Baron de Montesquieu
I know this is right because it was one of the questions on my test. And this was the right answer.
it was boran de montesquie
baron de montesquieu
Baron de montesquieu was a french philosopher during the enlightenment.
Louis XVI was overthrown by the people of the France who wanted change in the French Revolution. These people were known as the National assembly of France, (formerly the Third Estate) and later became a small group called the Conventions. They were enlightened thinkers who wanted equal rights, a constitution, and a better life where only the rich and noble wouldn't be the only ones to have a good life. One of the leaders of the conventions who issued the death of the King was known as Maximilian Robespierre, a lawyer and enlightened thinker who influenced thousands of people in the revolution until he went overboard. After M.R said the King must die in order for the revolution to be successful, the king faced the bloody death of the Guillotine. -FR
he was an enlightenment thinker
Jean Jacques Rousseau
baron de montesquieu For PLATO
Yep...... Jean Rousseau was an enlightened thinker and an integral part of the age of enlightenment..!.he wrote books like the social contract leading to many protests....The center of the Enlightenment was France, with contributions from Voltaire, montesquie and rousseau. Rousseau was the most popular of the philosophers among members of the enlightened thinkers.
it was boran de montesquie
baron de montesquieu
Charles-Louis Montesquieu was a French political thinker known for his theory of separation of powers.
Yep...... Jean Rousseau was an enlightened thinker and an integral part of the age of enlightenment..!.he wrote books like the social contract leading to many protests....The center of the Enlightenment was France, with contributions from voltaire, montesquie and rousseau. Rousseau was the most popular of the philosophers among members of the enlightened thinkers.
Charles-Louis Montesquieu was a French political thinker known for his theory of separation of powers.
Baron de montesquieu
One prominent Enlightenment thinker advocating for the separation of church and state was Voltaire. He believed that the church should not have control over governmental affairs, and that each should operate independently to ensure individual freedoms and prevent corruption.
John Locke .
John Locke