<< Hide Menu
1 min read•june 18, 2024
📖 AMSCO p.63 - p.74
Term | Definition + Significance |
The Enlightenment | A movement that encouraged people to purse scientific reason to expand on their rights rather than using God’s intervention in their daily lives. |
Phillis Wheatley | A former slave from West Africa who became the first African American published poet. |
John Bartram | A botanist who discovered how hybridize plants. |
John Copley and Benjamin West | Two notable American painters, who gained fame through portrait painting, and moved to England for fame. |
John Locke | An enlightenment thinker whose book “Two Treatises of Government” promoted ideals like natural rights, further theorizing that citizens had the power in government. |
Natural Rights | Enlightenment thinker John Locke’s “Theory of Natural Rights” states that everyone is born with inalienable rights, such as the right to liberty, freedom, and pursuit of happiness. |
The Zenger Case | A case where John Peter Zinger was tried for slandering the New York governor; his lawyer, Andrew Hamilton, argued that the slander is the truth. The case then legally allowed newspapers to criticize the government. |
Social Contract | People have the power to run the government, and they give up part of that power to the government, who will protect the citizens’ natural rights. If the government is corrupt, then the people have the right to rebel. |
© 2024 Fiveable Inc. All rights reserved.