French Enlightenment
The Failure of Enlightened Absolutism in France: An Analysis of the Economic and Political Situation of the Country during the Enlightenment Period
The dawn of the 18th century saw the emergence of a period that eventually determined the future of modern society -- that is, the Age of Enlightenment. Under the Age of Enlightenment, the prevalent ideology is that it is possible for people to formulate and enforce reform and changes in the society. Social reform is especially applicable in the European experience, wherein the rigid and conservative influence of Christianity has led to the development of a society that is characteristically theocentric.
The Enlightenment is characterized by a shift of society's concern to the natural and social sciences through scientific observation, which necessitates objectivism and rational thinking. These changes in the character of European society are brought about by the rise of modernization, where agricultural-traditional society with its norms, rituals, and traditions, is replaced by industrial capitalism, where division of labor and social structures and systems are clearly defined.
Despite the widespread popularity and subsistence of European society to the Enlightenment, it was in France where it flourished most. In France, the enlightenment was characterized by a group of theorists called the "philosophes," individuals "who were committed to political change in France and they saw themselves as a new class in alliance with the rising bourgeoisie ... they adopted an educative role to aid progress ... applying the new experimental method to the sphere of the social ... [t]hey focused on economic and social history and constructed universal histories of the process of the rise of civilization ... " (Preston, 1997:35).
Two philosophes became significant to the progress and development of the enlightenment in France: Montesquieu and...
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