Secularization of Learning - AP European History

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Question

Secularism, which emerged during the Renaissance period, is the belief that __________.

Answer

Secularism emerged as a political and social philosophy in the Renaissance period of European history and grew in influence during the Enlightenment and Industrial eras. It advocates primarily for the separation of the political and the religious (for example, no laws based on religious codes, etc.). It also contends that life on Earth is "more important" than the afterlife and that all religious beliefs should be tolerated, although these tenets of secularism were added by degrees as the centuries went by.

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Question

This philosophy was centered around the study of classical writings and emphasized the inherent potential of human-beings.

Answer

Humanism arose in the early part of the Renaissance period. It was based on the study of classical writings, and the early humanists revered the Greek philosophers like Aristotle and Plato. Humanism emphasized the inherent ability of people to reason, to think critically, and to examine phenomena via evidence.

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Question

Descent of Man was written by __________ and attempts to __________.

Answer

Darwin’s Descent of Man was published in 1871 and is Darwin’s second book on his theory of evolution and natural selection. It follows his original work, published a decade earlier, called On the Origin of Species. The Descent of Man focused on applying the theory of evolution to the development of the human species.

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Question

The British philosopher Jeremy Bentham's views on education differed widely from those of his contemporaries in that he believed __________.

Answer

Jeremy Bentham was a radical thinker on a number of levels, arguing that decisions should be made based on effecting the most good for the largest number of people. In education, Bentham was perhaps the most radical, but also the most influential. Bentham argued that the then contemporary practice of making education only available to Anglicans who could afford Oxford and Cambridge was wrong. Bentham's ideas were central to the founding of University College London in 1826, which sought to admit students based wholly on merit rather than religion and wealth.

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Question

This French philosopher is sometimes referred to as the founder of modern Western philosophy due to his development of the methodic doubt, a systematic process of doubting the veracity of one's own beliefs.

Answer

Another name for methodic doubt is Cartesian doubt. Rene Descartes was among the most influential philosophers of the 17th century, as evidenced by the use of a variation on his name as a, not uncommon, adjective.

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Question

During the Renaissance, the emphasis of many writers, particularly those who ascribed to humanism, shifted from glorification of the divine to __________.

Answer

The primary emphasis of most writers of the Renaissance, particularly those who ascribed to humanism, was to consider and celebrate the human experience. Humanist writers celebrated the possibility of all people to better their world and focused much less on religious considerations then had their counterparts in the Medieval Era. This is not to say that Renaissance humanists were all atheists; many were deeply religious. They simply sought to turn their intellectual pursuits toward more open and nuanced treatments of human endeavor and experience.

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Question

The skepticism of the Scientific Revolution employed __________ to revolutionize Europeans' understanding of the natural world.

Answer

Francis Bacon was an English scientist who is often credited with coming up with what is now known as "the scientific method." Bacon believed that scientific inquiry was too often conducted with the incorrect spirit, or with the wrong intentions. He advocated for inductive reasoning that prioritized observation and the collection of data above the sporadic and unsupported development of theories based on tradition that had previously dominated scientific inquiry. The general principle of inductive reasoning is to build one's larger theories about phenomena on an accumulated base of smaller, quantifiable observations.

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Question

Prior to the Humanist movement, the vast majority of scholarly writing was undertaken by __________.

Answer

Throughout the Medieval period of European history, most scholarly pursuits, including writing, were almost exclusively the prerogative of monks and other clergymen. The vast majority of Europeans had neither the education nor the free time to undertake intellectual pursuits, and the noblemen and kings were often more interested in making war and enjoying life. This left the role of scholar occupied almost exclusively by members of the church. Their writing generally reflected their absolute faith in the divine and their belief that the earthly life was merely a preparation for the afterlife.

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Question

The work of this scientist proved that laws of nature were predictable and consistent, and that direct divine involvement was not necessary to explain all the workings of the universe.

Answer

A famous quotation, usually attributed to Alexander Pope about the importance of the work of Isaac Newton, had direct bearing on this question: “Nature, and nature’s laws, lay bathed in night. God said ‘Let Newton be!' And all was light.” Isaac Newton’s most famous contribution to science was to prove that gravity was the primary driving force behind the movement of planets and of objects on Earth. His research proved that the universe could be explained independently of divine will, ushering in a new era of scientific inquiry and skepticism.

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Question

The idea that Christianity represented a “slave morality” and that true meaning and understanding could only be achieved through scientific research is best attributed to __________.

Answer

Many of these writers were critical of Christianity in one form or another, but only Nietzsche famously suggested that religion was abhorrent and a distraction from the pursuit of individual truth or meaning. Nietzsche's emphasis on individual subjecthood directly contrasted religious notions of sacrifice, humility, and hubris. Nietzsche’s ideas were widely influential encouraging the growth of nihilism and existentialism and challenging religion's claim as the correct path to truth and meaning.

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Question

When Newton claimed that he “stood on the shoulders of giants,” he was most likely referring to __________.

Answer

Like all great scientists, Isaac Newton’s work is simultaneously brilliantly original and deeply reliant on the tradition of scientific inquiry and discovery in which he was participating. When Newton developed his laws of motion and gravity, he was building, specifically, on the work of Galileo and Kepler (and to a lesser degree Copernicus) on the movement of planets and the Earth’s place in the universe.

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Question

The Scottish philosopher David Hume’s most widely regarded work, A Treatise of Human Nature, attempts to __________.

Answer

David Hume was a Scottish philosopher in the eighteenth century. He is widely considered to be one of the most influential philosophers in British history and one of the pioneers of empiricism and skepticism in Britain. His most famous work A Treatise of Human Nature attempts to empirically examine the psychological basis of human behavior. Hume firmly believed that people could not have innate ideas, but could only have an understanding based on the things they had directly experienced.

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Question

__________ was the first literary movement in Europe concerned with primarily secular issues.

Answer

Humanism emerged in the thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth centuries in the Italian city-states. The emergence of Humanism coincides with the beginning of the Renaissance in Europe. Humanism was an artistic and intellectual movement, and also a literary movement; prominent examples of humanist literary writing include Erasmus and Petrarch. Humanist literary writing represented a shift in the focus of many writers and thinkers from the divine to the temporal, as in Petrarch's sonnets, which focus entirely on earthly love and unrequited desire.

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Question

Secularism, which emerged during the Renaissance period, is the belief that __________.

Answer

Secularism emerged as a political and social philosophy in the Renaissance period of European history and grew in influence during the Enlightenment and Industrial eras. It advocates primarily for the separation of the political and the religious (for example, no laws based on religious codes, etc.). It also contends that life on Earth is "more important" than the afterlife and that all religious beliefs should be tolerated, although these tenets of secularism were added by degrees as the centuries went by.

Compare your answer with the correct one above

Question

This philosophy was centered around the study of classical writings and emphasized the inherent potential of human-beings.

Answer

Humanism arose in the early part of the Renaissance period. It was based on the study of classical writings, and the early humanists revered the Greek philosophers like Aristotle and Plato. Humanism emphasized the inherent ability of people to reason, to think critically, and to examine phenomena via evidence.

Compare your answer with the correct one above

Question

Descent of Man was written by __________ and attempts to __________.

Answer

Darwin’s Descent of Man was published in 1871 and is Darwin’s second book on his theory of evolution and natural selection. It follows his original work, published a decade earlier, called On the Origin of Species. The Descent of Man focused on applying the theory of evolution to the development of the human species.

Compare your answer with the correct one above

Question

The British philosopher Jeremy Bentham's views on education differed widely from those of his contemporaries in that he believed __________.

Answer

Jeremy Bentham was a radical thinker on a number of levels, arguing that decisions should be made based on effecting the most good for the largest number of people. In education, Bentham was perhaps the most radical, but also the most influential. Bentham argued that the then contemporary practice of making education only available to Anglicans who could afford Oxford and Cambridge was wrong. Bentham's ideas were central to the founding of University College London in 1826, which sought to admit students based wholly on merit rather than religion and wealth.

Compare your answer with the correct one above

Question

This French philosopher is sometimes referred to as the founder of modern Western philosophy due to his development of the methodic doubt, a systematic process of doubting the veracity of one's own beliefs.

Answer

Another name for methodic doubt is Cartesian doubt. Rene Descartes was among the most influential philosophers of the 17th century, as evidenced by the use of a variation on his name as a, not uncommon, adjective.

Compare your answer with the correct one above

Question

During the Renaissance, the emphasis of many writers, particularly those who ascribed to humanism, shifted from glorification of the divine to __________.

Answer

The primary emphasis of most writers of the Renaissance, particularly those who ascribed to humanism, was to consider and celebrate the human experience. Humanist writers celebrated the possibility of all people to better their world and focused much less on religious considerations then had their counterparts in the Medieval Era. This is not to say that Renaissance humanists were all atheists; many were deeply religious. They simply sought to turn their intellectual pursuits toward more open and nuanced treatments of human endeavor and experience.

Compare your answer with the correct one above

Question

The skepticism of the Scientific Revolution employed __________ to revolutionize Europeans' understanding of the natural world.

Answer

Francis Bacon was an English scientist who is often credited with coming up with what is now known as "the scientific method." Bacon believed that scientific inquiry was too often conducted with the incorrect spirit, or with the wrong intentions. He advocated for inductive reasoning that prioritized observation and the collection of data above the sporadic and unsupported development of theories based on tradition that had previously dominated scientific inquiry. The general principle of inductive reasoning is to build one's larger theories about phenomena on an accumulated base of smaller, quantifiable observations.

Compare your answer with the correct one above

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