Deck 16: Culture and Society in the Age of the Scientific Revolution

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Question
A major factor contributing to the scientific revolution was

A)the discovery by the humanists that the works of Ptolemy were a forgery.
B)a loss of interest in magic among educated Europeans.
C)the invention of instruments that made scientific discoveries possible.
D)the finding of a lost manuscript of Aristotle that led to the discovery of the law of gravity.
E)All these answers are correct.
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Question
The primary importance of Francis Bacon to the scientific revolution was

A)as a great experimental scientist who formulated the basic law of acceleration.
B)as a mathematician who provided the third part of Kepler's second law of motion.
C)as a great theoretical scientist who provided a uniform theory of universal attraction from the work of Copernicus and Galileo.
D)as a great propagandist who popularized the findings and methodology of the new scientific inquiries.
E)as the founder of modern philosophy.
Question
Baroque art is seen as the visual manifestation of

A)the revival of interest in Greece and Rome.
B)the scientific outlook.
C)the Counter-Reformation.
D)increasing secularism.
E)the Dutch Reformed Church.
Question
Galileo

A)was brought before the Inquisition.
B)antagonized Jesuit and Dominican astronomers.
C)published a book approved by the Church.
D)antagonized Jesuit and Dominican astronomers, was brought before the Inquisition, and published a book approved by the Church.
E)None of these answers is correct.
Question
Which of the following is true of Isaac Newton?

A)He got into fierce arguments with other researchers of his day.
B)He discovered the law of gravity.
C)He demonstrated that laws of motion on earth and in the heavens are the same.
D)He believed the world was stable and orderly.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
The works of these two contemporaries, Miguel de Cervantes and William Shakespeare, share

A)an underlying concern about human helplessness in the face of uncontrollable change.
B)a buoyant sense of optimism about the future.
C)the aspirations of common people for greater social opportunity.
D)a curious lack of energy, as though profound human questions are too difficult to address.
E)a desire to overthrow established governments.
Question
Galileo's accomplishments included

A)developing the theory of inertia, which undermined Aristotelian physics.
B)the discovery that the physical makeup of the other heavenly bodies is different from earth's.
C)proof that the orbits of the planets are elliptical, with the sun at one focus of the ellipse.
D)the fact that he persuaded the Roman Catholic Church to accept his discoveries as true.
E)observed proof of the Aristotelian view.
Question
In the seventeenth century, social mobility was

A)accepted as a desirable goal for all individuals.
B)easily available to peasants as opportunities to buy land increased.
C)closed to wealthy commoners because there was no way to enter the nobility.
D)increased somewhat by the need of expanding bureaucracies for educated officials.
E)attainable through education, not wealth.
Question
Which of the following words LEAST applies to the scientific outlook?

A)skepticism
B)common sense
C)experimentation
D)hypothesis
E)deduction
Question
One reason why European population grew slowly or not at all in the seventeenth century was because

A)only three in four children reached adulthood.
B)tens of thousands were emigrating to the New World.
C)couples tended to marry young, then find themselves unable to support a family.
D)warfare and economic depression reduced Europe's population by more than five million.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
Mannerist art was characterized by

A)formality, balance, and restraint.
B)distorted human figures and unnatural lighting effects.
C)extravagant use of bright colors and abstract design.
D)emphasis on decorative design.
E)simplicity in human figures, similar to Gothic sculpture.
Question
Cases of witchcraft declined after the middle of the seventeenth century

A)because authorities feared that such actions threatened their own authority.
B)because ordinary people embraced scientific explanations of natural events.
C)because people living in urban environments felt less vulnerable to mysterious forces.
D)both because authorities feared that such actions threatened their own authority and because people living in urban environments felt less vulnerable to mysterious forces.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
Which idea is associated with Copernicus?

A)The orbits of the planets are circles.
B)The orbits of the planets are ellipses.
C)Jupiter has three moons.
D)The earth rotates around the sun.
E)The planets are attached to transparent spheres.
Question
Which of the following was NOT usually a method by which the poor coped with their insecurity or discontent?

A)charivari
B)joining the army
C)petitions to Parliament
D)witch hunts
E)consultation with clever men or wise women
Question
As the discoveries of the new science spread throughout Europe,

A)governments played no role in fostering scientific knowledge.
B)Pascal gained a circle of wealthy followers skeptical that science would improve the human spirit.
C)ideas of order and regularity affected architecture and landscape design.
D)members of the wealthy classes ignored the new discoveries as uninteresting and not entertaining.
E)public scientific events were scorned.
Question
Why were witchcraft accusations directed primarily at old women, especially widows, during the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries?

A)There was hostility to women who appeared to be challenging their traditional subordinate status.
B)In looking for scapegoats for events that were not explicable, society usually chose those on its margins.
C)It was believed that women were so lustful that the devil could make them his slaves.
D)Elderly widows were resented by their neighbors as burdens.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
The intellectual approach of Descartes

A)relied on experimentation to confirm his most important ideas.
B)rested on the basic premise that "I think, therefore I am."
C)argued that the scientific method could not prove the existence of God.
D)argued that thought and tangible objects are of the same essence.
E)was premised upon truths perceived through faith.
Question
The artistic work associated with seventeenth-century Classicism

A)gave free expression to intense emotion.
B)required dramatists to confine their settings to ancient Greece and Rome.
C)frowned upon portraiture as a suitable subject for great art.
D)found notable patrons in the Habsburg courts.
E)embraced formal rules and structure.
Question
Scientific societies

A)preserved the individualism of scientific research.
B)were opposed by governments.
C)encouraged cooperative efforts in research.
D)symbolized the trend toward decentralization in governments during the seventeenth century.
E)allowed wide membership.
Question
Traditional village life in the seventeenth century witnessed

A)increasing isolation and lack of central governmental control.
B)increasing impoverishment of all villagers.
C)a breakdown in the relationship between peasants and landowners.
D)the emergence of a greater sense of community in the face of extreme hardship.
E)greater unity among rich and poor peasants.
Question
What religious, political, and social ramifications did the heliocentric model of the universe pose?
Question
How did the scientific interest in human anatomy exemplified in the Engraving Illustrating the Structure of the Human Body, shown in this chapter, demonstrate the continued influence of Renaissance art?
Question
How do the works of Cervantes and Shakespeare reflect the tensions of their times?
Question
How does the new certainty and confidence in science reflect the increased order of European states? What did that certainty imply about the relationship between the state of political development/stability and science/culture?
Question
What were the origins of the scientific revolution? Why did it occur when it did? How did it alter Europeans' views of their place in the natural world and in the universe?
Question
Review the feature entitled "Galileo and Kepler on Copernicus" in this chapter.Why did Galileo hesitate to publish his work in Italy? Why did Germany appear a more favorable environment at the time?
Question
Review the feature entitled "Galileo and Kepler on Copernicus" in this chapter.Judging from this letter, do you think Kepler had already published his work? If no, why not, and why is he then urging Galileo to publish first?
Question
Why was the new science of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries regarded by church and state as a threat to the established religious and political order?
Question
What obstacles would a seventeenth-century peasant have faced in trying to improve his or her position in society?
Question
Consider the paintings seen in this chapter by Caravaggio, Rubens, and Gentileschi.What makes these paintings extraordinary examples of the Baroque style?
Question
Consider maps 16.1 and 16.3.Where did the greatest improvements in communications occur? How did those improvements build upon political stability and urban growth?
Question
How did the founding of government-sponsored scientific societies reflect the consolidation and centralization of political authority?
Question
Why were philosophers, astronomers, anatomists, and other scientific thinkers hesitant to dispute and displace the ideas of ancient thinkers?
Question
How did Galileo's Moon pictured in this chapter overturn the Ptolemaic concept of the universe?
Question
Compare and contrast the similarities and differences in the methodology of Descartes and Isaac Newton.
Question
How are women portrayed in the woodcut found in this chapter?
Question
Review the feature entitled "Galileo and Kepler on Copernicus" in this chapter.Kepler distinguishes between scholars and mathematicians.Who are these scholars and what disciplines do they represent?
Question
Discuss the impact that the social and economic tensions of the seventeenth century had on European towns and villages.How did people deal with these tensions?
Question
How can we explain the European witch craze of the seventeenth century by placing it in its historical context? Consider issues of gender, politics, economics, and religion in your response.
Question
With the growth of larger political states and the discoveries of the new science, were seventeenth-century Europeans losing their faith in the Christian God? What evidence do you find that this was, or was not, the case?
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Classicism.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: scientific method.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: laws of planetary motion.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: René Descartes.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: alchemy.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Neostoicism.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Kepler.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Royal Society of London.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: cabala.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Rembrandt.
Question
Review the feature entitled "A Witness Analyzes the Witch Craze" in this chapter.What, according to Linden, motivated the persecution of witches? Does his opinion surprise you given the fact that he himself was a clergyman?
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Caravaggio.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Velázquez.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Vesalius.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: witch craze.
Question
Review the feature entitled "A Witness Analyzes the Witch Craze" in this chapter.What does Linden's perspective reveal about the breakdown in social order that plagued seventeenth century society in Europe?
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Isaac Newton.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: El Greco.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Shakespeare.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: seigneurial reaction.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Galileo.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Pascal.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Cervantes.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Poussin.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Mannerism.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Bernini.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Corneille.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Rubens.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: disenchantment.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Francis Bacon.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: inertia.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Michel de Montaigne.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: principle of doubt.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Copernicus.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Baroque.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: charivari.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Principia.
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Deck 16: Culture and Society in the Age of the Scientific Revolution
1
A major factor contributing to the scientific revolution was

A)the discovery by the humanists that the works of Ptolemy were a forgery.
B)a loss of interest in magic among educated Europeans.
C)the invention of instruments that made scientific discoveries possible.
D)the finding of a lost manuscript of Aristotle that led to the discovery of the law of gravity.
E)All these answers are correct.
the invention of instruments that made scientific discoveries possible.
2
The primary importance of Francis Bacon to the scientific revolution was

A)as a great experimental scientist who formulated the basic law of acceleration.
B)as a mathematician who provided the third part of Kepler's second law of motion.
C)as a great theoretical scientist who provided a uniform theory of universal attraction from the work of Copernicus and Galileo.
D)as a great propagandist who popularized the findings and methodology of the new scientific inquiries.
E)as the founder of modern philosophy.
as a great propagandist who popularized the findings and methodology of the new scientific inquiries.
3
Baroque art is seen as the visual manifestation of

A)the revival of interest in Greece and Rome.
B)the scientific outlook.
C)the Counter-Reformation.
D)increasing secularism.
E)the Dutch Reformed Church.
the Counter-Reformation.
4
Galileo

A)was brought before the Inquisition.
B)antagonized Jesuit and Dominican astronomers.
C)published a book approved by the Church.
D)antagonized Jesuit and Dominican astronomers, was brought before the Inquisition, and published a book approved by the Church.
E)None of these answers is correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Which of the following is true of Isaac Newton?

A)He got into fierce arguments with other researchers of his day.
B)He discovered the law of gravity.
C)He demonstrated that laws of motion on earth and in the heavens are the same.
D)He believed the world was stable and orderly.
E)All these answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The works of these two contemporaries, Miguel de Cervantes and William Shakespeare, share

A)an underlying concern about human helplessness in the face of uncontrollable change.
B)a buoyant sense of optimism about the future.
C)the aspirations of common people for greater social opportunity.
D)a curious lack of energy, as though profound human questions are too difficult to address.
E)a desire to overthrow established governments.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Galileo's accomplishments included

A)developing the theory of inertia, which undermined Aristotelian physics.
B)the discovery that the physical makeup of the other heavenly bodies is different from earth's.
C)proof that the orbits of the planets are elliptical, with the sun at one focus of the ellipse.
D)the fact that he persuaded the Roman Catholic Church to accept his discoveries as true.
E)observed proof of the Aristotelian view.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
In the seventeenth century, social mobility was

A)accepted as a desirable goal for all individuals.
B)easily available to peasants as opportunities to buy land increased.
C)closed to wealthy commoners because there was no way to enter the nobility.
D)increased somewhat by the need of expanding bureaucracies for educated officials.
E)attainable through education, not wealth.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Which of the following words LEAST applies to the scientific outlook?

A)skepticism
B)common sense
C)experimentation
D)hypothesis
E)deduction
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
One reason why European population grew slowly or not at all in the seventeenth century was because

A)only three in four children reached adulthood.
B)tens of thousands were emigrating to the New World.
C)couples tended to marry young, then find themselves unable to support a family.
D)warfare and economic depression reduced Europe's population by more than five million.
E)All these answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Mannerist art was characterized by

A)formality, balance, and restraint.
B)distorted human figures and unnatural lighting effects.
C)extravagant use of bright colors and abstract design.
D)emphasis on decorative design.
E)simplicity in human figures, similar to Gothic sculpture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Cases of witchcraft declined after the middle of the seventeenth century

A)because authorities feared that such actions threatened their own authority.
B)because ordinary people embraced scientific explanations of natural events.
C)because people living in urban environments felt less vulnerable to mysterious forces.
D)both because authorities feared that such actions threatened their own authority and because people living in urban environments felt less vulnerable to mysterious forces.
E)All these answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Which idea is associated with Copernicus?

A)The orbits of the planets are circles.
B)The orbits of the planets are ellipses.
C)Jupiter has three moons.
D)The earth rotates around the sun.
E)The planets are attached to transparent spheres.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Which of the following was NOT usually a method by which the poor coped with their insecurity or discontent?

A)charivari
B)joining the army
C)petitions to Parliament
D)witch hunts
E)consultation with clever men or wise women
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
As the discoveries of the new science spread throughout Europe,

A)governments played no role in fostering scientific knowledge.
B)Pascal gained a circle of wealthy followers skeptical that science would improve the human spirit.
C)ideas of order and regularity affected architecture and landscape design.
D)members of the wealthy classes ignored the new discoveries as uninteresting and not entertaining.
E)public scientific events were scorned.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Why were witchcraft accusations directed primarily at old women, especially widows, during the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries?

A)There was hostility to women who appeared to be challenging their traditional subordinate status.
B)In looking for scapegoats for events that were not explicable, society usually chose those on its margins.
C)It was believed that women were so lustful that the devil could make them his slaves.
D)Elderly widows were resented by their neighbors as burdens.
E)All these answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The intellectual approach of Descartes

A)relied on experimentation to confirm his most important ideas.
B)rested on the basic premise that "I think, therefore I am."
C)argued that the scientific method could not prove the existence of God.
D)argued that thought and tangible objects are of the same essence.
E)was premised upon truths perceived through faith.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The artistic work associated with seventeenth-century Classicism

A)gave free expression to intense emotion.
B)required dramatists to confine their settings to ancient Greece and Rome.
C)frowned upon portraiture as a suitable subject for great art.
D)found notable patrons in the Habsburg courts.
E)embraced formal rules and structure.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Scientific societies

A)preserved the individualism of scientific research.
B)were opposed by governments.
C)encouraged cooperative efforts in research.
D)symbolized the trend toward decentralization in governments during the seventeenth century.
E)allowed wide membership.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Traditional village life in the seventeenth century witnessed

A)increasing isolation and lack of central governmental control.
B)increasing impoverishment of all villagers.
C)a breakdown in the relationship between peasants and landowners.
D)the emergence of a greater sense of community in the face of extreme hardship.
E)greater unity among rich and poor peasants.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
What religious, political, and social ramifications did the heliocentric model of the universe pose?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
How did the scientific interest in human anatomy exemplified in the Engraving Illustrating the Structure of the Human Body, shown in this chapter, demonstrate the continued influence of Renaissance art?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
How do the works of Cervantes and Shakespeare reflect the tensions of their times?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
How does the new certainty and confidence in science reflect the increased order of European states? What did that certainty imply about the relationship between the state of political development/stability and science/culture?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
What were the origins of the scientific revolution? Why did it occur when it did? How did it alter Europeans' views of their place in the natural world and in the universe?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Review the feature entitled "Galileo and Kepler on Copernicus" in this chapter.Why did Galileo hesitate to publish his work in Italy? Why did Germany appear a more favorable environment at the time?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Review the feature entitled "Galileo and Kepler on Copernicus" in this chapter.Judging from this letter, do you think Kepler had already published his work? If no, why not, and why is he then urging Galileo to publish first?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Why was the new science of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries regarded by church and state as a threat to the established religious and political order?
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Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
What obstacles would a seventeenth-century peasant have faced in trying to improve his or her position in society?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
30
Consider the paintings seen in this chapter by Caravaggio, Rubens, and Gentileschi.What makes these paintings extraordinary examples of the Baroque style?
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Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
31
Consider maps 16.1 and 16.3.Where did the greatest improvements in communications occur? How did those improvements build upon political stability and urban growth?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
How did the founding of government-sponsored scientific societies reflect the consolidation and centralization of political authority?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Why were philosophers, astronomers, anatomists, and other scientific thinkers hesitant to dispute and displace the ideas of ancient thinkers?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
How did Galileo's Moon pictured in this chapter overturn the Ptolemaic concept of the universe?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
35
Compare and contrast the similarities and differences in the methodology of Descartes and Isaac Newton.
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Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
36
How are women portrayed in the woodcut found in this chapter?
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k this deck
37
Review the feature entitled "Galileo and Kepler on Copernicus" in this chapter.Kepler distinguishes between scholars and mathematicians.Who are these scholars and what disciplines do they represent?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Discuss the impact that the social and economic tensions of the seventeenth century had on European towns and villages.How did people deal with these tensions?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
How can we explain the European witch craze of the seventeenth century by placing it in its historical context? Consider issues of gender, politics, economics, and religion in your response.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
With the growth of larger political states and the discoveries of the new science, were seventeenth-century Europeans losing their faith in the Christian God? What evidence do you find that this was, or was not, the case?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Classicism.
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Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
42
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: scientific method.
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Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
43
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: laws of planetary motion.
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Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
44
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: René Descartes.
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k this deck
45
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: alchemy.
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k this deck
46
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Neostoicism.
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k this deck
47
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Kepler.
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k this deck
48
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Royal Society of London.
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k this deck
49
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: cabala.
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k this deck
50
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Rembrandt.
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k this deck
51
Review the feature entitled "A Witness Analyzes the Witch Craze" in this chapter.What, according to Linden, motivated the persecution of witches? Does his opinion surprise you given the fact that he himself was a clergyman?
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Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Caravaggio.
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k this deck
53
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Velázquez.
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54
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Vesalius.
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55
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: witch craze.
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56
Review the feature entitled "A Witness Analyzes the Witch Craze" in this chapter.What does Linden's perspective reveal about the breakdown in social order that plagued seventeenth century society in Europe?
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Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
57
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Isaac Newton.
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58
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: El Greco.
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59
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Shakespeare.
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60
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: seigneurial reaction.
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61
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Galileo.
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Unlock for access to all 77 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
62
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Pascal.
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63
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Cervantes.
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64
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Poussin.
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65
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Mannerism.
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66
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Bernini.
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67
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Corneille.
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68
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Rubens.
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69
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: disenchantment.
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70
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Francis Bacon.
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71
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: inertia.
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72
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Michel de Montaigne.
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73
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: principle of doubt.
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74
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Copernicus.
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75
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Baroque.
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76
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: charivari.
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77
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Principia.
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