5 Steps to a 5 AP World History, 2014-2015 Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

174 i PERIOD 4 Global Interactions (c. 1450–c. 1750)



  1. Both the Protestant Reformation and the
    Enlightenment
    (A) questioned political authority
    (B) lowered the status of women
    (C) upheld church traditions
    (D) relied on reason over faith
    (E) remained confined to Europe

  2. The Protestant Reformation
    (A) strengthened the authority of the papacy
    (B) spread because of advances in Chinese and
    European technology
    (C) became the basis of Enlightenment thought
    (D) diminished the achievements of the com-
    mercial revolution
    (E) was carried by Jesuits to the Western
    Hemisphere

  3. All of the following describe the Scientific
    Revolution EXCEPT that
    (A) it emphasized the value of research
    (B) it described the nature of the universe
    (C) some of its beliefs were openly opposed by
    the Roman Catholic Church
    (D) it was modeled on Chinese philosophy
    (E) it believed in the overall goodness of
    humanity
    4. Enlightenment thought
    (A) resulted in harsher punishments for
    criminals
    (B) treated children as miniature adults
    (C) resembled Renaissance thought
    (D) was not embraced by the women’s
    movement
    (E) introduced economic theories that sup-
    ported mercantilism
    5. The Protestant and Catholic reformations were
    alike
    (A) in their attitudes toward money-making
    (B) in their reliance on church councils
    (C) in their views toward papal authority
    (D) in their abandonment of church traditions
    (E) in their emphasis on education
    6. The Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment
    (A) both held that reason could be used to
    improve humanity
    (B) broke completely with classical traditions
    (C) supported the ideas of the Roman Catho-
    lic Church concerning the nature of the
    universe
    (D) were global movements
    (E) continued medieval traditions


government regulation of the economy should be minimal in order to allow the free operation
of the laws of supply and demand. Denis Diderot of France compiled the Encyclopédie, which
included the scientifi c and social scientifi c knowledge of the Enlightenment.

❯ Rapid Review


The period from 1450 to 1750 witnessed three major cultural and intellectual revolutions.
The Protestant Reformation defi ed established church traditions and taught salvation by
faith alone. The Scientifi c Revolution explained the nature of the universe and encouraged
research. Another movement, the Enlightenment, believed in the basic goodness of human-
ity and spoke of natural rights that formed the philosophy behind the political revolutions
of the eighteenth century.

❯ Review Questions

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