All SAT II World History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #2 : The Scientific Revolution
The heliocentric theory proposed by Copernicus states which of the following?
The sun and all the other planets revolve around Earth, which is the center of the universe.
Earth has a molten interior that is hotter than the surface of the sun.
The energy from the sun is necessary for sustaining all life on Earth.
Earth revolves around the Sun, which is the center of the solar system.
The Earth cannot possibly be flat.
Earth revolves around the Sun, which is the center of the solar system.
The heliocentric model of the solar system states that, contrary to earlier understanding, the Earth is not the center of the Universe. Rather, the sun is the center of our solar system. Earth and all the other planets revolve around the sun. This model was first proposed by Nicholas Copernicus and expanded upon by Galileo and Johannes Kepler.
Example Question #391 : Sat Subject Test In World History
Which of these men is famous for discovering that the Earth orbits the Sun, not the other way around as was previously thought?
Isaac Newton
Alexander Pope
Charles Dickens
Nicholas Copernicus
Tycho Brahe
Nicholas Copernicus
Prior to the research done by Copernicus in the "revolutions of the heavenly spheres," the Earth was thought to be the center of the universe. The Sun, the planets, and all of the stars were thought to revolve around the Earth. Copernicus proved this to be untrue; however, his work was deemed heretical by the Catholic church and would take some time to be accepted outside of scientific circles.
Example Question #392 : Sat Subject Test In World History
Which of the following best summarizes the tenets of Deism?
God's power on Earth is better represented by kings than by the Papacy or other religious leaders.
God does not exist and the world arose merely by chance.
Organized religion is an inherently corrupting influence in the lives of men.
Christianity, and the other Abrahamic religions, are all telling the same story and providing the same moral lessons and ought therefore to have better relations with one another.
God created the world to have certain natural laws, but does not interfere with it.
God created the world to have certain natural laws, but does not interfere with it.
Deism emerged for the first time in Europe during the Scientific Revolution. As scientists and thinkers began to understand more about the world, the mysticism of earlier periods began to fade and was replaced with growing comprehension and awareness. Deism is the belief that while God created the world, He did so with certain rules and laws that cannot be broken and now does not interfere in the lives of men or the existence of the world. This is called the belief in the "watchmaker" God.
Example Question #393 : Sat Subject Test In World History
The growth of what movement during the Renaissance can be seen as a precursor to the Scientific Revolution?
Classicism
Humanism
Pointillism
Socialism
Transcendentalism
Humanism
The growth of Humanism, which emphasized the ability of human beings to think rationally and solve problems using the logic, evidence, and critical thought recovered from the ancient world, can be understood as a precursor to the Scientific Revolution.
Example Question #2 : The Scientific Revolution
The Laws of Motion are found in the writings of __________.
Galileo
Francis Bacon
Isaac Newton
Charles Darwin
Charles Dickens
Isaac Newton
Isaac Newton is one of the most important figures of the Enlightenment and the Scientific Revolution. He discovered gravity and was, with Leibniz, the co-inventor of calculus. He also is credited with discovering the three laws of motion, which remain extremely important to our understanding of physics and the universe.
Example Question #3 : The Scientific Revolution
Why did Copernicus and Galileo, along with other notable astronomers, often conceal their research from the public during the Scientific Revolution?
None of these answers is correct; they were generally very quick to publish their research.
They feared disdain from the scientific community, which was slow to adapt to the progress of the Scientific Revolution.
They feared retribution from the Catholic church, which was unwilling to accept a different interpretation of the nature of the universe.
They feared retribution from the secular rulers, who did not want the common people to be educated.
They wanted to ensure that no mistakes could be found in their work.
They feared retribution from the Catholic church, which was unwilling to accept a different interpretation of the nature of the universe.
Copernicus hid his findings for most of his life, only publishing them when he was close to death, for fear of retribution from the Catholic Church. Galileo likewise hid his research for some time before finally deciding to publish his work, because not doing so would be to go against his conscience. Both men feared retribution from the Catholic church. During the Scientific Revolution, all scientists who disproved a "fact" about human beings or the universe that could be found in the Bible faced scorn, punishment, and even execution at the hands of the Catholic Church, which was desperate to retain control over the understanding of the place of humans and God in the universe.
Example Question #394 : Sat Subject Test In World History
The law of gravity was first proposed by which of the following individuals?
John Locke
Immanuel Kant
Alexander Graham Bell
Isaac Newton
Thomas Edison
Isaac Newton
Isaac Newton did a great deal to advance human understanding, including inventing a whole system of mathematics that we call calculus. His most famous achievement, however, is his discovery of the law of gravity, which changed the way scientists understood the universe. A famous quotation about Newton comes from the brilliant English Renaissance man Alexander Pope: "Nature, and nature's laws, lay bathed in night. God said 'Let there be Newton!' And all was light."
Example Question #395 : Sat Subject Test In World History
Which of the following Enlightenment philosophers can most reasonably be seen as the foil of John Locke?
Adam Smith
David Ricardo
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Thomas Hobbes
Voltaire
Thomas Hobbes
Whilst John Locke believed in liberalism and constitutionalism and limiting the power of absolute monarchs, Hobbes argued that absolutism was the only way to protect society from slipping into an anarchistic state of nature in which crime and chaos would reign.
Example Question #396 : Sat Subject Test In World History
Leviathan was written by which of the following authors?
Adam Smith
John Locke
Thomas Hobbes
Sir Francis Bacon
Charles de Montesquieu
Thomas Hobbes
Leviathan is a seminal work of the Enlightenment period that stood in contrast to the writings of John Locke, Rousseau, and others. In Leviathan, Thomas Hobbes presents his arguments in favor of absolutism as a means of preventing society from descending into catastrophic anarchy. Hobbes argued in support of the absolute power of government to control mankind's base nature.
Example Question #397 : Sat Subject Test In World History
The philosopher Voltaire was primarily concerned with protecting which of the following?
Freedom from taxation
Laissez-faire capitalism
The Catholic Church
Absolutism
Freedom of speech
Freedom of speech
Voltaire was a French philosopher during the Enlightenment era who advocated fiercely for the protection of freedom of speech. Freedom of speech, according to Voltaire, is the best and perhaps only way to guard against the tyranny of government.
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All SAT II World History Resources
