The destruction the war made. Also the fact that the during that time people needed change. People started to think for themselves and started disregarding the idea of following God's laws and started following their "own" laws and thinking for themselves.
Elected Representives
Both were inspired by ideas popularized during the Enlightenment.
Thomas Jefferson who wrote in the Declaration of Independence said this.
Before the French Revolution, the French were inspired by the Enlightenment Period as well as the American Revolution. The French Revolution lead to many changes in France's government and greatly changed their society.
Both were led by groups inspired by liberal ideals that emerged during the Enlightenment.
The idea of individual rights and freedoms was most inspired by the ideas of the Enlightenment. The concept that all individuals are entitled to liberty, equality, and protection from the government was a central theme of Enlightenment philosophy.
reason and logic
The Declaration of Independence
The Enlightenment The American Revolution
Some examples of ideas not inspired by the Enlightenment include authoritarianism, absolute monarchy, and divine right theory. These concepts were seen as counter to the ideals of reason, individualism, and liberty promoted during the Enlightenment period.
they was inspired by enlightenment thinkers because of ancient greeace and the rome
Elected Representives
The Declaration of Independence
Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence. He was inspired by the ideas of Enlightenment philosophers such as John Locke, who believed in natural rights and the social contract theory.
The Enlightenment Period.
The ideas that came to punctuate American Enlightenment thinking were: deism, liberalism, republicanism, conservatism, toleration and scientific progress.
The American Revolution was most inspired by the ideas of the Enlightenment. The movement emphasized concepts such as individual rights, liberty, and representative government, which influenced the American colonists in their quest for independence from British rule. The Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution reflect these Enlightenment ideals.