****SS.7.C.1.1 The Enlightenment****

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****SS.7.C.1.1 The Enlightenment**** ****At the end of this lesson, I will be able to do the following: identify and describe the Enlightenment ideas of separation of powers, natural law, and social contract. examine how Enlightenment ideas influenced the Founders beliefs about individual liberties and government. evaluate the influence of Montesquieu s and Locke s ideas on the Founding Fathers. **** Terms I need to know at the end of this lesson. Enlightenment Separation of Powers Natural Law Social Contract Montesquieu John Locke What is the Enlightenment? The Enlightenment was a period of time when people developed new ideas about human existence, including peoples basic rights and the level of control they should have over their government and their futures. The Enlightenment began in Europe around 1715. People in cities like Paris gathered in salons to discuss philosophy and ways to improve the human experience. Many of their ideas were based in science and reason, which is why this time was also called the Age of Reason. Natural Rights Enlightenment thinker, John Locke, believed that human beings are born with fundamental, basic rights. These natural rights included the right to life, liberty, property, and the freedom to find happiness. In order for people to enjoy these natural rights, other rights needed to be protected. Social Contract If there was no government at all, people would live in a state of nature with no rules and complete freedom but without any protection from each other. Another of Locke s ideas was the social contract: citizens give up some freedom they would have in a state of nature (like the freedom to rob and kill people), and in exchange the government protects citizens right to life, liberty, and property. To Locke, the relationship between a government and its citizens was like an agreement. Citizens agree to obey a set of rules, and the government agrees to protect citizens rights. Separate... Montesquieu studied the laws, customs, and governments of European countries to see how they created and enforced laws. He admired the government of England. The English government had three parts: a king to enforce laws, Parliament to create laws, and courts to interpret laws. The government was divided into parts, and each part had its own purpose. Montesquieu called this the separation of powers. but Equal Dividing the powers of government was just the first step. Each part of the government needed to be balanced with the other parts. Montesquieu thought that each of the parts, or branches, of government should be equal. He worried that if one branch had more power than the others, people would suffer and lose their liberty. To avoid this, he suggested that each branch have the ability to limit the power of the other two branches. In England, if the king tried to take too much control, the Parliament or the courts could act to stop him. Today, we call this the system of checks and balances. What three things should come to mind when you hear separation of powers?

Read textbook pages 87-89 Venn diagram: Compare and contrast Montesquieu and John Locke Directions: Read the excerpts and answer the questions that follow on the lines provided. Second Treatise of Government, from John Locke s Two Treatises of Government (1690) The state of nature has a law of nature to govern it, which obliges [compels] every one: and reason, which is that law, teaches all mankind, who will but consult it, that being all equal and independent, no one ought to harm another in his life, health, liberty or possessions... Submitting to the laws of any country, living quietly, and enjoying privileges and protection under them, makes not a man a member of that society.... Nothing can make any man so, but his actually entering into it by positive engagement, and express promise and compact. This is that, which I think, concerning the beginning of political societies, and that consent which makes any one a member of any common-wealth. Finding the Central Idea: What rights does Locke discuss in the first excerpt? Describing According to Locke, what makes someone a member of political societies, or societies with governments? Quote the thinker! Fill in the thought bubble above each Enlightenment thinker with a quote that each thinker might say about how people should be governed.

SS.7.C.1.1 Enlightenment Ideas What do they look like?

SS.7.C.1.2 Impact on Government ****At the end of this lesson, I will be able to do the following: identify the important ideas contained in the Magna Carta, English Bill of Rights, Mayflower Compact, and Common Sense. evaluate the impact that the Magna Carta, English Bill of Rights, Mayflower Compact, and Common Sense had on the purposes of government. **** Terms I need to know at the end of this lesson. Magna Carta English Bill of Rights Mayflower Compact Thomas Paine s Common Sense Limited Monarchy Self-Governed

Brainpop and page 86-87 Page 90-91 Page 87 Page 103

SS.7.C.2.1.2 IMPACT on Government Name and illustrate the IMPACT.