ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Modern World History Videos 86 videos

Modern World History 3.11 Unions: the People Who Brought You Weekends
64 Views

Today we're tackling unions, a.k.a. the people who brought you weekends, a.k.a. the greatest people who have ever existed. We'd send them a thank y...

See All

Modern World History 2.5 The Enlightenment 332 Views


Share It!


Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

How many philosophers does it take to screw in a lightbulb? [Philosophers sitting down by a lamp and light bulb]

00:06

Well, we're going to go with zero--not only because there weren't any lightbulbs

00:10

during the Age of Enlightenment, save for the ones that popped up above

00:13

people's heads periodically, but because no philosopher worth his salt would be

00:17

caught dead doing something as mundane is changing a light bulb... you know, when

00:21

there was so much thinking to do. Okay yeah we're not the best at jokes. Sue us.

00:25

That's what seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in Western Europe were all [Statues of Rousseau and voltaire appear]

00:28

about: thinking, thinking, and then thinking some more. The Enlightenment got

00:32

it's thoughtful foundations from some gentlemen who lived during the 1600s. Sir

00:37

Francis Bacon is credited with the scientific method, though why he didn't study

00:41

his namesake, well, we'll never know. René Descartes is considered to be both the

00:45

father of modern philosophy and of analytical geometry. We bet those twins [Twins crying in a cot]

00:50

really kept him up at night. And while John Locke's writings serve as the

00:54

philosophical underpinning of America's Declaration of Independence, he's also

00:58

famous for promoting the idea that the mind is a tabula rasa, or blank slate, at

01:04

birth. It's also pretty rasa during any late afternoon class, or is it more like a [Boy sleeping in class]

01:08

tabula nap-a. The ideas of these philosophers and others like them were

01:12

taken up in the 18th century to support the belief that human society is always

01:15

chugging along and getting better. Progress didn't stop with the Romans and

01:19

the Greeks the way some people in the 1700s believed. After all, did the Greeks and

01:23

Romans have Nutella? We don't think so. But it wasn't just delightful [Boy with a plate of nutella outside Greek building]

01:27

hazelnut goodness that led folks in the 18th century to believe that each new

01:31

generation of humanity would make society better than it had before.

01:34

Education there helped as well. As men and women became more literate and less ignorant, [Woman reading a book]

01:38

they stopped believing in witches and worrying about the devil so much, much to

01:43

the concern of the devil's PR team. France was the HQ of the Age of

01:47

Enlightenment. Philosophers, or French intellectuals--you know, many of whom were

01:51

broke--spent their days talking about philosophy and literature. When the

01:55

government got edgy about all the critiquing these philosophers were doing

01:58

and tried to enact censorship laws, well the French just started speaking and [French philosophers in a meeting]

02:03

writing satirically and, well, never stopped. But the philosophers, or "philosophes,"

02:07

didn't just focus on using humor to ridicule those in charge. They also

02:12

talked about all the stuff that was wrong in society, much of which they

02:15

believed could be blamed on the terribleness of the class system. Well,

02:19

to philosophes who did a lot to transform all this smack-talking into [Statue of liberty appears]

02:22

ideas that underpin modern democracy were Montesquieu and Rousseau. Montesquieu, who

02:28

was a nobleman and a lawyer, articulated the theory that the power in a

02:31

government should be distributed between its different branches. He also talked a

02:35

lot about despots... Hey, everyone has their own weird hobby. Well, Rousseau [Despot appears in a field]

02:39

wrote novels, music, tracts on education, and "The Social Contract." The dude was

02:45

busy. Well, "The Social Contract" argued that if people would join together as

02:49

members of a civil society and submit themselves to the will of the whole, then

02:52

individuals would be free of the tyranny of others and would have a shot at

02:56

writing laws they could live with. In other words, go read the book: it's kind [The Social Contract book appears]

03:00

of a big deal. By the end of the Age of Enlightenment, enlightened people

03:03

everywhere believed that, hey, not only could they run this whole government

03:07

thing, but they had a right to govern themselves. Additionally, all the white

03:11

guys in power started to think that maybe they could see themselves being

03:14

equal to other white guys of different face or social classes... that's progress,

03:17

right? Finally, the Age of Enlightenment got people to buy into the concept that

03:21

a sound government, no matter what flavor that sound government came in, was the [Boy with multiple flavored ice cream]

03:25

surest guarantor of life, liberty, and the pursuit of Pokémon. We personally hope

03:30

the sound government comes in mint chocolate.

Related Videos

GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
39794 Views

GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government

Fake News
11938 Views

How do you tell fake news from real news?

Jane Eyre Summary
123033 Views

When you're about to marry the love of your life, not many things could stop you. However, finding out that your future hubby is keeping his crazy...

What is Shmoop?
91404 Views

Here at Shmoop, we work for kids, not just the bottom line. Founded by David Siminoff and his wife Ellen Siminoff, Shmoop was originally conceived...

ACT Math 4.5 Elementary Algebra
492 Views

ACT Math: Elementary Algebra Drill 4, Problem 5. What is the solution to the problem shown?