Age of Enlightenment & Scientific Revolution

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Across
  1. 4. – Astronomer who developed the heliocentric model of the solar system
  2. 7. – An intellectual movement that emphasized reason, individualism, and skepticism of traditional authority.
  3. 9. - referred to the idea that individuals are born with natural, inherent freedoms that should be protected by governments
  4. 13. – The theory that the sun is at the center of the universe, proposed by Copernicus.
  5. 15. – Government by the people
  6. 19. – Philosopher who wrote The Social Contract and believed in the idea of general will.
  7. 20. – The belief that reason and logic are the primary sources of knowledge.
  8. 21. – The study of the structure of living organisms, advanced by scientists like Vesalius.
  9. 22. – The process of conducting tests to confirm scientific theories.
  10. 25. – Central to Enlightenment thinking
Down
  1. 1. – A proposed explanation for a phenomenon, tested through experiments.
  2. 2. – Study of fundamental questions about existence and knowledge
  3. 3. – Philosopher who advocated for freedom of speech, religious tolerance, and reason.
  4. 5. - His ideas were based on reason, justice, and human rights.
  5. 6. – The theory that knowledge comes from sensory experience and experimentation.
  6. 8. – Physicist and mathematician who formulated the laws of motion and gravity.
  7. 10. – The belief that Earth is at the center of the universe, supported by Ptolemy.
  8. 11. – The belief that God created the universe but does not interfere in human affairs.
  9. 12. – Astronomer who discovered that planets move in elliptical orbits.
  10. 14. – Philosopher who argued that people have natural rights to life, liberty, and property.
  11. 16. – The act of carefully watching and recording events to gather scientific data.
  12. 17. - referred to established beliefs or doctrines, often associated with religious or authoritarian institutions, that were accepted without question or evidence.
  13. 18. – Scientist who improved the telescope and supported the heliocentric theory, leading to conflict with the Catholic Church.
  14. 23. - referred to the accepted standards, behaviors, and social conventions that were traditionally followed in society.
  15. 24. - referred to a system of ideas and beliefs about society, government, and human nature that was based on reason, progress, and individual rights.