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More from this lesson
deductive reasoning
inductive reasoning
empirical reasoning
conjectural reasoningPeople have fundamental rights that cannot be revoked by human-made laws or political leaders.
Rights and freedoms are temporary and can be revoked for any reason by political leaders.
Rights come into existence only with the creation of human-made laws that derive from a monarch’s authority.
Animals living in a state of nature should be granted the same rights and freedoms as their human counterparts.John Locke
Thomas Hobbes
Jeremy Bentham
Edmund Burkethe social contract
the general will
natural law
the Zoroastrian traditionThey were centers of royal power and tightly controlled by monarchs.
They served as important outlets for news and information.
They enabled people from a variety of social backgrounds to acquire an informal education.
They had their origins in the cities of the Islamic world.the salons
the coffeehouses
the academies
the royal societiesa long-distance community of writers who corresponded with each other across Europe and the Atlantic
the urban areas of western Europe that housed the printshops of the Enlightenment
the debates that occurred in the coffee shops of eighteenth-century France
the royal libraries of the English monarchlow levels of literacy and a lack of leisure time
lack of interest
a widespread shortage of books and other printed materials
royal edicts restricting the practice of reading to all but a small aristocratic elite