Kevin Shultz (2014) states, "The American Enlightenment stemmed from European Enlightenment, which was a movement to prioritize the human capacity for reason as the highest form of human attainment" (p.69). Shultz (2014) also states that in the Western world in the 1600s people believed that (1) That rulers both religious or secular were not to be questioned. (2) That change was not possible for humans. (3) That human lives on Earth were nothing more than a short stop on a journey to Heaven or Hell…
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there was a great impact from The Enlightenment and The Great Awakening on colonial society in America. The first large-scale religious revival aligned with Enlightenment ideas, it also severed colonial ties with structures of religious authority. It created a unified movement for the four colonies. They were taught that individuals could find heaven if they worked hard enough, not just if they were predestined to go. and that allowed emotional expressions and that became The Great Awakening. However…
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The Enlightenment and the Great Awakening contributed to numerous discrete things in America. The Enlightenment was a period where intellectual philosophers came up with intricate thoughts and ideas. These ideas about intellectual reason challenged the current beliefs regarding religious emotionalism. Therefore contemporary things began to develop in America which ignited change. These futuristic ideas led to the Great Awakening. The Great Britain colonies had become uninterested religiously…
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The Enlightenment and the Great awakening both had major effects on the American colonies. The Enlightenment brought new political ideas as well as new way of thinking. The founding fathers also used this new political ideas in how they shaped the American government. An example of this is Thomas Jefferson’s words “Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness” which are found in the Declaration of Independence, come from Locke's words “Life, Liberty, and Property.” The Great Awakening also brought…
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17th and 18th century, while the Enlightenment had a tremendous impact on politics and government, the first Great Awakening had great impact on religion for the North American colonies. As the American colonists began to realize they were oppressed, the Awakening helped break them from classical religious traditions, and as for the Enlightenment, they were freed from absolute monarchy. Many great leaders such as Voltaire and George Whitefield took part of these great movements to create a new world…
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How did the Enlightenment, the Great Awakening, and the French and Indian War lead to the American Revolution? What other factors led to the demand of some colonists for independence from Great Britain? The Enlightenment was important America because it provided the philosophical basis of the American Revolution. The Revolution was more than just a protest against English authority; as it turned out, the American Revolution provided a blueprint for the organization of a democratic society. And…
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The 18th century was not just a time of great religious change in the American colonies but all over Europe as well. Evangelism was religious reaction to the age of enlightenment, “a new Age of Faith rose to counter the currents of the Age of Enlightenment, to reaffirm the view that being truly religious meant trusting the heart rather than the head” (Heyrman). In America, when the Great Awakening began colonist were still worried about the, “economic and political uncertainty accompanying King…
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When we look at The American Enlightenment, we find out that it was a model of the European Enlightenment. In the 1600s there was a belief with the Europeans that the light of human reason and science they may apply it to the society. These states that the New World and Europe went from a God-centered way of life to a man-centered view of life. The Enlightenment changed the way that people thought about the religion. The people began to control their faith and religion (Schultz, 2010). Although…
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and instead put a greater importance on the individual and their spiritual experience.dogpzdgobjz The Great Awakening began in earnest in the 1730’s and reached its climax in the 1740s. The revival had a particular appeal to women and to younger sons of the third or fourth generation of settlers—those who stood to inherit the least land and who faced the most uncertain futures. The rhetoric of the revival emphasized the potential for every person to break away from the constraints of the past and…
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First, the Great Awakening had a large impact on the Christian community of the early colonies. In the height of the Great Awakening, during the 1730’s and 1740’s it offered the settlers a refresher in their spiritual lives by inspiring the Christians to make their religion a daily process. The Great Awakening was a result due to the loss of belief. One of the biggest impacts the Great awakening had in America was the power of belief that was given to the people, a new passion for the right to worship…
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