29
Revolution and Enlightenment Chapter 10 Section 1

Revolution and Enlightenment

  • Upload
    ardith

  • View
    39

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Revolution and Enlightenment. Chapter 10 Section 1. Causes of the Scientific Revolution. Aristotle called the shots The Renaissance Scholars learned Latin and Greek Few began to question the old ways. New Technology and Mathematics. New problems required observation and measurement - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Revolution and Enlightenment

Revolution and Enlightenment

Chapter 10 Section 1

Page 2: Revolution and Enlightenment

Aristotle called the shotsThe Renaissance

◦Scholars learned Latin and Greek◦Few began to question the old ways

Causes of the Scientific Revolution

Page 3: Revolution and Enlightenment

New problems required observation and measurement

New instruments Telescope and microscope

New advancements in Math◦Algebra◦Geometry

New Technology and Mathematics

Page 4: Revolution and Enlightenment

Scientific Breakthroughs

Page 5: Revolution and Enlightenment
Page 6: Revolution and Enlightenment
Page 7: Revolution and Enlightenment

Geocentric Theory◦Earth was unmoving object at center of universe

◦Moon, sun, and planets move around earth

◦Beyond planets lay sphere of fixed stars

◦Heaven far beyond sphere

The Ptolemaic System

Page 8: Revolution and Enlightenment

Aristotle in 4th century B.C.Ptolemy in 2nd century AD

How could you believe this?

Page 9: Revolution and Enlightenment

Christianity supported theory◦God created Man◦Man is most important creation◦Man is at the center◦To disagree is Blasphemy Blasphemy is bad

Page 10: Revolution and Enlightenment

Nicolaus Copernicus◦On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Bodies

◦Stars, earth, and planets revolve around the Sun

◦Contradicted religious views Feared ridicule and persecution

◦Didn’t publish findings until year before he died - 1543

Heliocentric Theory

Page 11: Revolution and Enlightenment
Page 12: Revolution and Enlightenment

Johannes Kepler◦Laws of Planetary Motion◦Kepler’s First Law Planetary orbits are elliptical Sun at end of ellipse, not center

Page 13: Revolution and Enlightenment

Used telescope to observe planetsThe Starry MessengerDestroyed idea of heavenly objects as orbs of light

Galileo Galilei

Page 14: Revolution and Enlightenment

Catholic Church ordered Galileo to abandon his ideas◦Threatened concept of the universe Humans no longer center of universe God no longer in specific place

Problems with the Church

Page 15: Revolution and Enlightenment

Galileo frightens Catholic and Protestant leaders◦Publicly silent but continues working

1632 –Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems◦Showed Galileo supported Copernicus’ theory

◦Pope summoned him to Rome to stand trial

Page 16: Revolution and Enlightenment

1633 – reads confession◦Threatened w/torture◦Agreed ideas of Copernicus were false

◦Lived under house arrest Dies - 1642

Page 17: Revolution and Enlightenment

Wrote Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy – the Principia

Laws of Motion Universal Law of Gravitation World-Machine concept

Newton’s View of the Universe

Page 18: Revolution and Enlightenment

◦Law of Universal Gravitation Every object in universe attracts every other object

Degree of attraction depends on mass and distance between them

What’s it mean?

Page 19: Revolution and Enlightenment

Galen – Greek physician in A.D. 100s◦Teachings dominated Middle Ages◦Based on animal dissection

16th Century scientists change ideas

Breakthroughs in Medicine

Page 20: Revolution and Enlightenment

Andreas Vesalius◦Dissected human corpses◦On the Fabric of the Human Body◦Filled w/detailed drawings of organs, bones, and muscle

Medicine and the Human Body

Page 21: Revolution and Enlightenment

William Harvey◦On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in America

◦Heart acts as pump to circulate blood throughout the body

Page 22: Revolution and Enlightenment

Robert Boyle◦First scientist to conduct controlled experiments in chemistry

◦Relationship between volume and pressure of gases

Antoine Levoisier◦System for naming chemical elements

◦Founder of Modern Chemistry

Breakthroughs in Chemistry

Page 23: Revolution and Enlightenment

Scholarship was considered the domain of men◦Women belong at home with the children

Contributions of Women

Page 24: Revolution and Enlightenment

Margaret Cavendish◦Criticized belief that humans, through science, were the masters of nature

Page 25: Revolution and Enlightenment

Women could be astronomers in Germany◦Worked with fathers and husbands

Maria Winkelmann◦Assisted her husband◦Discovered her own comet◦Denied astronomy post at Berlin Acadamy They felt members would be appalled

Page 26: Revolution and Enlightenment

Rene Descartes◦Inspired by Scientific Revolution Doubt and uncertainty everywhere

◦Doubt inspired learning◦Cannot doubt existence “I think, therefore I am”

◦Mind cannot be doubted Body and material world

can be

Philosophy and Reason

Page 27: Revolution and Enlightenment

Mind cannot be doubted◦Body and material world can be

Mind and matter are completely separate◦Matter should be viewed as detached from the mind

◦Investigated by reasonWhat does this all mean?

◦Reason is chief source of knowledge

Page 28: Revolution and Enlightenment

Scientists should not rely on ancient authority

Scientific Method◦Step-by-step, repeatable process for collecting and analyzing data

Bacon and the Scientific Method

Page 29: Revolution and Enlightenment

Developed by Francis Bacon◦Believed in use of inductive reasoning Specific to the general Free of opinion Start with facts and proceed to general principles

Goal was to advance human life with new discoveries

Science could benefit industry, agriculture and trade