The Ideas of the Enlightenment (p.43;51)

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Across
  1. 2. cannot be taken away or given away (p.43)
  2. 6. favoring or enforcing strict obedience to authority, especially that of the government, at the expense of personal freedom (p.51)
  3. 7. the qualities that a person is expected to have as a responsible member of a community (p.51)
  4. 10. at one’s discretion; random (p.51)
  5. 12. this person believed in a limited monarchy where powers were shared (p.43)
  6. 14. a form of government in which the executive, legislative, and judicial branches limit and control each other through a system of checks and balances. (p.51)
  7. 15. this person supported an absolute monarchy, in which the king had complete and sole power.
Down
  1. 1. the concept proposed by Rousseau that an entire society agrees to be governed by its general will, and all individuals should be forced to abide by the general will because it represents what is best for the entire community(p.51)
  2. 3. French for “philosopher”; applied to all intellectuals during the Enlightenment (p.51)
  3. 4. an eighteenth-century religious philosophy based on reason and natural law (p.51)
  4. 5. the elegant urban drawing rooms where, in the eighteenth century, writers, artists, aristocrats, government officials, and wealthy middle-class people gathered to discuss the ideas of the philosophes(p.51)
  5. 8. not sanctioned by law (p.51)
  6. 9. a group of individuals born and living at the same time(p.51)
  7. 11. an artistic style that replaced baroque in the 1730s; it was highly secular, emphasizing grace, charm, and gentle action(p.51)
  8. 13. the concept that the state should not impose government regulations but should leave the economy alone (p.51)