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

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Modern World History 2.5 The Enlightenment 332 Views


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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.

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