The Enlightenment Research Paper

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The Enlightenment The Enlightenment was a time in which many ideas were created, some of which included concerns of God, reason, nature, and humanity. It was also a time where they developed art, philosophy, and politics which was a significant gain worldwide. Central to Enlightenment thought were the use and celebration of reason, the power by which humans understand the universe and improve their own condition. The goals of rational humanity were considered to be knowledge, freedom, and happiness (Duignan). The process of the enlightenment was for humans to become progressively self-directed in their thought and action and to awaken their intellectual powers of becoming more fulfilled in their human existence. The Enlightenment was also …show more content…

One of the influential founding characters of the Enlightenment was Pierre Bayle who was a French Protestant that was forced to work and live in diplomatically liberal and forbearing Holland in order to avoid prison and censorship. In 1697, Bayle created a bizarre yet delightful book that exerted a tremendous influence on the age called “Bayle’s Historical and Critical Dictionary.” This book included a biographical dictionary, with long studious entries on vague figures in the history of culture which was broken up by long vague footnotes, which are in turn interrupted by further footnotes. The people was not use to such rare and bizarre works that exerted such essential and redemptive influence on their culture. This book was not only bizarre but it questioned religious scientific, and metaphysical doctrines. Everyone loved Bayle’s extensiveness and his trend to monitor arguments without pre-arranging their assumptions although this made it difficult to really understand his thought process. The Enlightenment admired his attitude of inquiry, they felt as if it made him more distinctive then other figures, but it also drew similarities with Descartes. Bayle was fearless and presumptuous in inquiring all manners of the doctrine. This epistemological attitude, as manifest in distrust of authority and reliance on one's own capacity to judge, expresses the Enlightenment valuing of individualism …show more content…

In the eighteenth century many of the human and social sciences have their roots in the framework of the Enlightenment in which some examples included history, aesthetics, anthropology, economics, psychology, and sociology. The new development of the new sciences was supported by the expansion of new scientific tools which was a kind of thinking that gain new respect and application in the

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