7-2 REVIEW :)
Quiz by Christian Huggins
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30 questions
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- Q1Enlightenment thinkers contributed to changes in relationships between citizens and governments through their belief that...governments are instituted to protect citizens’ rights.most changes in government are dangerous.popular liberties should be limited by the need for social order.absolute monarchy is the most effective form of government.30s
- Q2What did William and Mary agree to when becoming joint monarchs of the English throne in 1688?agreeing to ally with Napoleonagreeing to a joint session of Parliamentsigning the Magna Cartasigning the English Bill of Rights30s
- Q3The revolution in France at the end of the 18th century was responsible forinspiring other revolution, like in Latin America.ending the era of the Enlightenment.ending British rule in Normandy.causing the American Revolution.30s
- Q4Which movement inspired the French Revolution?Napoleonic ConquestsThe RenaissanceThe EnlightenmentThe Russian Revolution30s
- Q5"We should have a great many fewer disputes in the world if words were taken for what they are, the signs of our ideas only, and not for things themselves." What is John Locke pointing to as a solver of worldly disputes in this quote?the use of reasonthe use of diplomacythe spread of knowledgethe use of words30s
- Q6Which one of these statements BEST characterizes the central idea of the Enlightenment?Logic and reason are capable of solving social and political problems.The established political order should remain unchanged.Art should reflect emotion, not the human form.A person's eternal salvation is determined by faith alone.30s
- Q7Historians have regarded the American Revolution as being of worldwide importance because it...marked the successful emergence of a new concept in government.was led by people of recognized intellectual ability.was won without foreign military assistance.ended European imperialism in the Western Hemisphere.30s
- Q8The political theory that people form governments for their mutual protection and that government rules only with the consent of those people is known as...social contract theory.socialism.communism.divine right theory.30s
- Q9The “Rule of Law” states thata just government derives its power from the governed.there should be no barriers to the right to vote.a country’s citizens are the source of the government's power.all people, including those who govern, must obey the law.30s
- Q10Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, and Newton all supported which idea from the Scientific Revolution?geocentric theorylaw of gravityheliocentric theorylaw of planetary motion30s
- Q11Sir Isaac Newton revolutionized the way people understood the universe in the seventeenth century when he proved that the... sun's gravity keeps the planets within their orbits.sun's gravity keeps the planets within their orbits.planets revolve around the sun.earth revolves around the sun.planets are held in place by an invisible shield.30s
- Q12Copernicus' heliocentric view of the universe was different from popular scientific views of the 16th century because... the earth was thought to be the center of the universe, rather than the sun.humans were thought to be at the mercy of the gods.most people thought there was no outside universe.the moon was thought to be the center of the universe, rather the sun.the earth was thought to be the center of the universe, rather than the sun.30s
- Q13According to John Locke, if the government failed to protect natural rights, what did citizens have a right to do?To overthrow the government and establish a new oneTo divide the government into three separate partsTo create a direct democracy and allow individuals to governTo elect new government leaders to rule the country30s
- Q14Why are authoritarian and totalitarian systems considered unlimited governments?The people under those systems are allowed to elect their government leaders.Those systems protect individual freedoms.The government leaders have absolute power.Those systems have one branch that checks the powers of the other branches.30s
- Q15What led to England's transition from an absolute monarchy to a constitutional monarchy?Thomas Hobbes's social contractThe Glorious RevolutionThe French and Indian War (Seven Years War)John Locke's natural rights30s