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B1 中级 英语 16:23 Educational

The Enlightenment: Crash Course European History #18

CrashCourse · 2,647,719 次观看 · 添加于 2 周前

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00:00

Hi I’m John Green and this is Crash Course European History.

00:03

So far, we’ve seen a ton of political change and continuing warfare in the midst of the

00:07

seventeenth century’s little ice age, and history often focuses on these types of political

00:12

and military stories, but there were also other changes occurring: shifts in how people

00:17

perceived the everyday world.

00:19

The linking of phenomena like earthquakes and eclipses with human events goes back a

00:24

very long way, like to the beginning of our species, as does the belief that supernatural

00:30

forces are deeply shaping the lives of individual humans.

00:34

For instance, in a previous video about witchcraft, we discussed how earthquake tremors in Istanbul

00:39

in 1648 were seen as portents of a sultan’s death a few months later.

00:44

But a century after that, a huge earthquake struck Lisbon, Portugal on All Saints’ Day

00:48

of 1755.

00:50

Tens of thousands of people died, many from a tsunami that followed the quake.

00:55

Now, some theologians argued this was punishment from God for the world’s sins, but others

01:00

pointed out that the earthquake had destroyed a lot of churches while sparing a lot of brothels.

01:07

Voltaire wrote a famous poem in response to the earthquake that included the memorable

01:11

lines “As the dying voices call out, will you dare respond to this appalling spectacle

01:17

of smoking ashes with, “This is the necessary effect of the eternal laws Freely chosen by

01:24

God?”

01:25

The way Europeans were looking at the world had changed between the Istanbul earthquake

01:30

and the Lisbon one: The Enlightenment was thriving.

01:34

[Intro] So, today we want to emphasize that the Enlightenment

01:45

wasn’t all high fallutin’ calculations of the sun’s orbit or theories about the

01:50

mathematical laws of the universe or for that matter theories about earthquake causality.

01:56

It also considered more down-to-earth situations like how people of different social classes

02:01

relate to one another, how trade and manufacturing should function, and what the relationship

02:06

of ordinary people should be to their government.

02:10

The Enlightenment or Age of Light refers to the belief that the musty old ideas needed

02:15

to be exposed to rational investigation to see if they were still valuable.

02:21

The bright light of reason needed to shine on tradition.

02:25

And this momentous challenge to tradition came about during a time in which Europe was

02:29

being completely transformed in many ways that are sometimes forgotten amid all the

02:34

excitement about Voltaire and reason.

02:38

So let’s go straight to the Thought Bubble today.

02:41

Beyond the wars and state-building we’ve already seen,

02:43

2. increasing abundance and novelty was creeping into the everyday lives of Europeans.

02:49

Coffee, tea, chocolate, tobacco, and other commodities led to experimentation.

02:55

For instance, one English housewife saw tea for the first time and thought it was meant

02:58

to be baked as a kind of pie filling.

03:01

A diplomat said that tea and coffee had brought a greater “sobriety” and “civility”

03:06

to everyday life in Europe.

03:08

Europe had previously been a land of famine and mere subsistence for essentially all of

03:13

its history.

03:15

But now the cultivation of new foods from the Americas like potatoes and corn,

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8. along with literally thousands of other new plants, meant that available calories

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were increasing,

03:25

And it also introduced the idea that maybe the world didn’t have to be perpetually

03:29

on the brink of starvation and catastrophe.

03:32

Also, by this time, tens of thousands of Europeans had traveled the world, and had experienced

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