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Chapter19 Definition
Key Terms And People
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| geocentric theory | Scientific therory that has the earth as the center of the universe with the sun and stars revolving around it. |
| Scientific Revolution | A transformation in European thought in the 1500's and 1600's that called the scientific observation,experimentation, and the questioning of traditional opinions. |
| scientific method | A method of inquiry that promotes observing, measuring, explaning, and verifying as a way to gain scientific knowledge. |
| Rene Descartes | French philosopher, mathematician, and scientist. His belief that all things should be doubted until they could be proved by reason became underpinnings of scientific method |
| Nicolaus Copernicus | Polish astronomer, he proposed the heliocentric, or sun-centered, therory of the universe. |
| heliocentric theroy | Scientific therory that has the sun at the center of the universe with the earth rotating around the sun. |
| Galileo Galilei | Italian astronomer,mathematician, and physicist. He discovered the law of motion of falling objects and invented the first working telescope. His dicoveries put him in conflic with the Roman Catholic Church. |
| Isaac Newton | English mathematician and natural philosopher. He discovered the law of gravity as well as the las on the physics of objects. |
| Enlightenment | A time of optimism and possibility from the late 1600's to the late 1700's also called the Age of Reason. |
| salons | Gatherings in which intellectual and political ideas were exchanged during the Enlightenment. |
| social contract | An agreement between a people and their government, stating that people would give up some of there freedom and in return, their government would provide them with peace, security, and order. |
| John Locke | English philosopher and founder of British empiricism. He developed political and economic theories during the Enlightenment. He wrote " Two Treatises on Government" in which he said that people can rebel agaisnt goverments that dont protect their rights. |
| Jean-Jacques Rousseau | Swiss-French political philosopher he valued the social contract and adressed the nature of man in his work " On the Origin of Inequality. |
| Bardon de Montesquieu | French jurist and political philosopher. He explored democratic theories of goverments. He proposed a government divided into three branches and greatly influenced the United States Consitution. |
| philosophes | Philosophers of the Enlightenment. |
| Voltaire | French philosopher and author. He was a supporter of Deism, the idea that God was no longer involved with the universe after creating it. He also advocated a tolerant approach to religion. |
| enlightened despots | The absolute monarchs in the 18th century Europe who ruled according to the principles of the Enlightenment. |
| Stamp Act | A law passed by the British Parliament that raised tax money by requiring the American colonist to pay for an offical stamp whenever they bought paper items. |
| Thomas Jefferson | American statesman. Third president of the United States he was a member of two Continental Congress chairman of the committee to draft the Declaration of Independence, the Declaration's main author and one of it signers. |
| Bejamin Franklin | American statesman he was a philosopher,scientist,inventor,writer,publiser, first U.S. postmaster, and member of the comittee to draft the Declaration of Independence. |
| George Washington | First president of the United States. He commanded the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War and served as a representative to the Continental Congress. |
| Treaty of Paris | The agreement that offically ended the American Revolution and established British recognition of the independence of the United States. |
| James Madison | American statesman. He was a delegate to the Consitutional Convention and the fourth president of the United States. He is known as " Father of the Consitution." |
| federal system | A system of government in which power is divided between a central, or a federal, government and individual states. |