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Toward a New Worldview 1540-1715 Chapter 18

Toward a New Worldview

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Toward a New Worldview. 1540-1715 Chapter 18. Chapter Overview. Scientist and Intellectual transform people’s understanding of their universe and their place in it. They ask questions & create methods for answering Scientific revolution Replaced medieval reliance on authorities - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Toward a New Worldview

Toward a New Worldview

1540-1715Chapter 18

Page 2: Toward a New Worldview

Chapter Overview0 Scientist and Intellectual transform people’s understanding of their

universe and their place in it.0 They ask questions & create methods for answering

0 Scientific revolution0 Replaced medieval reliance on authorities

0 Experimentation0 Observation 0 Mathematical analysis

0 Enlightenment0 Light of reason to society

0 Social science 0 Economics0 Psychology0 Political science

0 Characteristics0 Reason & rationalism0 Belief in human progress – materially & intellectually0 Profound secularism0 Deep commitment to limited gov & human liberty

Page 3: Toward a New Worldview

Key Concepts0 Scientific Revolution 1540

0 Overturned Aristotelian physics & Ptolemaic0 Copernicus advocated the heliocentric theory of the solar system- proved by Galileo &

Kepler 0 Governments estab science societies0 Newton discovered the universal law of gravitation

0 Enlightenment Philosophies0 Centered in France0 Fostered by conversations held at salons – well-to-do women0 Used reason to examine their own societies0 Discovered the scientific laws of human life0 Opposed censorship, religious/political persecution & autocratic gov 0 individual rights & intellectual freedom were crucial for advancement

0 Reforms0 Banning of torture0 Reduction in the number of capital crimes0 Religious toleration 0 Reduction of mercantilist restrictions0 Burdens of serfdom

Page 4: Toward a New Worldview

Scientific Thought - 1500

0Scientific thought in the early 1500s was based on ancient and medieval ideas.

0European notions about the universe were based on Aristotelian principles.

0A chief feature of this view was the belief in a motionless, static earth at the center of the universe.

0Ten crystal spheres moved around the earth.

Page 5: Toward a New Worldview

The Scientific Revolution16th century

0 Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) 0 heliocentric view (refutes the Medieval geocentric view):

earth revolves around the sun 0 By the early 16th century, the Catholic Church viewed

Copernicus‘ theory as heretical 0 Tycho Brahe (1546-1601) – Built best observatory in

Europe and compiled a mass of scientific data from observations of the heavens 0 Data used later by Kepler, Galileo and others

0 Johann Kepler (1571-1630) – 3 laws of planetary motion: orbits are elliptical

Page 6: Toward a New Worldview

Copernican SystemThis illustration of the Copernican System from the published text of Copernicus's treatise On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres (1543) shows the earth and the planets revolving around the sun. Copernicus challenged traditional astronomy and its earth-centered universe. (Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY)

Page 7: Toward a New Worldview

The Copernican Hypothesis

0Copernicus overturned the medieval view of the universe.

0He proposed that the earth revolved around the sun and that the sun was the center of the universe.

0This heliocentric view was a departure from the medieval view endorsed by both Catholic and Protestant churchmen.

Page 8: Toward a New Worldview

Medicine:

0 Scientists began challenging Greco-Roman medical authority (esp. Galen-2nd c. AD)

0 Andreas Vesalius (1514-64) 0 The Structure of the Human Body (1543): renewed and modernized

study of anatomy 0 William Harvey (1578-1657):

0 On the Movement of the Heart and Blood (1628)-- blood circulation 0 Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723):

0 developed powerful microscopes 0 First to see and write about bacteria, yeast plants, living organisms

in a drop of water and the circulation of blood corpuscles in capillaries.

Page 9: Toward a New Worldview

Scientific Revolution17th century

0 Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) – used the telescope to prove Copernicus‘s heliocentric theory 0 Forced by the Roman Inquisition to retract his support of the

Copernican theory 0 Also developed laws of motion

0 Scientific Method 0 Bacon‘s inductive method, coupled with Descartes deductive

reason formed the backbone of the modern scientific method. 0 Francis Bacon (1561-1626) 0 • empiricism: first-hand study of scientific subjects 0 • inductive method: scientific conclusion is reached after much

observation

Page 10: Toward a New Worldview

GalileoThis 1624 engraved portrait by Ottavio Mario Leoni (1578-1630) of Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) shows the Italian scientist in full vigor at age 60, before he was hounded by the Roman Inquisition. (Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum)

Page 11: Toward a New Worldview

Galileo's moon paintingsWhen Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) published the results of his telescopic observations of the moon, he added these paintings to illustrate the marvels he'd seen. (Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale, Florence/Art Resource, NY)

Page 12: Toward a New Worldview

Scientific Method

0Bacon‘s inductive method, coupled with Descartes deductive reason formed the backbone of the modern scientific method.

0Francis Bacon (1561-1626) 0 empiricism: first-hand study of scientific subjects 0 inductive method: scientific conclusion is reached after

much observation

Page 13: Toward a New Worldview

0 Rene Descartes (1596-1650) 0 deductive method: conclusion is reached by logic 0 v ―I think, therefore I am ‖ (cognito ergo sum) 0 Believed science must:

0 start with clear and incontrovertible facts 0 subdivide each problem into as many parts as necessary, using a step-by-step logical sequence

0 Cartesian dualism: divided all existence into the spiritual and the material 0 The spiritual can only be examined through deductive reasoning (logic) 0 The material is subject to the experimental method

0 Developed analytical geometry

0 Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1747): Principia – law of universal gravitation 0 Incorporated the astronomy of Copernicus and Kepler with the physics of Galileo into an

overarching theory explaining order and design to the universe. 0 This view came to be the foundation of the Enlightenment view of God: deism

Page 14: Toward a New Worldview

Newton’s Synthesis

0Newton synthesized the integral parts into a whole.0Newton integrated the astronomy of Copernicus and

Kepler with the physics of Galileo.0He formulated a set of mathematical principles to

explain motion.0At the core of Newton’s theory was the universal law

of gravitation.

Page 15: Toward a New Worldview

Madame du ChateletGabrielle-Emilie Le Tonnelier de Breteuil, marquise du Chatelet (1706-1749) was an intellectually gifted women from the high aristocracy with a passion for science. She was fascinated by the new world system of Isaac Newton. She helped to spread Newton's ideas in France by translating his Principia and by influencing Voltaire, her companion for fifteen years until her death. (Giraudon/Art Resource, NY)

Page 16: Toward a New Worldview

Causes of the Scientific Revolution

0Medieval universities had provided the framework for the new view.

0The Renaissance stimulated science by rediscovering ancient mathematics.

0Better ways of obtaining knowledge about the world, including improved tools such as telescopes and sextants, improved the scientific method.

0Bacon advocated empirical, experimental research.0Descartes emphasized deductive reasoning and was

the first to graph equations.

Page 17: Toward a New Worldview

Some Consequences of the Scientific Revolution

0 The Scientific Revolution helped create the international scientific community.

0 It resulted in the development of the scientific method.0 The Scientific Revolution had few economic and social

consequences for the masses until the eighteenth century.0 leads to

0 Enlightenment 0 Clash with religion 0 Agricultural Revolution 0 Improvement in exploration 0 Decline in witch hunts

Page 18: Toward a New Worldview

Memory Device for Scientific Revolution:

0C ops Copernicus 0B ring Brahe 0K ids Kepler 0G reat Galileo 0B ig Bacon 0D onuts Descartes 0N ow Newton