¶ … humans are born with a blank slate upon which is written, as they grow, the ideas and modes of acting that they will follow as they mature. Their environment, essentially, is responsible for informing their behavior and the idea of human nature having some sort of "behavioral code" already established in the human soul or something of that sort is rejected in the concept of the blank slate thesis. Essentially the blank slate thesis states that all knowledge is acquired through the senses, which is an argument made by many philosophers throughout the centuries (and which does not exactly speak to the idea of whether there is such a thing as "human nature" per se). However, what the blank slate thesis actually consists of is an underlying principle which states that there is such a thing as human nature (it is this which accounts for the fact that human beings gain knowledge through the sense after all -- if that is not natural then what is?). The blank slate concept of human nature is just this: that human nature is blank -- it is not born in a state of original sin, it is not fallen, and it is not in need of salvation -- all ideas that were held prior to the modern era (in the West). Pinker does not make this point, but implicit in his talk is the notion that if the blank slate thesis is anything it is meant to be a repudiation of the medieval doctrine regarding a religious framework or conception of the human soul and of human nature. Thus, the blank slate thesis of the modern era essentially rejects the medieval view of human nature, while admitting that knowledge is indeed gained the same way (through the senses). As to a concept of the soul or of "fallen" human nature (the cause of man's tendency towards corruption, according to the medievalist doctrine),...
Following the French Revolution and the Age of Enlightenment, the revolutionary mindset in the West was to worship liberty and equality and the idea of a "fallen" human nature, which the Western European states had rejected with the Enlightenment and the coming Romantic Era, was ill-suited to advance the idea of equality.
The change following the American revolution was not only a political one, but it brought along a series of changes like a domino in all aspects of life. "In many areas, the Revolution witnessed the overthrow of the old order politically, socially, economically, and religiously" (Morton, 2003, pg. 3). Paine's pamphlet appealed to the people's common sense. The fact that its author spoke the language of the masses and knew
Irrationalists and the Enlightenment Thomas Carlyle and his friend Mazzini were a couple of the "irrationalists" who opposed the Enlightenment developments and believed men needed a "new religion" (Stromberg 50) in order to guide them towards future progress. The Napoleonic Wars had upset the order that the Age of Enlightenment had cultivated -- essentially a Protestant takeover throughout Europe in which the Protestant ethos sat at the heart. The backlash
Leonhard Euler: Mathematics PioneerApril 15, 1707 – September 18, 1783Leonhard Euler was born on April 15, 1707, in Basel, Switzerland. He died on September 18, 1783, in St. Petersburg, Russia. He lived through a period of Europe known as the Age of Enlightenment—a time when Europeans were turning away from the Age of Faith that had characterized the Middle Ages and embracing an Age of Reason. During this time, it
Enlightenment and Scientific Method Robert Hollinger, in his essay "What is the Enlightenment?," notes the centrality of science to the "Enlightenment project," as he defines it, offering as one of the four basic tenets that constitute the "basic ideas of the Enlightenment" the view that "only a society based on science and universal values is truly free and rational: only its inhabitants can be happy." (Smith 1998, p. 71). As Smith
You can't just issue degrees without having the use of force lurking in the background to make sure those degrees have some "teeth" so to speak. But Rousseau rejected that idea. Rousseau also rejected the notion that ties between family members were an appropriate model for relationships between the state and its citizens. In using precepts from what Aristotle had written two thousand years earlier (in Aristotle's Politics), Rousseau -
Enlightenment Upon the Colonies Enlightenment As may be common knowledge by people raised, educated, and living in America for many years will know, during the American Enlightenment period, many people were inspired. There were ideas abound. It was an era of relative tolerance and humanist thinking. Documents such as the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution were composed and ratified during this period as well. Clearly, the American Enlightenment
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