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Learning Objectives
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Chapter 8 teaches students about:

  • The enduring impact of Enlightenment ideas on political revolutions, cultural movements, and intellectual debates.
  • The dominance of the idea of progress and the countervailing tendencies of religious fervor in the eighteenth century.
  • The role of the philosophes and Physiocrats, their influence on an expanding reading public, and the centrality of Paris in the Enlightenment.
  • Enlightened despotism, its secularism, rationality, and reformism.
  • The successes and failures of enlightened despotism in France, Austria, Prussia, and Russia.
  • The partitions of Poland, which forever changed the balance of power within Europe as a whole and signaled the importance of establishing strong sovereignty.
  • The wave of revolutionary activity that commenced in the late eighteenth century and continued until the mid-nineteenth century.
  • The middle-class, or bourgeois, nature of the democratic revolutions.
  • The reform movement in Britain and the push by Parliament to centralize the empire.
  • The American Revolution, the intervention of European powers in the conflict, and the limited advances of democracy and equality in the new states.
  • The inspiration that the American Revolution provided, as well as its vindication of Enlightenment ideals.







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