English 3 Mr. Kummerow
Encounters and Foundations to 1800
Age of ReasonNotes
Age of Reason: Tinkerers and Experimenters
The Smallpox Plague
Unlikely Cure
A Practical Approach to Change
Deism: Are People Basically Good?
Self-made Americans
Question: How did rationalism differ from Puritanism, and what effect did rationalism have on the new American political system?
Encounters and Foundations to 1800
Age of Reason Notes
- The Age of Reason: Tinkerers and Experimenters
- began in Europe in the 1600s and 1700s
- Rationalists believed that human beings could use their reason to find truth
- Puritans saw God as active in human affairs; the rationalists saw God differently.
- God’s special gift to people was reason
- Reason enabled each person to direct his or her own life.
- Scientific experimenting thrived in the American Colonies.
- Americans had to make do with what they had, and they had to achieve results.
- The Smallpox Plague
- In April 1721, a ship from the West Indies docked in BostonHarbor.
- It carried the disease of smallpox.
- Spread rapidly and often killed.
- The smallpox conflict shows that Americans could be contradictory
- Mather, a devout Puritan, but also a practical scientist.
- Willingness to experiment was necessary to the public welfare.
- Deism: Are People Basically Good?
- Rationalists saw God in the natural world.
- Believed that all people at all times could discover God’s natural laws.
- This outlook is called deism
- Deists viewed people as basically good.
- Use reason to perfect themselves and society.
- The best way to worship God was to do good for others.
- Rationalist ideas helped fuel the American struggle for Independence.
- Helped to shape the Declaration of Independence.
- Self-made Americans
- The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin is a masterpiece of the American Age of Reason.
- Franklin used a popular form of Puritan writing – writing about oneself.
- Franklin’s work was not religious.
- His story of a self-made American would become the model for some classic American literature and for many bestsellers today.
Benjamin Franklin
Notes
- 1 of 17 children
- Accomplishments
- By 24, he was a prosperous merchant, owner of a successful shop, and the publisher of The Pennsylvania Gazette
- Help founded the Academy of Philadelphia, the American Philosophical Society, and the first public library
- Good negotiator
- Used the skill to service the state and country
- Began his autobiography when he was 65 and continued working on it for years. He never finished it and it was not published during his lifetime.
- Poor Richards Almanack is biggest publishing success (25 years)
- from Autobiography
- Get to know the writer’s
- Personality
- Philosophical beliefs
- Attitudes
- Look beneath the surface of the text for Inferences
- Definition: Clues for guessing the writer’s suggested but unstated beliefs
- from Poor Richard’s Almanack
- Aphorisms
- Definition: A brief, cleverly worded statement that makes a wise observation about life
- Purposes: Entertain, instruct, suggest ways to overcome obstacles, solve problems, achieve success; and inspire
- Satire: Use humor to mock and criticize the way things are that can address any subject
Benjamin Franklin
Notes
- Accomplishments
- Good negotiator
- from Autobiography
- Get to know the writer’s…
- Definition:
- from Poor Richard’s Almanack
- Aphorisms
- Definition:
- Purposes:
- Satire: