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Multiple Choice Quiz
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1
Who was NOT one of the most important seventeenth century thinkers to the Enlightenment?
A)Isaac Newton
B)Rene Descartes
C)Francis Bacon
D)John Locke
E)Thomas Hobbes
2
Science was important to the Enlightenment as
A)the focus of the philosophes' original thought.
B)a source of theoretical justifications for the philosophes' programs.
C)an inspiring example of the success of reason and experience.
D)the major recruiting ground for new philosophes.
E)a justification for military adventurism.
3
The Enlightenment eroded the authority of revealed religion through all of the following means EXCEPT
A)toleration, which demanded the coexistence of competing revealed truths.
B)deism, which stripped religion of its mystical and supernatural trappings.
C)science, which proved that the universe is just a giant mechanism.
D)criticism, which subjected Christianity to rationalist analysis.
E)liberal theology, which opposed religious superstition or "enthusiasm."
4
One important reason the philosophes championed intellectual freedom was
A)they felt that all points of view must be treated as equally valid.
B)the beliefs they opposed were supported by official power.
C)their beliefs rested not on assumptions but on facts.
D)they wanted to mobilize the masses.
E)they believed they could convince government officials of the rightness of their ideas.
5
All of the following Enlightenment figures pioneered the social sciences EXCEPT
A)Montesquieu, who essentially founded political science by writing a comparative study of governments.
B)David Hume, who transformed ethics from a philosophical to a scientific field of study.
C)Adam Smith, who advanced economics by focusing on the mechanical workings of the market.
D)Voltaire, who moved history beyond chronicles of battles to analysis of social institutions and culture.
E)Immanuel Kant, who attempted to harmonize the notion of absolute moral values with practical reason.
6
The Encyclopedia advanced the Enlightenment by all of the following EXCEPT
A)conveying the philosophes' concept of useful knowledge.
B)forcing opponents of the Enlightenment to concede by its weight of evidence.
C)stressing the social utility of science and social science.
D)overcoming official censorship in the process of satisfying the demand for works of the Enlightenment.
E)applying rational standards to religion.
7
Rousseau advocated all of the following EXCEPT
A)the founding of morals on the basis of conscience rather than reason.
B)the creation of a new academy that would bring together scientists and humanists.
C)education through the cultivation of natural talents rather than imposition of dry information.
D)a social and political system in which individual desires are subordinate to group consensus.
E)a return to simplicity to shrug off the trappings of a materialistic culture.
8
The elite's cosmopolitan culture, the "republic of letters," was held together by all of the following EXCEPT
A)a lecture circuit that paid philosophes to give public talks throughout Europe.
B)travel, and in particular the "grand tour" of modern capitals and ancient ruins.
C)the use of French as a common language.
D)learned academies that served as conduits for advanced scientific and philosophical ideas.
E)salons that brought aristocrats, philosophes, and well-to-do commoners together.
9
The growth of publishing in the eighteenth century was evidenced by all of the following EXCEPT
A)the proliferation of journals for specialized interests.
B)the disappearance of oral traditions in popular culture.
C)the appearance of regular newspapers.
D)the increasing number and profitability of booksellers.
E)the growth of traveling circulating libraries.
10
The novel, romantic poetry, and symphonic music had in common that they
A)celebrated the structure that classical forms gave to human experience.
B)ignored linear song structures in favor of dissonance.
C)rebelled against the constraints of classical forms by abandoning structure.
D)opened up artistic experience to peasants and the urban working classes.
E)emphasized emotional experience as the focus of artistic endeavor.
11
The social context of art was changing in that
A)aristocrats were replacing the Church as the primary source of patronage.
B)artists were suddenly confronted with the need to support themselves commercially.
C)critics and public exhibitions were creating a "public sphere" of cultural discourse.
D)artists for the first time turned their attention to ordinary people's lives.
E)art was the preserve of a very small, provincial group that had no contacts with the "real world."
12
Cheap books for ordinary people tended to be in all of the following genres EXCEPT
A)almanacs.
B)religious tracts.
C)entertaining stories.
D)romances.
E)popularizations of the Enlightenment.
13
Literacy in France was
A)highest in the northeast.
B)highest in the east.
C)highest in the south.
D)highest in the southwest.
E)the lowest in Europe.
14
Which countries did the most to promote schooling of the common people?
A)England and France
B)France and Prussia
C)England and Austria
D)Austria and Prussia
E)Prussia and England
15
Popular organizations included all of the following EXCEPT
A)journeymen's secret societies that combined social and trade-union functions.
B)confraternities honoring saints that united established artisans and provided for a dignified funeral.
C)mutual aid societies that collected dues and provided aid in times of illness or accident.
D)salons in which social and cultural leaders met to exchange their views.
E)tavern culture which provided community for a poor clientele.
16
During the eighteenth century, refined cultural tastes came to be
A)essential at all levels of society.
B)seen by all to be hollow pretense.
C)the sign of membership in the elite.
D)linked to a democratic view of society.
E)a measure of one's arrogance.
17
The Enlightenment thinker who authored Elements of the Philosophy of Newton was
A)Locke.
B)Hobbes.
C)Rousseau.
D)Voltaire.
E)Diderot.
18
Voltaire's best-selling masterpiece that was burned by authorities in Switzerland, France, and the Netherlands was
A)The Philosophical Dictionary.
B)The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.
C)The Spirit of the Laws.
D)The Encyclopedia.
E)Emile, or Treatise on Education.
19
The author of The Spirit of the Laws, a comparative study of governments and societies, was
A)Voltaire.
B)Hobbes.
C)Montesquieu.
D)Kant.
E)Rousseau.
20
In his book The Social Contract, Rousseau described the ideal polity as
A)a theocracy.
B)a government that has returned to a state of nature.
C)government in which individuals have a role in making the law to which they submit.
D)one led by a natural aristocracy of the educated and wealthy.
E)a military autocracy with a professional bureaucracy.







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