Deck 13: Thought and Culture in the Early Nineteenth Century

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Question
Romantic art emphasized

A) photographic imitations of nature.
B) conscious and precise observations of a subject.
C) harmony between the human mind and the subject.
D) a non-religious attitude toward their art.
E) spontaneous and authentic expressions of the artist's feelings, fantasies and dreams.
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Question
Of the following, ____ chose to utilize Hegel's idea that there is system behind the movement of history.

A) Hume
B) Kant
C) de Bonald
D) Freud
E) Marx
Question
Hegel's theories may be associated with

A) glorification of the Prussian state.
B) socialism.
C) technocratic socialism.
D) constitutional monarchy.
E) royal absolutism.
Question
According to the romantics, abstract and scientific knowledge are insufficient guides to knowledge because of all the following reasons EXCEPT

A) too much time is spent on establishing specific principles on nature.
B) romantics focus on human diversity and uniqueness.
C) romantics feel that individual needs to find and fulfill an inner self.
D) a person needs to play his own music and write his own poetry.
E) a person can survive by reason alone.
Question
German idealism developed as a response to the ideas of

A) de Bonald.
B) Hugo.
C) Schlegel.
D) Schleiermacher.
E) Hume.
Question
Which of the following shows the dark side of romanticism?

A) It served as background to the extreme nationalism of the twentieth century.
B) It promoted drama and poetry.
C) It supported the idea that the individual artist should follow his or her imagination.
D) It focused on the creative capacities inherent in human emotions.
E) The Romantics shed light on a side of human nature overlooked by the philosophes.
Question
How did Hume cast doubt on scientific certainty and the cause and effect theory?

A) He claimed that regularities observed in the past will happen in the present and future.
B) An objective reality exists which rational creatures can comprehend.
C) There is no law at work in nature that guarantees a specific cause will always produce a specific effect.
D) The mind has the ability to sense natural laws.
E) Science is able to prove a necessary connection that produces scientific laws of cause and effect.
Question
Which of the following statements is not correct?

A) Conservatives viewed God and history as the only sources of political authority.
B) Edmund Burke was concerned that fanaticism would lead to terrorism.
C) Conservatism did not point to a limitation of the Enlightenment.
D) Conservatives believed that no legitimate or sound constitution could be drawn up by a group assembled for that purpose.
E) Conservatives did not view human beings as good by nature.
Question
Who has been called the dominant figure among French romantics?

A) Flaubert
B) Zola
C) Sand
D) Hugo
E) Bacon
Question
By attacking reason with an excessive zeal the romantics undermined which important concept that was made extreme by Hitler?

A) They emphasized the importance of political unity of a nation.
B) The emotionalism and irrationalism of romanticism was applied to politics.
C) Romantics erased the poetry of the world.
D) Nationalism was destroyed and replaced by a feeling of world culture.
E) The past was not an important part of romanticism and only a glorious future was important.
Question
All of the following are true statements about the romantics except they

A) denounced the rationalism of the philosophes because it crushed the emotions and impeded creativity.
B) yearned to rediscover in the human soul the pristine freedom that has been squashed by habits, values, rules, and standards imposed by civilization.
C) saw feeling as an obstacle to clear thinking.
D) wanted individuals to play their own music; write their own poetry; paint their own vision of nature; and live, love, and suffer in their own way.
E) saw reason as cold and dreary, and its understanding of people and life meager and inadequate.
Question
Romantics were most interested in

A) developing academic rules for the writing of poetry.
B) applying laws of nature to the natural setting that was the subject of poetry.
C) composing musical fugues.
D) expressing primitive feelings.
E) critical thinking.
Question
The romantics were among the first to attack

A) human imagination.
B) industrial capitalism.
C) folk culture.
D) creative capacities inherent in emotions.
E) humanism.
Question
The term Young Hegelians refers to

A) the docents at the University of Berlin who followed their master teacher.
B) former students of Hegel who spread his ideas in the German gymnasiums.
C) those who believed an understanding of the dialectic could lead to change in the world.
D) conservatives who accepted the world as it was because it was the result of a rational dialectic.
E) those who believed society would never be rational.
Question
The best characterization of the romantics' attitude towards history is

A) lack of interest.
B) a search for general laws of history.
C) respect for and interest in each specific historical epoch.
D) a search for edifying moral lessons from history.
E) history served a didactic purpose by providing examples of human folly.
Question
Which of the following may not be associated with Kant?

A) One cannot actually know ultimate reality.
B) Objects conform to the human mind because the mind creates order within nature.
C) The mind is a tabula rasa.
D) The mind has its own inherent logic.
E) The mind imposes structure and order on our sense experiences.
Question
Many romantics saw a dark side of the unconsciousness and were often compared to

A) Aristotle.
B) Freud.
C) William Blake
D) Dante
E) Hume
Question
The most important of the Young Hegelians was

A) Feuerbach.
B) Kierkegaard.
C) Hume.
D) Marx.
E) Kant.
Question
According to the authors of your text, the central message of the romantics was

A) the liberty and equality proclaimed by the Revolution must be secured.
B) faith must be upheld.
C) imagination was important, but feelings were not.
D) poetry should not seek to philosophize.
E) the individual imagination was primary in artistic creation.
Question
The author describes romanticism as a reaction against

A) scholastic philosophy.
B) nationalism.
C) Enlightenment rationalism.
D) the cult of the Great Man in history.
E) the otherworldly Christian orientation.
Question
The bourgeoisie in the nineteenth century usually supported

A) socialism.
B) liberalism.
C) technocratic socialism.
D) Hegelian dialectics.
E) radicalism.
Question
Who conceived the idea of the Volksgeist?

A) John Stuart Mill
B) John Locke
C) Johann Gottfried Herder
D) G.W.F. Hegel
E) Immanuel Kant
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
tabula rasa
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
William Blake
Question
Conservatives were likely to blame which of the following as the root of human malevolence?

A) Irrational laws
B) Poor education
C) Human nature
D) A bad environment
E) Liberals
Question
One may correctly say that nineteenth-century liberals

A) were followers of de Tocqueville.
B) never engaged in revolutions.
C) wanted political power to be concentrated in the hands of the masses.
D) called for universal manhood suffrage with only age qualifications as a limitation.
E) were concerned that revolution would spread to the masses.
Question
The American and French revolutions were crucial phases in the history of

A) conservatism.
B) romanticism.
C) liberalism.
D) radicalism.
E) socialism.
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Hume
Question
Two ideas that were crucial in shaping nationalism were

A) the rational outlook and folk history.
B) that power belongs to the king and the people are his subjects.
C) that the people possess unlimited sovereignty and that they are united in a nation.
D) that all people must have a right to exist and that the strong must respect the rights of the weak.
E) conservatism and radicalism.
Question
Which of the following remarked, "over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign...."?

A) de Maistre
B) Burke
C) David Hume
D) Lemercier
E) John Stuart Mill
Question
Political conservatives shared with romantics

A) faith in the unique power and value of the individual imagination.
B) devotion to the principle of equality before the law.
C) anti-Semitism.
D) veneration of the past.
E) the rejection of the past.
Question
Conservatives were generally

A) critical of Enlightenment principles that released instincts religion had once controlled.
B) suspicious of the theory of natural rights.
C) fearful of utopian visions and those who would implement them by force.
D) of the view that human wickedness was not caused by a faulty environment, but lay at the core of human nature.
E) All of these
Question
Scholars would agree with the statement that

A) in Germany, the romantic view of the state contributed to the rise of twentieth century wars.
B) Jews long settled in Germany could be considered Germans by nationalists.
C) German nationalists rejected history.
D) German nationalists denied the concept of a people's inner spirit and instead proclaimed that conscious effort by a talented people resulted in their superiority.
E) the romantics were not the earliest apostles of German nationalism.
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
modern nationalism
Question
All of the following helped to shape liberalism except

A) the rational outlook of the Greeks.
B) the view that human wickedness was not caused by faulty environment.
C) the Judeo-Christian respect for the worth and dignity of the individual.
D) John Locke's natural rights philosophy.
E) Montesquieu's theory of the separation of powers and of checks and balances.
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Victor Hugo
Question
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Conservatism
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
Question
Which of these viewed with horror the democratic creed that all people should share in political power?

A) Many bourgeois liberals
B) The romantics
C) The nationalists
D) The idealists
E) The radicals
Question
For Hegel, the supreme embodiment of Universal Reason in the world was

A) the individual.
B) the church.
C) extraordinary individuals like Jesus.
D) the German volk.
E) the state.
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
romanticism
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
John Constable
Question
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Immanuel Kant
Question
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Lord Byron
Question
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John Keats
Question
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Absolute Spirit
Question
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Ernst Cassirer
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John Stuart Mill
Question
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Freud
Question
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German idealism
Question
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Johann Gottfried Herder
Question
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Horst von Maltitz
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
nationalism
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
liberalism
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
William Wordsworth
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
George Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Question
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Volksgeist
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Edmund Burke
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Friedrich Schlegel
Question
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
E. J. Hobsbawm
Question
​During the nineteenth century, liberal nationalist helped to create all of the following countries except

A) ​Germany.
B) ​Poland.
C) ​Greece.
D) ​Italy.
E) ​Turkey.
Question
Romantics and German nationalists ​viewed the German state as

A) ​a human institution.
B) ​a rational arrangement between individuals.
C) ​a holy expression of the Germanic spirit.
D) ​a protection of personal liberty.
E) ​an application of universal norms.
Question
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   Explain the connection between romantic thought and the growth of nationalism.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Explain the connection between romantic thought and the growth of nationalism.
Question
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   What is meant by the term romanticism? hHow did the romantics differ from the philosophes?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
What is meant by the term romanticism? hHow did the romantics differ from the philosophes?
Question
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   What is meant by the term conservatism? Why did the conservatives reject the French revolution?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
What is meant by the term conservatism? Why did the conservatives reject the French revolution?
Question
​The French Revolution helped propel the growth of nationalism by

A) ​increasing the power of the French Church compared to the Vatican.
B) ​asserting that the state was not the possession of the ruler.
C) ​breaking the alliance between socialists and liberals.
D) ​demonstrating the power of the urban peasants to create a stable government.
E) ​connecting the landed aristocracy and the liberals against their conservative opposition.
Question
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   What is meant by the term liberalism? How did the liberals seek to promote the gains of the French revolution in the nineteenth century?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
What is meant by the term liberalism? How did the liberals seek to promote the gains of the French revolution in the nineteenth century?
Question
Nineteenth Century liberals​ espoused all of the following except

A) ​freedom of speech
B) ​freedom from arbitrary arrest
C) ​a government derived its authority from the consent of the governed
D) ​universal voting rights
E) ​protection of property rights
Question
​Which statement is least associated with the work of Immanuel Kant?

A) The human mind is an active instrument that coordinates chaotic streams of sensations.
B) ​Laws of science are universally valid but our dependent upon our ability to categorize them.
C) ​Our knowledge is limited to the phenomenal world.
D) ​We can demonstrate constant conjunction of events not cause and effect.
E) ​We can only know things we can experience.
Question
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   On a blank map of Europe, designate with arrows the countries that may be associated with the following cultural figures: Shelley, Wordsworth, Keats, and Byron; Hugo and Chateaubriand; Schlegel, Schiller, Schelling, and Beethoven.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
On a blank map of Europe, designate with arrows the countries that may be associated with the following cultural figures: Shelley, Wordsworth, Keats, and Byron; Hugo and Chateaubriand; Schlegel, Schiller, Schelling, and Beethoven.
Question
​Many Romantics viewed God as

A) ​a great watchmaker.
B) ​inspiring spiritual force.
C) ​a manipulative force.
D) ​ an opiate of the masses.
E) ​dispassionate observer.
Question
Romantics viewed folk culture as​

A) ​a expression of simple people with little to offer the modern world.
B) ​a collection of superstitions.
C) ​the deepest expression of national feeling.
D) ​deceptive and dangerous to nationalist goals.
E) ​steeped in past knowledge that had been saved by the Enlightenment.
Question
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   On a blank map of Europe, designate the state where each of the following philosophers worked: Hegel, Kant, Hume, and Mill.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
On a blank map of Europe, designate the state where each of the following philosophers worked: Hegel, Kant, Hume, and Mill.
Question
​Conservatives view of society included all of the following except

A) ​society needed Christianity or else it became brutalized.
B) ​the community is the building block of society.
C) ​society worked best when individuals were free and autonomous.
D) ​individualism could imperil stability.​
E) ​religion is the basis of civil society.
Question
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   Compare and contrast liberalism with conservatism.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Compare and contrast liberalism with conservatism.
Question
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   What was the relationship between nationalism and liberalism in the nineteenth century? Has this relationship necessarily continued into the twentieth century? Discuss.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
What was the relationship between nationalism and liberalism in the nineteenth century? Has this relationship necessarily continued into the twentieth century? Discuss.
Question
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   Why was history a very important part of the work of Hegel? In what way did Hegel's view of freedom actually limit man's freedom of action? How did his ideas contrast with the ideas of the philosophes?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Why was history a very important part of the work of Hegel? In what way did Hegel's view of freedom actually limit man's freedom of action? How did his ideas contrast with the ideas of the philosophes?
Question
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   What were the political views of Edmund Burke?<div style=padding-top: 35px>
What were the political views of Edmund Burke?
Question
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   On a blank map of Europe, mark the point of origin of the following ideas: idealism, romanticism, conservatism and liberalism.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
On a blank map of Europe, mark the point of origin of the following ideas: idealism, romanticism, conservatism and liberalism.
Question
Which statement best portrays what ​Romantics thought about history and historians?​

A) History is a collection of unique eras and should emphasize the particular.​
B) ​History should be used to teach people how not to repeat past mistakes.​
C) ​History is a list of human folly and error.​
D) ​Historians can never shed light on the creative spirit of human experience.​
E) ​History is best written as a creative expression of the historian's spirit.
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Deck 13: Thought and Culture in the Early Nineteenth Century
1
Romantic art emphasized

A) photographic imitations of nature.
B) conscious and precise observations of a subject.
C) harmony between the human mind and the subject.
D) a non-religious attitude toward their art.
E) spontaneous and authentic expressions of the artist's feelings, fantasies and dreams.
spontaneous and authentic expressions of the artist's feelings, fantasies and dreams.
2
Of the following, ____ chose to utilize Hegel's idea that there is system behind the movement of history.

A) Hume
B) Kant
C) de Bonald
D) Freud
E) Marx
Marx
3
Hegel's theories may be associated with

A) glorification of the Prussian state.
B) socialism.
C) technocratic socialism.
D) constitutional monarchy.
E) royal absolutism.
glorification of the Prussian state.
4
According to the romantics, abstract and scientific knowledge are insufficient guides to knowledge because of all the following reasons EXCEPT

A) too much time is spent on establishing specific principles on nature.
B) romantics focus on human diversity and uniqueness.
C) romantics feel that individual needs to find and fulfill an inner self.
D) a person needs to play his own music and write his own poetry.
E) a person can survive by reason alone.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
German idealism developed as a response to the ideas of

A) de Bonald.
B) Hugo.
C) Schlegel.
D) Schleiermacher.
E) Hume.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Which of the following shows the dark side of romanticism?

A) It served as background to the extreme nationalism of the twentieth century.
B) It promoted drama and poetry.
C) It supported the idea that the individual artist should follow his or her imagination.
D) It focused on the creative capacities inherent in human emotions.
E) The Romantics shed light on a side of human nature overlooked by the philosophes.
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
How did Hume cast doubt on scientific certainty and the cause and effect theory?

A) He claimed that regularities observed in the past will happen in the present and future.
B) An objective reality exists which rational creatures can comprehend.
C) There is no law at work in nature that guarantees a specific cause will always produce a specific effect.
D) The mind has the ability to sense natural laws.
E) Science is able to prove a necessary connection that produces scientific laws of cause and effect.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Which of the following statements is not correct?

A) Conservatives viewed God and history as the only sources of political authority.
B) Edmund Burke was concerned that fanaticism would lead to terrorism.
C) Conservatism did not point to a limitation of the Enlightenment.
D) Conservatives believed that no legitimate or sound constitution could be drawn up by a group assembled for that purpose.
E) Conservatives did not view human beings as good by nature.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Who has been called the dominant figure among French romantics?

A) Flaubert
B) Zola
C) Sand
D) Hugo
E) Bacon
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
By attacking reason with an excessive zeal the romantics undermined which important concept that was made extreme by Hitler?

A) They emphasized the importance of political unity of a nation.
B) The emotionalism and irrationalism of romanticism was applied to politics.
C) Romantics erased the poetry of the world.
D) Nationalism was destroyed and replaced by a feeling of world culture.
E) The past was not an important part of romanticism and only a glorious future was important.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
All of the following are true statements about the romantics except they

A) denounced the rationalism of the philosophes because it crushed the emotions and impeded creativity.
B) yearned to rediscover in the human soul the pristine freedom that has been squashed by habits, values, rules, and standards imposed by civilization.
C) saw feeling as an obstacle to clear thinking.
D) wanted individuals to play their own music; write their own poetry; paint their own vision of nature; and live, love, and suffer in their own way.
E) saw reason as cold and dreary, and its understanding of people and life meager and inadequate.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Romantics were most interested in

A) developing academic rules for the writing of poetry.
B) applying laws of nature to the natural setting that was the subject of poetry.
C) composing musical fugues.
D) expressing primitive feelings.
E) critical thinking.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The romantics were among the first to attack

A) human imagination.
B) industrial capitalism.
C) folk culture.
D) creative capacities inherent in emotions.
E) humanism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The term Young Hegelians refers to

A) the docents at the University of Berlin who followed their master teacher.
B) former students of Hegel who spread his ideas in the German gymnasiums.
C) those who believed an understanding of the dialectic could lead to change in the world.
D) conservatives who accepted the world as it was because it was the result of a rational dialectic.
E) those who believed society would never be rational.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The best characterization of the romantics' attitude towards history is

A) lack of interest.
B) a search for general laws of history.
C) respect for and interest in each specific historical epoch.
D) a search for edifying moral lessons from history.
E) history served a didactic purpose by providing examples of human folly.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Which of the following may not be associated with Kant?

A) One cannot actually know ultimate reality.
B) Objects conform to the human mind because the mind creates order within nature.
C) The mind is a tabula rasa.
D) The mind has its own inherent logic.
E) The mind imposes structure and order on our sense experiences.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Many romantics saw a dark side of the unconsciousness and were often compared to

A) Aristotle.
B) Freud.
C) William Blake
D) Dante
E) Hume
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The most important of the Young Hegelians was

A) Feuerbach.
B) Kierkegaard.
C) Hume.
D) Marx.
E) Kant.
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
According to the authors of your text, the central message of the romantics was

A) the liberty and equality proclaimed by the Revolution must be secured.
B) faith must be upheld.
C) imagination was important, but feelings were not.
D) poetry should not seek to philosophize.
E) the individual imagination was primary in artistic creation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The author describes romanticism as a reaction against

A) scholastic philosophy.
B) nationalism.
C) Enlightenment rationalism.
D) the cult of the Great Man in history.
E) the otherworldly Christian orientation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
The bourgeoisie in the nineteenth century usually supported

A) socialism.
B) liberalism.
C) technocratic socialism.
D) Hegelian dialectics.
E) radicalism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Who conceived the idea of the Volksgeist?

A) John Stuart Mill
B) John Locke
C) Johann Gottfried Herder
D) G.W.F. Hegel
E) Immanuel Kant
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
tabula rasa
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k this deck
24
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
William Blake
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k this deck
25
Conservatives were likely to blame which of the following as the root of human malevolence?

A) Irrational laws
B) Poor education
C) Human nature
D) A bad environment
E) Liberals
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
One may correctly say that nineteenth-century liberals

A) were followers of de Tocqueville.
B) never engaged in revolutions.
C) wanted political power to be concentrated in the hands of the masses.
D) called for universal manhood suffrage with only age qualifications as a limitation.
E) were concerned that revolution would spread to the masses.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The American and French revolutions were crucial phases in the history of

A) conservatism.
B) romanticism.
C) liberalism.
D) radicalism.
E) socialism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Hume
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Two ideas that were crucial in shaping nationalism were

A) the rational outlook and folk history.
B) that power belongs to the king and the people are his subjects.
C) that the people possess unlimited sovereignty and that they are united in a nation.
D) that all people must have a right to exist and that the strong must respect the rights of the weak.
E) conservatism and radicalism.
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30
Which of the following remarked, "over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign...."?

A) de Maistre
B) Burke
C) David Hume
D) Lemercier
E) John Stuart Mill
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31
Political conservatives shared with romantics

A) faith in the unique power and value of the individual imagination.
B) devotion to the principle of equality before the law.
C) anti-Semitism.
D) veneration of the past.
E) the rejection of the past.
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32
Conservatives were generally

A) critical of Enlightenment principles that released instincts religion had once controlled.
B) suspicious of the theory of natural rights.
C) fearful of utopian visions and those who would implement them by force.
D) of the view that human wickedness was not caused by a faulty environment, but lay at the core of human nature.
E) All of these
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33
Scholars would agree with the statement that

A) in Germany, the romantic view of the state contributed to the rise of twentieth century wars.
B) Jews long settled in Germany could be considered Germans by nationalists.
C) German nationalists rejected history.
D) German nationalists denied the concept of a people's inner spirit and instead proclaimed that conscious effort by a talented people resulted in their superiority.
E) the romantics were not the earliest apostles of German nationalism.
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34
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
modern nationalism
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35
All of the following helped to shape liberalism except

A) the rational outlook of the Greeks.
B) the view that human wickedness was not caused by faulty environment.
C) the Judeo-Christian respect for the worth and dignity of the individual.
D) John Locke's natural rights philosophy.
E) Montesquieu's theory of the separation of powers and of checks and balances.
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36
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Victor Hugo
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37
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Conservatism
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38
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
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39
Which of these viewed with horror the democratic creed that all people should share in political power?

A) Many bourgeois liberals
B) The romantics
C) The nationalists
D) The idealists
E) The radicals
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40
For Hegel, the supreme embodiment of Universal Reason in the world was

A) the individual.
B) the church.
C) extraordinary individuals like Jesus.
D) the German volk.
E) the state.
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41
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
romanticism
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42
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
John Constable
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43
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Immanuel Kant
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44
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Lord Byron
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45
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
John Keats
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46
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Absolute Spirit
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47
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Ernst Cassirer
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48
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
John Stuart Mill
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49
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Freud
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50
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
German idealism
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51
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Johann Gottfried Herder
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52
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Horst von Maltitz
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53
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
nationalism
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54
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
liberalism
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55
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
William Wordsworth
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56
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
George Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
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57
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Volksgeist
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58
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Edmund Burke
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59
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
Friedrich Schlegel
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60
Please define the following key terms. Show Who? What? Where? When? Why Important?
E. J. Hobsbawm
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61
​During the nineteenth century, liberal nationalist helped to create all of the following countries except

A) ​Germany.
B) ​Poland.
C) ​Greece.
D) ​Italy.
E) ​Turkey.
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62
Romantics and German nationalists ​viewed the German state as

A) ​a human institution.
B) ​a rational arrangement between individuals.
C) ​a holy expression of the Germanic spirit.
D) ​a protection of personal liberty.
E) ​an application of universal norms.
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63
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   Explain the connection between romantic thought and the growth of nationalism.
Explain the connection between romantic thought and the growth of nationalism.
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64
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   What is meant by the term romanticism? hHow did the romantics differ from the philosophes?
What is meant by the term romanticism? hHow did the romantics differ from the philosophes?
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65
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   What is meant by the term conservatism? Why did the conservatives reject the French revolution?
What is meant by the term conservatism? Why did the conservatives reject the French revolution?
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66
​The French Revolution helped propel the growth of nationalism by

A) ​increasing the power of the French Church compared to the Vatican.
B) ​asserting that the state was not the possession of the ruler.
C) ​breaking the alliance between socialists and liberals.
D) ​demonstrating the power of the urban peasants to create a stable government.
E) ​connecting the landed aristocracy and the liberals against their conservative opposition.
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67
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   What is meant by the term liberalism? How did the liberals seek to promote the gains of the French revolution in the nineteenth century?
What is meant by the term liberalism? How did the liberals seek to promote the gains of the French revolution in the nineteenth century?
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68
Nineteenth Century liberals​ espoused all of the following except

A) ​freedom of speech
B) ​freedom from arbitrary arrest
C) ​a government derived its authority from the consent of the governed
D) ​universal voting rights
E) ​protection of property rights
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69
​Which statement is least associated with the work of Immanuel Kant?

A) The human mind is an active instrument that coordinates chaotic streams of sensations.
B) ​Laws of science are universally valid but our dependent upon our ability to categorize them.
C) ​Our knowledge is limited to the phenomenal world.
D) ​We can demonstrate constant conjunction of events not cause and effect.
E) ​We can only know things we can experience.
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70
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   On a blank map of Europe, designate with arrows the countries that may be associated with the following cultural figures: Shelley, Wordsworth, Keats, and Byron; Hugo and Chateaubriand; Schlegel, Schiller, Schelling, and Beethoven.
On a blank map of Europe, designate with arrows the countries that may be associated with the following cultural figures: Shelley, Wordsworth, Keats, and Byron; Hugo and Chateaubriand; Schlegel, Schiller, Schelling, and Beethoven.
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71
​Many Romantics viewed God as

A) ​a great watchmaker.
B) ​inspiring spiritual force.
C) ​a manipulative force.
D) ​ an opiate of the masses.
E) ​dispassionate observer.
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72
Romantics viewed folk culture as​

A) ​a expression of simple people with little to offer the modern world.
B) ​a collection of superstitions.
C) ​the deepest expression of national feeling.
D) ​deceptive and dangerous to nationalist goals.
E) ​steeped in past knowledge that had been saved by the Enlightenment.
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73
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   On a blank map of Europe, designate the state where each of the following philosophers worked: Hegel, Kant, Hume, and Mill.
On a blank map of Europe, designate the state where each of the following philosophers worked: Hegel, Kant, Hume, and Mill.
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74
​Conservatives view of society included all of the following except

A) ​society needed Christianity or else it became brutalized.
B) ​the community is the building block of society.
C) ​society worked best when individuals were free and autonomous.
D) ​individualism could imperil stability.​
E) ​religion is the basis of civil society.
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75
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   Compare and contrast liberalism with conservatism.
Compare and contrast liberalism with conservatism.
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76
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   What was the relationship between nationalism and liberalism in the nineteenth century? Has this relationship necessarily continued into the twentieth century? Discuss.
What was the relationship between nationalism and liberalism in the nineteenth century? Has this relationship necessarily continued into the twentieth century? Discuss.
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77
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   Why was history a very important part of the work of Hegel? In what way did Hegel's view of freedom actually limit man's freedom of action? How did his ideas contrast with the ideas of the philosophes?
Why was history a very important part of the work of Hegel? In what way did Hegel's view of freedom actually limit man's freedom of action? How did his ideas contrast with the ideas of the philosophes?
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78
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   What were the political views of Edmund Burke?
What were the political views of Edmund Burke?
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79
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).
Please use this outline map of Europe to answer the question(s).   On a blank map of Europe, mark the point of origin of the following ideas: idealism, romanticism, conservatism and liberalism.
On a blank map of Europe, mark the point of origin of the following ideas: idealism, romanticism, conservatism and liberalism.
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80
Which statement best portrays what ​Romantics thought about history and historians?​

A) History is a collection of unique eras and should emphasize the particular.​
B) ​History should be used to teach people how not to repeat past mistakes.​
C) ​History is a list of human folly and error.​
D) ​Historians can never shed light on the creative spirit of human experience.​
E) ​History is best written as a creative expression of the historian's spirit.
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