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Christianity in Europe  In 1500, Christianity was mostly limited to Europe - Divisions: Roman Catholic / Eastern Orthodox  On the defensive against Islam - Loss of Holy Land by 1300 - Fall of Constantinople in 1453 - Ottoman siege of Vienna in 1529 Protestant Reformation  Began in 1517 – Martin Luther’s 95 theses (discuss) - salvation through faith alone, not good deeds - no need for indulgences - questioned religious hierarchy  Luther - printing press – bible in vernacular  Lots of divisions of Protestantism spread therefore there were several religious wars - 1562–1598: French Wars of Religion (Catholics vs. Huguenots) - 1618–1648: the Thirty Years’ War in the Holy Roman Empire (mostly today’s Germany). Constantine, etc. 95 Theses Catholic Reformation  The Protestant Reformation provoked a counter Catholic Reformation - stopped indulgences - ended much corruption  New religious 0rders - Jesuits – spread Christianity, even went to China as missionaries - Dominicans and Franciscans as well Christianity Outward Bound  Imperialism enabled the globalization of Christianity - Spain, Portugal, France - Portuguese missionaries led in Africa and Asia - Spanish and French were prominent in the Americas - Russian Orthodox missionaries worked in Siberia  European success encouraged belief that the old gods had been defeated  Christians didn’t confront a literate world religion - no holy texts = easier to convert  Confucians, Buddhists, Hindus, and Muslims resisted Christianity much more Holy Virgin Cathedral - Russia Conversion and Adaptation in Spanish America  Population collapse, conquest and resettlement made conversion possible - vast majority baptized by 1700  Europeans tried to destroy native religions  Sometimes had to blend Christianity with old religions - Christian saints took on functions of precolonial gods - many rituals survived with some Christian influence Brazilian Savior China and the Jesuits  Needed government permission for operation  Especially targeted the official Chinese elite  Were respectful of Chinese culture, tried to accommodate it  Not much conversion at all - efforts gained 200,000–300,000 converts in 250 years Afro-Asian Cultural Traditions  Religious elements came w/ slaves to the Americas - Europeans tried to suppress African “sorcery” - but elements of voodoo, Santeria, etc. remained  Islamic “renewal” in Arabian Peninsula - founder Abd al-Wahhab (1703–1792) was a theologian - ended veneration of saints - aimed to restore strict adherence to the sharia (Islamic law) - women were expected to subject themselves to husbands - “idols” were destroyed - tobacco, hashish, and musical instruments were banned Islamic “renewal” As a Muslim, you are forbidden to drink alcohol. This is why Muslim women must marry Muslim men in some countries. Stoning. One of the consequences of not adhering to Sharia Law in many Islamic countries. China – Back to Old Traditions  China still followed Confucianism -added Buddhist and Daoist ideas (neo-Confucianism)  Elite Believed: kaozheng - “research based on evidence” - emphasized need for analysis, instead of unsupported speculation - led to new works on agriculture, medicine, etc - scientific approach to knowledge  Lively popular culture among the less well educated - production of plays, paintings, and literature India: The Hindu/Muslim Divide  bhakti - achieve union with the divine through songs, prayers, dances, poetry, and rituals - appealed especially to women - often set aside caste distinctions - much common ground with Sufism, helped to blur the line between Islam and Hinduism in India  Sikhism Spread – Blend of Hinduism and Islam - founder: Guru Nanak.. grew in Punjab region - evolved into a militant community in response to hostility Guru Nanak The Birth of Modern Science  Scientific Revolution - was based on careful observations, controlled experiments, and formulation of general laws to explain the world  Significance - challenged the teachings and authority of the Church - challenged ancient social hierarchies and political systems - also used to legitimize racial and gender inequality  Inventions : Microscope / Telescope New Inventions Why Europe???  Islamic world - most advanced scientifically 800–1400  China’s technology – unmatched for centuries following the millennium  European Conditions - legal system allowed autonomy for institutions - first corporations – Dutch/English East India  Islamic world – science not in university system  China – civil service exams – classical Confucian texts - no autonomy for higher learning institutions - disdain for science and philosophy Dutch East India Company Science as Cultural Revolution  Aristotle and Ptolemy - earth is stationary, at the center of the universe - a universe of divine purpose  Nicolaus Copernicus - On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres (1543) - earth and the planets revolved around the sun - Kepler and Galileo built on his ideas  Isaac Newton - formulated laws of motion and mechanics - central concept: universal gravitation - natural laws of the universe Isaac Newton End of the Scientific Revolution  By Newton’s death - different view of the physical universe - functioned according to mathematical principles - the “machine of the universe” is self-regulating - knowledge of the universe can be obtained through reason - the heart as a pump rather than as mysterious center of the body’s passions, etc. The Enlightenment  Adam Smith – laissez-faire  John Locke – tabula rasa  Rousseau – social contract  Montesquieu – separation of powers  Voltaire – deism “like a clock” Thanks Montesquieu and Rousseau Montesquieu and “separation of powers” Rousseau and his “social contract” Adam Smith European Science beyond the West  Science became the most widely desired product of     European culture - but early modern Asia was only modestly interested Mostly interested in astronomy and mathematics Japan - some European contact via the Dutch Ottoman Empire chose not to translate major European scientific works Islamic educational system was conservative, made it hard for theoretical science to do well Confucianism in China 19th Advances in Science and Theory  Charles Darwin - argued that all of life was in flux - origin of species / the descent of man – evolution  Karl Marx / Engels – socialism / communism’  Sigmund Freud - cast doubt on human rationality Reflections  Ideas shape peoples’ mental or cultural worlds and influence behavior. - many early modern ideas are still highly significant  The development of early modern ideas took place in an environment of great cultural borrowing. - borrowing was selective - borrowing sometimes caused serious conflict - efforts to stop cultural influence - efforts to suppress the original culture