The Age of Reason: Europe from the 17th to the Early 19th Centuries
21H.433 · History · Undergraduate · Spring 2011
Prof. Jeffrey S. Ravel
This course asks students to consider the ways in which social theorists, institutional reformers, and political revolutionaries in the 17th through 19th centuries seized upon insights developed in the natural sciences and mathematics to change themselves and the society in which they lived. Students study trials, art, literature and music to understand developments in Europe and its colonies in these two centuries. Covers works by Newton, Locke, Voltaire, Rousseau, Marx, and Darwin.
The syllabus, on MIT OpenCourseWare
The full course — syllabus, assigned readings, problem sets, exams, and lecture notes — lives on OCW. These open the real thing:
Syllabus ↗
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Attribution
Prof. Jeffrey S. Ravel. 21H.433 The Age of Reason: Europe from the 17th to the Early 19th Centuries. Spring 2011. Massachusetts Institute of Technology: MIT OpenCourseWare, https://ocw.mit.edu. License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.
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