M O D U L E III
INTELLECTUAL
   REVOLUTION
             THAT DEFINED SOCIETY”
                   DISCUTIDO
                    DOMINGO
                     TEJADA
 Objectives:
1. Discuss how the ideas postulated by Copernicus,
   Darwin, and Freud contributed to the spark of scientific
   revolution;
2. Describe the development of Science and Technology
   during the scientific revolution;
3. Explain and recognize the significance of technology
   invented during the scientific revolution;
4. Recognize and appreciate the works of the different
   proponents; and
5. Articulate ways by which society is transformed by
   science and technology.
                   KEY CONCEPTS
REVOLUTION ❖ A wide-reaching change in the way something works,
                  organized or change in people’s idea about it.
NATURAL ❖ A process that results in the adaptation of an
SELECTION organism to it’s enviroment by means of selectively
           reproducing changes in genetic constitution.
PERSONALITY ❖ It is the combination of characteristics or
               qualities that form an individual’s
               distinctive character.
BEHAVIOR ❖ It is the range of actions and mannerisms made
             by individuals.
CIVILIZATION ❖ A complex human society in which people
                  live in groups of settled dwellings.
                INTRODUCTION
   “Intellectual Revolution” is the term used to
Greek speculation about “nature” in the period
before Socrates ~600-400 BCE. It is also known as
the “Pre-Socratic” or the “ non-theological” or
“first philosophy”. There are three characteristic
features of this form of philosophy: 1) the natural
whole (i.e., supernatural forces do not make things
“happen”); 2) there is a natural ‘order’ (i.e., there are
‘laws of nature’); and 3) humans can ‘discover’
those laws.
                      To know that we know what we know, and
                      to know that we do not know what we do
                      not know, that is true knowledge.
                      Mathematics is written for
                      mathematicians.
                      For it is the duty of an astronomer to
                      compose the history of the celestial
                      motions through careful and expert study.
                      So, influenced by these advisors and this
                      hope, I have at length allowed my friends
                      to publish the work, as they had long
                      besought me to do.
Nicolaus Copernicus
                                          —Nicolaus Copernicus
     1473-1543
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Nicolaus Copernicus was a Polish astronomer known as the Father
of Modern astronomy. He was the first modern European scientist to
propose that the earth and other planets revolve around the sun or
known as heliocentric theory.
GEOCENTRIC THEORY
Copernicus VS Church
So when Copernicus came
along with the correct
heliocentric system, his ideas
were fiercely opposed by the
Roman Catholic Church
because they displaced Earth
from the center, and that was
seen as both a demotion for
human beings and contrary to
the teachings of Aristotle.
                 Copernicus was somewhat
ADDITIONALS:     wrong about his theory.
ADDITIONALS:   Copernicus also worked as a...
          TRIVIA: DID YOU KNOW?
Coperni
   Copernicus was so perfectionist
  that he never once babble or tell
  anyone about his theory not until
  he was nearing his death, and for
    his huge fear of being deemed
         heretic by the Church.
CHARLES DARWIN
    1809 – 1882
Darwin’s Theory of Evolution
● Is the widely held notion that
   all living organisms are related
   and have descended from a
   common ancestor.
Natural selection- is the
process        through       which
populations of living organisms
adapt and change
DARWINISM
● is a theory of biological
  evolution stating that all
  species of organisms arise and
  develop through the natural
  selection of small, inherited
  variations that increase the
  individual's ability to compete,
  survive, and reproduce.
● also called Darwinian theory
 On the Origin of Species by Means
        of Natural Selection
● November 24, 1859
● work of scientific literature that is
  considered to be the foundation of
  evolutionary biology
● introduced the scientific theory that
  populations evolve over the course of
  generations through a process of
  natural selection.
Ideas about the transmutation of species
were controversial as they conflicted with
the beliefs that species were unchanging
parts of a designed hierarchy and that
humans were unique, unrelated to other
animals. The political and theological
implications were intensely debated, but
transmutation was not accepted by the
scientific mainstream.
Darwinism’s Effect on Society
● The development of Darwinism changed the
  general thinking of the world, while unlocking the
  truth behind both Earth and life.
● This realization pitted the church and science
  against each other in a battle over creation vs.
  evolution.
Darwinism’s Effect on Society
● Darwinism allowed us to gain a better
  understanding of our world, which in turn
  allowed us to change the way that we
  think.
● This leadership took the fear out of science
  and allowed scientists to attempt more
  controversial experiments in order to find
  new discoveries.
Darwinism’s Effect on Society
● He discovered that mutations can prove as
  beneficial to a society by allowing a
  species to adapt to environmental
  changes.
He composed a pro/con list to decide on   Fun fact!
         whether to marry.
                 Sigmund Schlomo Freud
            ● In 1873 , Sigmund studied medicine at the
                         University of Vienna.
               ● Freud was an Austrian Neurologist
1856-1939
● Sigmund Freud married Martha Bernays, with
  whom he had six children.
● In Freudian Theory, the mind is structured into
  main parts: the conscious and unconscious mind.
● He created an entirely approach to the
  understanding of the human personality.
● He is regarded as one of the most
  influential-and controversial-minds of the 20th
  Century.
                         TRIVIA
In Sigmund Freud's
psychoanalytic theory of
personality, the unconscious
mind is defined as a reservoir
of feelings, thoughts, urges,
and memories that outside of
conscious awareness
            T H      E
INFORMATION
 REVOLUTION
  T H E N    B E G   I   N S...
        INFORMATION REVOLUTION
    Information revolution accompanied the history of mankind
and began as early as 300 BC with Sumerian Pictographs. Some of
the milestones of the information revolution ar Gutenberg’s
invention of the printing press in 1455, the work of Agusta and
Babbage on Analytic Engine in the early 1830’s, the invention of the
first the telephone during 1870’s, and Turing’s work during World
War II (Newman, 1955).
                                                   First model of
                                                    TELEPHONE
            Printing
            Press (1455)                           ALEXANDER
GUTENBERG                   Augusta & Babbage’s   GRAHAM BELL
                              Analytic Engine
                            Alan Turing (1912-1954) is a British
                        mathematician who considered information
                        revolution as the fourth revolution following
                        the Copernican, Darwinian, Freudian.
                            He provided a fundamental contribution
                        to computer sciences by refining the
                        concepts of algorithm and computation with
                        what came to be called Turing Machine.
    He also contributed the Turing test concerning the possibility of
developing conscious and thinking machines in Artificial Intelligence. The
Turing test is a test of a machine’s ability to exhibit intelligent behavior
equivalent to, or indistinguishable from that of a human (Beavers, 2013).
  Information revolution triggers profound changes both in the way we conduct
        our lives and in the way we perceive ourselves as human beings.
       MESOAMERICAN CIVILIZATION
Mesoamerica was a region and
cultural area in the Americas,
and it was where pre-Columbian
societies flourish before the
Spanish colonization in the 15th
and 16th centuries.
                                   Mesoamerica and its cultural areas
   ● Human presence - 21,000 BCE
   ● Hunting and gathering communities - 11,000 BCE
Agriculture
7000 BC
- Cultivation of cacao,
  corn, beans, tomato,
  squash and chil;
- Domestication of turkey
  and       dog      from
  Paleo-Indian
  hunter-gatherer to the       The main food sources:
                             “Three Sisters” - beans, corn,
  organization          of              squash
  sedentary agricultural
  villages.
● Cotton plants and rubber
  trees were used in making
  textiles and rubber balls.
                               Cotton plants   Rubber trees
 Textiles      Rubber balls
Combatting lack of usable land and poor soil condition
● Combination       of    crop
  rotation and slash-and-burn
  technique
● Formed terraces along the
  slopes of mountain valley.
● Chinampas- plots of mud
  and soil placed on top of
                                         Chinampas
  layers    of   thick   water
  vegetation.
● Irrigation techniques.
               Mesoamerican Calendars
Haab (Civil Calendar)
- Had 18 months of 20
  days for a total of 30
  days each cycle.
Tzolkin Calendar
 - 20 months of 13 days
 - Was used primarily for
   ceremonial purposes.
                                  Aztec Calendar
           ASIAN CIVILIZATION
            (India and China)
● 4000 years ago
● Indus River Valley
                       ● Bronze and copper
                       ● Mohenjo-daro
           ASIAN CIVILIZATION
            (India and China)
Hinduism            Buddhism
● 4 sacred books    ● Buddha
   called Vedas       “The Enlightened One”
● Aryan people      ● Siddharta Gautama
● Caste system        “Human greed and
● Brahmans            selfishness leads to
                      human pain”
          ASIAN CIVILIZATION
           (India and China)
Confucianism
● Huang Ho riverbanks
● Confucius
● Great wall of China
● “Barbarians”
     M I D D LE EAS T C I V I LI ZAT I O N
    MIDDLE EAST is considered as the home to the “Cradle of
Civilization” where many of the world’s oldest cultures and
civilizations were seen. The history started for the earliest
human settlements continuing through several major pre- and
post- Islamic Empires to the modern collection of nation-states
covering the Middle East today. (Cleveland & Bunton, 2016)
    The MIDDLE EAST was the first to practice intensive year-round
agriculture and currency-mediated trade as opposed to barter. It also
gave the rest of the world the first writing system, invented the
potter’s wheel and then the vehicular and mill wheel, created the first
generalized governments and law codes, served as birthplace to the
first city-states with their high degree of division labor, as well as
laying the foundation for astronomy and mathematics.
   The invention of writing was considered as one of
the most important inventions between the advent of
agriculture and the age of the steam engine. The
creation was based on the new needs for commercial,
property, and political records including a celebration
of the deeds of proud local kings. Writing was
preceded by the invention of the clay cylinder seals, on
which little pictures of objects can be recorded.
   The earliest writings simply evolved from pictures
baked on clay tablets, which were turned into symbols,
and gradually transformed into phonetic elements.
(Mitchell, 2012)                However, upon its prospering its
                            empire also introduced rigid social
                            stratification, slavery, and organized
                            warfare.
          AFRICAN CIVILIZATION
According to some
historians, Africans
were nothing more
than savages whose
only contributions
to the world were
farming and slaves.
  This lineage and culture of achievements have
emerged at least 40,000 years ago in Africa.
Some of these were in the field of Mathematics,
Astronomy, Metallurgy and tools, Agriculture and
Engineering.
Dogon Astronomy                Mathematics
                                             Engineering
                  Metallurgy
Mathematics
● First method of counting.
● The     Yoruba     people      from
  present-day Nigeria created their
  own complex counting system
  based on units of 20 (instead of 10).
● Geometry and symmetry in
  repeated patterns can be seen
  throughout the area south of the
  Sahara, in forms of artistic designs
  on houses, gourd, baskets, pipes,
  and other everyday items.
Astronomy
● African Stonehenge in
  present-day Kenya was a
  remarkably         accurate
  calendar.
● The Dogon people of Mali
  have various astronomical
  discoveries wherein they
  knew of the Saturn’s rings,
  Jupiter’s moon, the spiral
  structure of the Milky Way
  and the orbit of Sirius star.
                                  African Stonehenge
Across African ancient metallugry and tool making were
also made.
This includes:
Steam engines, metal chisels and saw, copper and iron
weapon and tools, nail, glue, carbon, steel and bronze
weapon.
The African empire of egypt developed a vast array of divers
structures and great architectural monument along the nile.
    Great Sphinx of Giza               Great Pyramid of Giza
In the 12th century,
hundreds of great
cities in Zimbabwe
and Mozambique
made of massive stone
complexes and huge
castle-like compound
existed
In the 13th century
(Adams, 1983) The
empire of Mali boasted
impressive cities
including Tumbuku
with grand places ,
mosque and
universities.
● Medicine in Nigeria and South Africa was
  more advanced than medicine in Europe.
● Plants with salicylic acid for pain, kaolin for
  diarrhea, and in 20th century extracts that
  were confirmed to kill Gram positive bacteria.
● Other plant used had anticancer properties,
  caused abortion and treated malaria.
(Ackernecht,1982) Medical procedure
performance in ancient Africa before they were
performed in Europe included vaccination,
autopsy, limb traction and broken bone setting,
bullet removal, brain surgery, skin grafting, filling
of dental cavities , installation of false teeth,
anesthesia and tissue cauterization
                            REPORTED BY:
                         Jocel Mae Domingo
                       Ana Marie Mar Tejada
                       Althea Myzie Discutido
                                  from BSBA 1-1
/ˈTHaNGk ˌyo͞o/
          an Yo ! :)          STS MODULE 3