The scientific revolution of the seventeenth century had repercussions far beyond the realm of pure science as:
A) it changed European ideas about religion, God, nature, and the human experience.
B) it demonstrated that the physical universe may lack order and harmony.
C) it laid a foundation for belief in absolutist institutions.
D) it reduced man to an insignificant role in the universe.
Correct Answer:
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Q1: In the seventeenth century, science became modern,
Q3: The great Renaissance artist Leonardo da Vinci
Q4: Witches were blamed for:
A) natural disasters.
B) deaths
Q5: Influential writers Francis Bacon and René Descartes,
Q6: In the inductive method of inquiry, we
Q7: The key to understanding Francis Bacon's thoughts
Q8: Bacon's work provided the basis for the
Q9: The greatest weakness in Bacon's thinking was
Q10: One effect of Descartes' general philosophy was
Q11: Cartesian dualism held that there were two
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