Hi I’m John Green and this is Crash Course
European History.
So far, we’ve seen a ton of political change
and continuing warfare in the midst of the
seventeenth century’s little ice age, and
history often focuses on these types of political
and military stories, but there were also
other changes occurring: shifts in how people
perceived the everyday world.
The linking of phenomena like earthquakes
and eclipses with human events goes back a
very long way, like to the beginning of our
species, as does the belief that supernatural
forces are deeply shaping the lives of individual
humans.
For instance, in a previous video about witchcraft,
we discussed how earthquake tremors in Istanbul
in 1648 were seen as portents of a sultan’s
death a few months later.
But a century after that, a huge earthquake
struck Lisbon, Portugal on All Saints’ Day
of 1755.
Tens of thousands of people died, many from
a tsunami that followed the quake.
Now, some theologians argued this was punishment
from God for the world’s sins, but others
pointed out that the earthquake had destroyed
a lot of churches while sparing a lot of brothels.
Voltaire wrote a famous poem in response to
the earthquake that included the memorable
lines “As the dying voices call out, will
you dare respond to this appalling spectacle
of smoking ashes with, “This is the necessary
effect of the eternal laws Freely chosen by
God?”
The way Europeans were looking at the world
had changed between the Istanbul earthquake
and the Lisbon one: The Enlightenment was
thriving.
[Intro]
So, today we want to emphasize that the Enlightenment
wasn’t all high fallutin’ calculations
of the sun’s orbit or theories about the
mathematical laws of the universe or for that
matter theories about earthquake causality.
It also considered more down-to-earth situations
like how people of different social classes
relate to one another, how trade and manufacturing
should function, and what the relationship
of ordinary people should be to their government.
The Enlightenment or Age of Light refers to
the belief that the musty old ideas needed
to be exposed to rational investigation to
see if they were still valuable.
The bright light of reason needed to shine
on tradition.
And this momentous challenge to tradition
came about during a time in which Europe was
being completely transformed in many ways
that are sometimes forgotten amid all the
excitement about Voltaire and reason.
So let’s go straight to the Thought Bubble
today.
1.
Beyond the wars and state-building we’ve
already seen,
2. increasing abundance and novelty was creeping
into the everyday lives of Europeans.
3.
Coffee, tea, chocolate, tobacco, and other
commodities led to experimentation.
4.
For instance, one English housewife saw tea
for the first time and thought it was meant
to be baked as a kind of pie filling.
5.
A diplomat said that tea and coffee had brought
a greater “sobriety” and “civility”
to everyday life in Europe.
6.
Europe had previously been a land of famine
and mere subsistence for essentially all of
its history.
7.
But now the cultivation of new foods from
the Americas like potatoes and corn,
8. along with literally thousands of other
new plants, meant that available calories
were increasing,
9.
And it also introduced the idea that maybe
the world didn’t have to be perpetually
on the brink of starvation and catastrophe.
10.
Also, by this time, tens of thousands of Europeans
had traveled the world, and had experienced
other social orders first hand.
11.
For instance, travelers discovered that people
across Asia didn’t seem as quarrelsome as
Europeans.
12.
Drivers of carts did not block narrow streets
for hours arguing over who had the right of
way.
13.
They politely agreed to let one or the other
pass.
14.
They also saw that not all social orders were
as hierarchical as most European ones,
15. and that some societies even gave less
weight to a person’s parentage
16. and more to that person’s individual
skills and talents.
Thanks Thought Bubble.
[[TV-Montesquieu]] One of the first ways writers
criticized outmoded ways of life was to make
fun of them...writers like Charles-Louis de
Secondat, Baron de La Brède et de Montesquieu,
aka Just Montesquieu.
(He really was the person to criticize outmoded
ways of life because, boy did he have an outmoded
name.)
Montesquieu was a jurist who owned an estate
near Bordeaux, which still makes wine under
his name, and in 1721, he published the Persian
Letters in which Uzbek visitors find Europe
amusing if not shocking.
The visitors, for instance, are amazed at
the magic of priests who somehow perform the
trick of turning wine into blood.
And although they clearly see the problems
in French society, they firmly adhere to the
mustiness of their own ways, such as keeping
women secluded in a harem and guarded by eunuchs.
The message was that both easterners and Europeans
were imperfect.
The author Voltaire--who, slightly off topic,
was very handsome.
I mean, very striking eyes.
At any rate, he had similarly critical and
amusing takes; his discourtesy to aristocrats
eventually got him sent to the Bastille prison,
in fact.
In many rollicking tales, he made fun of overweening
rulers and their endless corruptions.
He valued honesty and those who lived simple
lives “cultivating their gardens,” as
he famously put it in his satirical novel
Candide (1759), which you can learn more about
in Crash Course Literature.
Full of horrors and injustice, Candide appeared
four years after the Lisbon earthquake, which
Voltaire thought was firm evidence that we
did not live in the best of all possible worlds.
To replace the old stuffy ways of monarchs
and aristocrats, people needed to learn how
to embrace the newly-desirable traits of the
Enlightenment, like being honest, and inquisitive,
and open.
Swiss thinker Jean-Jacques Rousseau had many
ideas about education reform, for instance.
He was not a wealthy or titled person but
rather was born into a watchmaking family
and lived among artisans.
His best-selling novel Emile (1762) describes
a boy who grows up not in a city or palace
but in a countryside where one can be oneself—a
natural individual.
Instead of experiencing common rote learning,
with large doses of religious and classical
reading, Emile learns carpentry, and gardening,
and other practical skills.
In the countryside he behaves in the best
possible way—naturally and without pretentious
airs.
Rousseau promoted what would come to be called
middle-class values, like hard work, practicality,
and domesticity for women.
When Emile becomes a young man, the spouse
chosen for him is plump and smiling and devoted
to taking care of him—not studying or reading
or practicing a craft or working hard to support
the family like farm women did.
Also, she will breast feed their children,
whereas both aristocratic women and busy working
women at the time commonly used wet nurses.
As with Emile’s upbringing, all of this
is presented as “natural.”
Meanwhile, wealthy women in Europe instituted
the Enlightenment salon: regular get-togethers
in their homes to hear the latest idea, learn
about the latest book, or meet the latest
philosopher-influencer—called a philosophe
in French.
Slightly off topic, but I just love the idea
of Rousseau and Voltaire as influencers.
Like, I would have loved to see their instagram
feeds.
Voltaire’s smoldering selfies,
Rousseau’s weird rants written in the notes
app and then screenshotted.
It would have been gold.
At any rate, 18th Century Salon goers were
often great readers or experimenters with
the latest commodities and fashion.
Just like contemporary influencers, actually.
And in terms of fashion, instead of looking
to the courts for fashion inspiration, men
like Voltaire now sported cottons from India
made into handkerchiefs that were worn around
the neck, which would soon metamorphose into
the necktie).
They also sported banyans—that is loose
bathrobe type garments—that did not need
corsets, which men traditionally wore.
As Rousseau believed, men should take off
their make-up, wigs, and high heels and be
natural—just like people did in other parts
of the world.
Just natural man as he is naturally made in
the countryside, wearing a Banyan and a feathered
hat.
Transformation was in the air for everyone,
not just the elites.
Although imported foreign cottons were still
illegal in France, for instance, many people
now wore them, including servants, who received
cast-off cotton dresses or shirts that were
bright and easy to keep clean.
And to help people learn, there were many
more texts.
Like in France, there was the Encyclopedie
(you’ll notice my amazing French pronunciation).
It provided discussions of topics such as
natural rights and the status of women.
Its main editor Denis Diderot wrote: “All
things must be examined, debated, investigated
without exception and without regard for anyone’s
feelings.”[1]
Diderot favored social and political reform.
But the Encyclopedie--you know what, I’m
gonna just translate it--Encyclopedia, also
contained technical drawings of machinery,
including machinery for mining.
And that reflected practical values and also
provided a spur to inventiveness and growing
prosperity in Europe.
Also, mining, which was already pretty important,
was about to become EXTREMELY important, thanks
to coal.
In general, Enlightenment aims were more worldly
than spiritual.
In Scotland, philosopher David Hume promoted
reason above religion, concluding that belief
in God was mere superstition.
Some people, called Deists, argued that God
existed but that he didn’t influence everyday
life after having set the machine of the universe
in motion.
Many important “founding fathers” of the
United States were deists, and if you believe,
as many philosphers did, that God keeps a
distance from human affairs, then the persecution
of people for their religious beliefs starts
to seem like cruel fanaticism.
And some philosophes became activists.
Like, Voltaire was outraged by the torture
of Jean Calas, who had been accused of murdering
his son to prevent him from converting to
Catholicism.
(Calas’s son had in fact committed suicide
due to gambling debts.)
Calas was waterboarded and had every bone
in his body broken before eventually dying
under torture.
Is there a bone back there?
All right, listen.
This is a femur.
I don’t think this is an actual femur, I
think it’s, like a recrea--Stan is this
a real femur?
It is NOT a real femur.
So I asked our brilliant writer Bonnie if
Calas really had every bone in his body broken
and she repsonded, “It’s hard to know
whether they got every one,” and then she
described Calas’s torture to me with a level
of detail that led me to conclude that ONE
they probably did break every bone in his
body, and TWO oh my god torture in 18th century
Europe was THE WORST.
So, last thing I’m going to say about this:
if you invent a time machine, and I believe
absolutely that you can, do not go back in
time before like, maybe 2003?
Don’t get me wrong--things are bad, but
remember: they used to be so much worse.
Speaking of terrible, let’s talk about slavery.
So, Enlightenment views also fed into rising
movements in Britain, France, the Netherlands,
and their colonies to abolish slavery.
By this time, the slave trade was massive
and there was growing acknowledgement of its
cruelt.
In 1770, the French Catholic abbé (or, clergyman)
Guillaume Raynal laid out the violent devastation
of native peoples by invading Europeans.
And in 1788 the freed slave Olaudah Equiano
described the middle passage after he had
been kidnapped in present-day Nigeria and
enslaved.
Now Equiano is often believed to have been
born in South Carolina, and his riveting memoir
may have been cobbled together from the harrowing
tales of others.
Still, it was a bestseller.
It captured the inhumanity of whites towards
blacks, advocated Enlightenment freedom and
human rights for all.
It also stirred freedmen and slaves to struggle
for abolition.
And there was also growing movements for other
kinds of freedom.
The Scotsman Adam Smith took on the mercantilist
theory that global wealth was static and states
could only increase wealth by taking it from
others when he rejected ideas about stockpiling
gold, and refusing entry of goods into one’s
country, and also remaining a subsistence
agricultural economy with serfs.
He advocated for manufacturing, the division
of labor, and free trade.
In a free or laissez-faire market, an individual
would work and interact with others in the
economy on the basis of their self-interest.
And the sum of all self-interests would make
for a balanced, harmonious, and prosperous
society.
Smith is best known as the father of the free
market, free trade, and individualism thanks
to his 1776 book An Inquiry into the Nature
and Causes of The Wealth of Nations.
But he also opposed absolutism and urged concern
for the overall well-being of society.
In addition to the benefits of laissez-faire
that he saw, Smith saw the potential harms,
so he also argued for healing social policies.
Another important Enlightenment book was Jean-Jacques
Rousseau’s The Social Contract, which famously
begins “Man is born free and everywhere
he is in chains.”
Rousseau picked up on John Locke’s theme
of the contract that individuals made with
one another to form a state or nation.
And he believed that Once freely formed, the
state embodied the best that was in the collective
community; thus individuals needed to give
the state unconditional obedience because
it represented the “general will.”
Today, thinkers see that this call for obedience
to the general will planted the seeds of dictatorial
governments in the twentieth century and beyond.
But, Rousseau did also emphasize individual
sentiments as valuable.
At the opposite end of Rousseau’s “general
will” was German philosopher Emmanuel Kant’s
attention to individual reason.
He famously exclaimed, “Dare to Know”
as he advanced the Enlightenment’s commitment
to the human mind and the ability of every
person to think for themselves instead of
simply obeying old commands and ideas.
The human mind, he argued, housed “categories
of understanding” with which information
interacted to produce purely rational judgments.
And in this way, Kant shared the faith in
the individual of both Jean-Jacques Rousseau
and Adam Smith, and we can trace our own culture’s
individualism back to the Enlightenment.
And many other individuals took refuge in
Enlightenment thought as well as taking it
as a call to action.
Upper-class Jewish women across Europe found
the world of ideas so inspiring that they
began salons, too.
In Berlin, they established nine of the fourteen
salons in the city.
And philosopher and author Moses Mendelssohn
used the more tolerant atmosphere to express
his optimism about the future of Jews in Europe.
Because of the Enlightenment emphasis on reason,
he believed that the age-old persecution of
Jews would soon end.
Of course, we now know that that wasn’t
the case.
And much exploitation and oppression has taken
place in the guise of reasoned thought.
Pseudoscientific “reason” has been used
to justify many forms of structural inequality,
from racism to sexism to class systems.
Rationality would not prove to be a way out
of the human urge to create and marginalize
outsiders.
But Enlightenment thought was nonetheless
transformative, and seeking worldly explanations
for inequality and injustice did have significant
real-world consequences.
I mean, no longer would we see Earthquakes
merely as acts of God.
Enlightenment challenges to the idea that
we already were living in the best of all
possible worlds would help us to imagine,
and eventually live in, better worlds--albeit
ones that are still profoundly imperfect.
Thanks for watching.
I’ll see you next time.
________________
[1] Quoted in Lynn Hunt et al., The Making
of the West: Peoples and Cultures, 6th ed.
(Boston: Bedford St. Martins,
2019) 616.
