Deck 16: The Enlightenment: From Conflict to Tolerance
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Deck 16: The Enlightenment: From Conflict to Tolerance
1
What marked the beginning of the Thirty Years' War?
A) German nobility wanted to overthrow the Holy Roman Emperor
B) Ferdinand II cancelled religious freedom in Bohemia
C) French troops launched a raid on a Swiss battalion
D) French King Louis IV invaded the western part of the Holy Roman Empire
A) German nobility wanted to overthrow the Holy Roman Emperor
B) Ferdinand II cancelled religious freedom in Bohemia
C) French troops launched a raid on a Swiss battalion
D) French King Louis IV invaded the western part of the Holy Roman Empire
B
2
What was the response of the German Lutheran's to the Thirty Years' War?
A) They initially gave robust support to the Protestant cause, but ultimately withdrew because of the cost
B) They supported the Catholic cause because it guaranteed that they would gain more land
C) They stood aloof from it all
D) Some fought for the Protestant cause and others for the Catholic cause
A) They initially gave robust support to the Protestant cause, but ultimately withdrew because of the cost
B) They supported the Catholic cause because it guaranteed that they would gain more land
C) They stood aloof from it all
D) Some fought for the Protestant cause and others for the Catholic cause
C
3
At the time of the Thirty Years' War, Spain, the Holy Roman Empire, Austria, and Bohemia were all ruled by:
A) The Pope
B) The French, by way of intermarriage
C) The Hapsburg family
D) The Holy Roman Emperor
A) The Pope
B) The French, by way of intermarriage
C) The Hapsburg family
D) The Holy Roman Emperor
C
4
Which side of the Thirty years' War did the French support?
A) Protestant
B) Catholic
C) Lutheran, but not Calvinist
D) The Papal States
A) Protestant
B) Catholic
C) Lutheran, but not Calvinist
D) The Papal States
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5
What ended the Thirty Years' War?
A) The civil war in England
B) The Clemency Agreement
C) The Hinderland Accord
D) The Peace of Westphalia
A) The civil war in England
B) The Clemency Agreement
C) The Hinderland Accord
D) The Peace of Westphalia
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6
What was the author's assessment of the Thirty Years' War?
A) Germany ultimately won, given its land expansion
B) The biggest loser was France, which lost finances, land, and religious freedoms
C) Each country made both gains and losses
D) It was a debacle with horrendous loss
A) Germany ultimately won, given its land expansion
B) The biggest loser was France, which lost finances, land, and religious freedoms
C) Each country made both gains and losses
D) It was a debacle with horrendous loss
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7
What were French Protestants called?
A) Valores
B) Huguenots
C) Bon Vivants
D) Baptists
A) Valores
B) Huguenots
C) Bon Vivants
D) Baptists
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8
What was the relationship between the Catholic French government and French Calvinists?
A) Calvinists fortunes vacillated between tolerance and persecution
B) Calvinists were persecuted up to the French Revolution
C) Calvinists were widely tolerated until Henry Bourbon took the throne
D) Calvinists flourished in the south, but were persecuted in the north
A) Calvinists fortunes vacillated between tolerance and persecution
B) Calvinists were persecuted up to the French Revolution
C) Calvinists were widely tolerated until Henry Bourbon took the throne
D) Calvinists flourished in the south, but were persecuted in the north
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9
How did the Puritans come by their name?
A) They wanted to purify English society of sinful practices (e.g., dancing)
B) They wanted to purify the Church of England from any semblance of Catholicism
C) They wanted to purify themselves of sin
D) Their enemies called them this as a way of saying they were self-righteous
A) They wanted to purify English society of sinful practices (e.g., dancing)
B) They wanted to purify the Church of England from any semblance of Catholicism
C) They wanted to purify themselves of sin
D) Their enemies called them this as a way of saying they were self-righteous
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10
What is the Presbyterian model of church governance?
A) It is ruled by a council of elders
B) It is ruled by a bishop and his priests, but they had to get the people's agreement for any changes to the church
C) It is ruled by a House of Commons
D) It is ruled as a democracy
A) It is ruled by a council of elders
B) It is ruled by a bishop and his priests, but they had to get the people's agreement for any changes to the church
C) It is ruled by a House of Commons
D) It is ruled as a democracy
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11
How were the English Protestants' concerns about King James I allayed?
A) He wrote the King James Bible
B) Catholics tried to kill him and members of Parliament
C) He was made to swear an oath of allegiance to the Church of England
D) They never were as they always suspected him of Catholic sympathies
A) He wrote the King James Bible
B) Catholics tried to kill him and members of Parliament
C) He was made to swear an oath of allegiance to the Church of England
D) They never were as they always suspected him of Catholic sympathies
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12
What was the author's assessment of the King James Bible?
A) It was linguistically beautiful, but actually a very poor translation
B) It was an excellent translation, but the language was far from the way common English talked
C) It was the finest translation of the Bible in the vernacular to date
D) It was an honorable attempt, but was theologically problematic
A) It was linguistically beautiful, but actually a very poor translation
B) It was an excellent translation, but the language was far from the way common English talked
C) It was the finest translation of the Bible in the vernacular to date
D) It was an honorable attempt, but was theologically problematic
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13
What was interesting about Roger Williams who founded Rhode Island and the first Baptist church in the Americas?
A) He wasn't even a Christian at the time
B) He was asked to be the pastor each year for twelve years and finally relented and agreed
C) He argued for a United Colonies of America, this over 150 years before the Declaration of Independence
D) He argued for the separation of church and state as well as religious toleration
A) He wasn't even a Christian at the time
B) He was asked to be the pastor each year for twelve years and finally relented and agreed
C) He argued for a United Colonies of America, this over 150 years before the Declaration of Independence
D) He argued for the separation of church and state as well as religious toleration
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14
What did Oliver Cromwell oversee?
A) The execution of the king and Puritan laws put into place in England
B) The collapse of the Tudor dynasty and the rise of the House of William and Mary
C) Massive colonization in the Americas and East Indies
D) The rebuilding of churches and monasteries in England after their civil war
A) The execution of the king and Puritan laws put into place in England
B) The collapse of the Tudor dynasty and the rise of the House of William and Mary
C) Massive colonization in the Americas and East Indies
D) The rebuilding of churches and monasteries in England after their civil war
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15
Did Oliver Cromwell support the bishops of England?
A) Yes, he found them the appropriate power to check the King's power
B) Yes, he even tried to get the archbishop of Canterbury made king
C) No, as a Puritan, he rejected the episcopal model
D) No, as a Puritan he believed that all are priests, all are bishops
A) Yes, he found them the appropriate power to check the King's power
B) Yes, he even tried to get the archbishop of Canterbury made king
C) No, as a Puritan, he rejected the episcopal model
D) No, as a Puritan he believed that all are priests, all are bishops
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16
Does the author believe the term Wars of Religion is apt?
A) Yes, he thought it was the scandal of the Christian faith
B) Yes, and he argued that little had really changed, except for the massive loss of life
C) No, he called them wars of belief, not wars of religion
D) No, he said they were European wars, and religion was just one important factor
A) Yes, he thought it was the scandal of the Christian faith
B) Yes, and he argued that little had really changed, except for the massive loss of life
C) No, he called them wars of belief, not wars of religion
D) No, he said they were European wars, and religion was just one important factor
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17
Regarding the Wars of Religion, the author quotes Cavanaugh's The Myth of Religious Violence to argue what?
A) There are numerous examples where religious loyalties were trumped by other concerns
B) None of the wars were ultimately concerned for religious issues
C) Modern wars were based on the Wars of Religion
D) Religious concerns turned out to be a private affair during the Wars of Religion
A) There are numerous examples where religious loyalties were trumped by other concerns
B) None of the wars were ultimately concerned for religious issues
C) Modern wars were based on the Wars of Religion
D) Religious concerns turned out to be a private affair during the Wars of Religion
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18
The author described denominations creating documents that secured their beliefs. What did the Reformed tradition rely on?
A) The Book of Concord
B) The Thirty-Nine Articles
C) Calvin's Institutes
D) The Book of Common Prayer
A) The Book of Concord
B) The Thirty-Nine Articles
C) Calvin's Institutes
D) The Book of Common Prayer
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19
The author describes the Enlightenment as:
A) The age of cultural maturity
B) The age of church decline
C) The age of brutality
D) The age of reason
A) The age of cultural maturity
B) The age of church decline
C) The age of brutality
D) The age of reason
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20
What made Copernicus hesitant to publish his theory that the sun was the center of the solar system?
A) He challenged formal church teaching
B) He challenged the witness of the Bible
C) He challenged the working models most scientists had at the time
D) His benefactor threatened to withdraw all support, leaving him a pauper
A) He challenged formal church teaching
B) He challenged the witness of the Bible
C) He challenged the working models most scientists had at the time
D) His benefactor threatened to withdraw all support, leaving him a pauper
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21
What was Galileo's sentence for being found guilty of heresy?
A) He was restricted to his villa in Florence
B) He was put in the papal dungeon
C) He was banished from Italy, and his possessions were confiscated
D) He was burned at the stake
A) He was restricted to his villa in Florence
B) He was put in the papal dungeon
C) He was banished from Italy, and his possessions were confiscated
D) He was burned at the stake
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22
What did Denis Diderot and Paul d'Holbach argue that led to their conclusion God was unnecessary?
A) Matter worked mechanically through the laws of physics
B) Matter and motion were eternal
C) God as a first cause also would have to be considered a contingent being, thus the universe could have no noncontingent being, that is, God
D) They argued, God was dead
A) Matter worked mechanically through the laws of physics
B) Matter and motion were eternal
C) God as a first cause also would have to be considered a contingent being, thus the universe could have no noncontingent being, that is, God
D) They argued, God was dead
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23
According to the author what best characterizes the church's relationship to science?
A) It was widely opposed to science
B) It stayed aloof from science
C) It argued that these were different magisteria and thus unrelated
D) It supported scientific discovery
A) It was widely opposed to science
B) It stayed aloof from science
C) It argued that these were different magisteria and thus unrelated
D) It supported scientific discovery
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24
What was the point of the movement of rationalism?
A) To find ways to argue doctrine with intellectual rigor
B) To secure knowledge by reason rather than by revelation
C) Ultimately to prove that God did not exist
D) To create a society under the banner Rationes Pontificus
A) To find ways to argue doctrine with intellectual rigor
B) To secure knowledge by reason rather than by revelation
C) Ultimately to prove that God did not exist
D) To create a society under the banner Rationes Pontificus
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25
What is empiricism?
A) Knowledge by experience
B) Knowledge by unbiased thought
C) Knowledge by revelation
D) Knowledge for knowledge sake
A) Knowledge by experience
B) Knowledge by unbiased thought
C) Knowledge by revelation
D) Knowledge for knowledge sake
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26
What was David Hume's understanding of miracles?
A) They represented proof of God that went beyond rational explanation
B) They required faith, which ultimately is the foundation for sound religion
C) They represented a prescientific imagination
D) They represented the kinds of beliefs that ought to lead one to atheism
A) They represented proof of God that went beyond rational explanation
B) They required faith, which ultimately is the foundation for sound religion
C) They represented a prescientific imagination
D) They represented the kinds of beliefs that ought to lead one to atheism
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27
According to a Deistic framework, what was God's relationship to the world?
A) God guided the world, but without revelation
B) God's omnipresence in the world was conditioned on his being eternal: eternity allows for ubiquity
C) God is all knowing, and thus all things are predestined
D) God is unrelated to the world, but would judge people after death
A) God guided the world, but without revelation
B) God's omnipresence in the world was conditioned on his being eternal: eternity allows for ubiquity
C) God is all knowing, and thus all things are predestined
D) God is unrelated to the world, but would judge people after death
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28
What was the French Enlightenment thinkers' relationship to the church?
A) They were hostile
B) They sought a way to unite faith and reason
C) They created philosophies that ultimately helped church theologians, though this would be long after they died
D) Unlike the English Enlightenment thinkers, they were among the most devout
A) They were hostile
B) They sought a way to unite faith and reason
C) They created philosophies that ultimately helped church theologians, though this would be long after they died
D) Unlike the English Enlightenment thinkers, they were among the most devout
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29
What was the author's assessment of Enlightenment confidence in human nature?
A) He believes that it is the only real hope for a modern Christianity
B) He finds it unwarranted, given secular wars and the degradation of the earth
C) He calls it the basis for everything we hold sacred today
D) He said that the verdict is still out on the results of the Enlightenment
A) He believes that it is the only real hope for a modern Christianity
B) He finds it unwarranted, given secular wars and the degradation of the earth
C) He calls it the basis for everything we hold sacred today
D) He said that the verdict is still out on the results of the Enlightenment
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30
According to the author, how ingrained is philosophical naturalism in the West?
A) It is still the minority position, but gaining strength
B) In scholarly discourse, it is the orthodoxy of the intellectual world
C) It is ironically the very thing that has buttressed modern faith
D) The author said it could not be assessed
A) It is still the minority position, but gaining strength
B) In scholarly discourse, it is the orthodoxy of the intellectual world
C) It is ironically the very thing that has buttressed modern faith
D) The author said it could not be assessed
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31
Martin Luther was opposed to the German Peasants' War.
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32
The Peace of Augsburg allowed Catholics to live in Catholic principalities; Lutherans to live in Lutheran principalities; and Calvinists to live in Calvinist principalities.
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33
After Ferdinand was dethroned in Bohemia, he became the Holy Roman emperor.
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34
The Peace of Westphalia established the sovereignty of nation states.
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35
Cardinal Richelieu of France withdrew Calvinists' right to worship.
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36
One reason Puritans distrusted King James I was that his mother, Mary, Queen of Scots, was a staunch Catholic.
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37
The King James Bible actually was only produced 100 years after his death.
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38
When the Puritans fully ran England, they abolished sports and theater.
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39
According to the author, the latter half of the Thirty Years' War was fundamentally a proxy between Catholic France and Catholic Hapsburgs.
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40
The primary document of the Lutheran Church is the Thirty-Nine Articles.
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41
According to the author, an important motivation for Pope Urban arresting Galileo was that Galileo mocked him publicly.
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42
Galileo's understanding of the relationship between science and religion was that there was none.
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43
Christianity has a long reactive history against science.
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44
John Locke believed that philosophy virtually proved God did not exist.
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45
The Enlightenment ultimately undermined religious toleration.
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46
Do you think the Thirty Years' War succeeded in satisfying the criteria of Just War Theory? Explain your answer.
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47
The author claims that the Wars of Religion were less interested in religion as they were in politics and economics. What are his arguments and do you think that they are persuasive?
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48
Many scientists are atheists who believe that scientific inquiry can explain most or all of the conditions of the universe. Do you believe this is a justified position? Why or why not?
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49
Do you think the Enlightenment's faith in humanity is justified? In what ways might it be and how might it be challenged?
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50
The author believes that the church has principally supported science throughout his history. What are his arguments, and do you think he is persuasive?
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