The Scientific Revolution & Modernity
War and Power in the 17th Century
Japan’s Sakoku and Edo Culture
Science, Reason, and the Enlightenment
Urbanization and the Modern Self
100

What major shift in thinking defined the Scientific Revolution and marked the beginning of modernity?

A paradigm shift toward empirical observation, experimentation, and rational thought as sources of knowledge.

100

What two major wars defined the 17th century in Europe?

The Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648) and the English Civil War (1642–1651).

100

What does Sakoku mean in the context of Japanese history?

“Closed country” — Japan’s policy of isolation from most foreign contact during the Edo period

100

What were the three key ideals of the Enlightenment?

Reason, Optimism, and Individual Rights

100

What did Descartes’ phrase “Cogito ergo sum” mean for the emerging “modern self”?

“I think, therefore I am” — the self is defined by conscious thought and individual awareness.

200

In contrast to the “Age of Faith,” what characterized the “Age of Reason”?

A move toward secularism, individual reasoning, and viewing society through a rational and critical lens rather than religion.

200

Who were the opposing sides in the English Civil War?

The Royalists (Cavaliers) vs. the Parliamentarians (Roundheads) led by Oliver Cromwell

200

What 1635 policy formally restricted Japanese people from leaving or re-entering Japan?

The Edict of 1635, which banned travel abroad and limited trade to the Dutch and Chinese at Nagasaki.

200

Which philosopher is most associated with rationalism and the idea of mind-body dualism?

René Descartes

200

What was a major cultural result of the Dutch Golden Age?

A flourishing of art and science supported by wealthy merchant patrons and religious tolerance.

300

How did the Scientific Revolution redefine humanity’s relationship to nature?

Nature was seen as a system governed by laws discoverable through mathematics and science, not divine mystery.

300

What event sparked the Thirty Years’ War in 1618?

The Defenestration of Prague, when Protestant nobles threw Catholic officials out of a castle window.

300

Despite isolation, how did Japan continue to engage with Western science and knowledge?

Through rangaku or “Dutch learning,” translating Western scientific and medical texts brought by Dutch traders.

300

What was Voltaire’s main critique of Enlightenment “optimism” in Candide?

He satirized Leibniz’s claim that this is “the best of all possible worlds,” exposing blind faith in reason and progress

300

Which European cities rose as centers of commerce during 1500–1800?

Venice, Antwerp, Genoa, Amsterdam, and London

400

What did “modernity” emphasize in both intellectual and institutional terms?

Intellectually: critical reflection and deductive reasoning; 

institutionally: rule by law, bureaucracy, education, and free press.


400

How did Hobbes’ Leviathan reflect the turmoil of the English Civil War?

It portrayed the state of nature as a war of all against all and argued that peace required an absolute sovereign.

400

Name two core principles of Edo-period aesthetics and their meanings.

Irregularity (Wabi) – beauty in imperfection and simplicity 

Perishability (Sabi) – aged, rustic beauty

Simplicity (shibui) - refined, richness, not flashy or plain

Suggestion (yugen) - mysterious, elegant


400

How did the “subject-object scheme” reflect the Enlightenment worldview?

It placed humans as knowing subjects and nature as an object to be studied and controlled by reason.


400


How did Rembrandt’s Anatomy Lessons reflect the modern mindset?

They embodied the spirit of empirical observation (“to see for myself”) and the search for knowledge through science and art.


500


What does the “epistemological shift” of modernity mean?

a fundamental change in the basis of knowledge—from divine revelation to empirical inquiry and reason.

500

How did Locke’s view of the state of nature differ from Hobbes’?

The state of nature was relatively peaceful and governed by natural law, and that people had the right to rebel against unjust rulers.

500

How did Edo aesthetics challenge Western notions of “art for art’s sake”?

By linking art to spiritual impermanence, moral reflection, and harmony with nature, not pure self-expression or beauty.

500

What is “extreme anthropocentrism,” and how does it relate to the Enlightenment?

The belief that humans are the center and measure of all things, emphasizing human reason’s dominance over nature and other beings.

500

what are the key features of the “modern self”?

Being inwardly focused, self-aware, self-determining, and expressive, defining identity through thought and choice rather than divine order.

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