Exam 4: Toward a New Heaven and a New Earth: The Scientific Revolution and the Emergence of Modern Science
Exam 1: Reformation and Religious Warfare in the Sixteenth Century126 Questions
Exam 2: Europe and the World: New Encounters, 1500-1800127 Questions
Exam 3: State Building and the Search for Order in the Seventeenth Century129 Questions
Exam 4: Toward a New Heaven and a New Earth: The Scientific Revolution and the Emergence of Modern Science122 Questions
Exam 5: The Eighteenth Century: an Age of Enlightenment126 Questions
Exam 6: The Eighteenth Century: European States, International Wars, and Social Change127 Questions
Exam 7: A Revolution in Politics: The Era of the French Revolution and Napoleon128 Questions
Exam 8: The Industrial Revolution and Its Impact on European Society123 Questions
Exam 9: Reaction, Revolution, and Romanticism, 1815-1850129 Questions
Exam 10: An Age of Nationalism and Realism, 1850-1871128 Questions
Exam 11: Mass Society in an Age of Progress, 1871-1894128 Questions
Exam 12: An Age of Modernity, Anxiety, and Imperialism, 1894-1914126 Questions
Exam 13: The Beginning of the Twentieth-Century Crisis: War and Revolution127 Questions
Exam 14: The Futile Search for Stability: Europe Between the Wars, 1919-1939133 Questions
Exam 15: The Deepening of the European Crisis: World War II130 Questions
Exam 16: Cold War and a New Western World, 1945-1965129 Questions
Exam 17: Protest and Stagnation: The Western World, 1965-1985128 Questions
Exam 18: After the Fall: The Western World in a Global Age Since 1985131 Questions
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Why were seventeenth-century European intellectuals so intent on developing methods of study for entire bodies and specific fields of human knowledge? What did it mean then to become a methodical (or systematic) thinker or researcher?
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