there has been many influential people, events and eras that greatly contributed to the society we know of today. Many of which contributed to the Cultural, Industrial or Territorial disputes that set our boundaries. Unlike in the preceding years of war throughout the world that set these boundaries, the Age of Enlightenment brought a whole new perspective to the way the world thought, and how they viewed their individual societies, the world, and their governments. The Age of Enlightenment, named because of the many thinkers that occurred during the era and the ideals spread across, paved the way to the accomplishments that were achieved in the forthcoming years. In this era people began to think for themselves and stopped relying on their rulers to make the decisions necessary to aid their countries; people began to wonder why they had no say in their government (individualism), they began to understand that they themselves needed to be treated fairly amongst each other (humanism), and they also began to believe in divine beings that they began to worship, which lead to the concept of Protestantism and religious tolerance.

Though the Age of Enlightenment had a major impact on the development of rational thought and many scientific and religious ideals, without the works of two major philosophers, Isaac Newton and John Locke, the Enlightenment period would have had a hard time taking off. More specifically Isaac Newton’s “Principa Mathematica” and John Locke’s “Essay Concerning human Understanding” Enriched the Enlightenment period with the necessary Philosophical, Mathematical and Scientific understandings that it needed to make the major accomplishments that the period accomplished, and ar...

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...s and societies, the church had to begin to see the world in a new light and begin to practice religious tolerance. Locke and Voltaire were firm advocates in Religious tolerance, Voltaire went as far as to say “the Jew, the Mahometan, and the Christian transact together, as though they all professed the same religion, and give the name of infidel to none but bankrupts (Kramnick)” when he viewed the peace at the Royal Exchange in London. With this image in mind for his own country, Thomas Jefferson himself quoted “The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods, or no God. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg” (Kramnick). This showed that Religious tolerance was beginning to spread because of its idealists and the profound knowledge that they shared.

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