Enlightenment and Terrorism
Enlightenment and the Present-Day ConflictIn the days and nights after the smoke had cleared, and the few remaining survivors had been pulled from the debris of the fallen World Trade Center, the countries and independent states of the world were faced with a choice: Would they choose to support America, and in turn its belief in post-Enlightenment theories and practices, or would they instead choose to side with the terrorists and Islamic fundamentalists responsible for the attacks, men whose medieval outlooks had lead them to ignore reason and tolerance in the name of militant religiosity. For the countries that believed that the fundamental rights of man still included freedom, liberty and property, the choice was clear, and they made it without delay. They chose civilization. To fully understand what is meant by the term "post-Enlightenment", however, a look back to western Europe in the 16th century is necessary. It was during this time that a monumental transformation first began to take shape; a revolution that would ultimately liberate the West from the constraints that had always hindered the progress of the traditional, agrarian societies of old. The thoughts and teachings of the Scientific Revolution, and later t
he Enlightenment, brought about an entirely different approach to how everyday life was to be carried out. The people of the western European countries, and consequently the North American colonies, were introduced by both Bacon and Descartes to the idea that employing reason and empiricism to issues that confronted them, rather than adhering to religious dogma and tradition, would be the key to human advancement. Men like Newton and Galileo, through their theories and discoveries, provided the tools for a new, modern society to base itself upon innovation and the development of technology rather than simple agriculture and military strength. In turn, the great thinkers and philosophers such as Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau and Voltaire provided the commentary necessary for the fundamental changes in social, political, intellectual and religious thought that inevitably followed. Inviolable rights and freedoms were established, and a new system of political and religious authority was instituted. The man of modern civilization would never suffer beneath autocratic and absolute rule the way the man who came before him had, for the power had finally been transferred into the hands of the society as a whole. The final conclusion that can be reached from observing the present-day conflict is that the war that must ultimately be fought between the West and the East is not going to be a battle of military might against strategic terrorism, but rather an ideological battle between the principles of the Enlightenment - reason and tolerance, lib
Some common words found in the essay are:
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Approximate Word count = 1038
Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page double spaced)
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