All AP European History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #41 : Ap European History
The Scottish philosopher David Hume’s most widely regarded work, A Treatise of Human Nature, attempts to __________.
None of these answers is correct.
deductively examine the reasons why human nature is so easily corruptible
inductively examine the effect of religion and society on natural human behavior
prove that human behavior is affected little by circumstance, and primarily pre-determined by God
empirically examine the psychological basis of human behavior
empirically examine the psychological basis of human behavior
David Hume was a Scottish philosopher in the eighteenth century. He is widely considered to be one of the most influential philosophers in British history and one of the pioneers of empiricism and skepticism in Britain. His most famous work A Treatise of Human Nature attempts to empirically examine the psychological basis of human behavior. Hume firmly believed that people could not have innate ideas, but could only have an understanding based on the things they had directly experienced.
Example Question #4 : Secularization Of Learning
The skepticism of the Scientific Revolution employed __________ to revolutionize Europeans' understanding of the natural world.
sophistry
rhetorical arguments
post-structuralism
deconstructionism
inductive reasoning
inductive reasoning
Francis Bacon was an English scientist who is often credited with coming up with what is now known as "the scientific method." Bacon believed that scientific inquiry was too often conducted with the incorrect spirit, or with the wrong intentions. He advocated for inductive reasoning that prioritized observation and the collection of data above the sporadic and unsupported development of theories based on tradition that had previously dominated scientific inquiry. The general principle of inductive reasoning is to build one's larger theories about phenomena on an accumulated base of smaller, quantifiable observations.
Example Question #1 : Secularization Of Learning
During the Renaissance, the emphasis of many writers, particularly those who ascribed to humanism, shifted from glorification of the divine to __________.
a consideration of the human experience
complete refutation of the possibility of a divinity
an appreciation for foreign or unfamiliar cultures and traditions
disdain for the human condition
an approach rooted in non-conformity and mysticism
a consideration of the human experience
The primary emphasis of most writers of the Renaissance, particularly those who ascribed to humanism, was to consider and celebrate the human experience. Humanist writers celebrated the possibility of all people to better their world and focused much less on religious considerations then had their counterparts in the Medieval Era. This is not to say that Renaissance humanists were all atheists; many were deeply religious. They simply sought to turn their intellectual pursuits toward more open and nuanced treatments of human endeavor and experience.
Example Question #71 : 1500 C.E. To 1900 C.E.
Secularism, which emerged during the Renaissance period, is the belief that __________.
art and artistic pursuits are the highest achievements and goals of mankind
political and religious life ought to be separated
common language is the root of nationality
political power is for the immoral and amoral
None of the other answers is correct.
political and religious life ought to be separated
Secularism emerged as a political and social philosophy in the Renaissance period of European history and grew in influence during the Enlightenment and Industrial eras. It advocates primarily for the separation of the political and the religious (for example, no laws based on religious codes, etc.). It also contends that life on Earth is "more important" than the afterlife and that all religious beliefs should be tolerated, although these tenets of secularism were added by degrees as the centuries went by.
Example Question #12 : Secularization Of Learning
This philosophy was centered around the study of classical writings and emphasized the inherent potential of human-beings.
Classicism
Socialism
Calvinism
Dogmatism
Humanism
Humanism
Humanism arose in the early part of the Renaissance period. It was based on the study of classical writings, and the early humanists revered the Greek philosophers like Aristotle and Plato. Humanism emphasized the inherent ability of people to reason, to think critically, and to examine phenomena via evidence.
Example Question #41 : Ap European History
This French philosopher is sometimes referred to as the founder of modern Western philosophy due to his development of the methodic doubt, a systematic process of doubting the veracity of one's own beliefs.
Henri Bergson
Nicolas Malebranche
August Comte
René Descartes
Peter Abelard
René Descartes
Another name for methodic doubt is Cartesian doubt. Rene Descartes was among the most influential philosophers of the 17th century, as evidenced by the use of a variation on his name as a, not uncommon, adjective.
Example Question #41 : Ap European History
Nicholas Copernicus developed which of the following scientific models?
the heliocentric model of the universe
the Ptolemaic model of planetary spheres
an elliptical model of planetary motion
the geocentric model of the universe
a model describing the Earth's gravitational pull
the heliocentric model of the universe
Copernicus wrote On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres in the sixteenth century, and this work was published after his death. This work described a heliocentric model of the universe, in which the sun was posited as the center of the universe, with the planets revolving around it. Copernicus's model implicitly disputed the accuracy of the prevailing scientific model, the Ptolemaic or geocentric model, in which the earth was the center of the universe. Also, note that Copernicus's model did not recognize that planetary motion was elliptical.
Example Question #2 : Science And Technology
The emergence of the scientific method and the preeminence of inductive reasoning in the Scientific Revolution are owed to the writings of __________.
Socrates
Francis Bacon
Plato
Tycho Brahe
Aristotle
Francis Bacon
Sir Francis Bacon was an English scientist in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries who pioneered the scientific method and greatly emphasized the importance of inductive reasoning as opposed to deductive reasoning. His development of the scientific method is one of the most important steps of the Scientific Revolution and contributed to the massive growth in human understanding of chemistry and physics in the centuries that followed. In the scientific method, the first step is to gather facts and then to conduct unbiased experiments designed to test a certain theory; this differed greatly from the earlier approach of running experiments and then postulating a theory to match the outcome of the test.
Example Question #3 : Science And Technology
The Papacy was primarily __________ to the progress of the Scientific Revolution because it __________.
hostile . . . challenged the church’s beliefs on creation and the nature of the universe
ambivalent . . . presented little threat to the church’s hold on the lives of the majority of Europeans
hostile . . . threatened to liberate the working classes of Europe
friendly . . . reinforced the church’s beliefs on creation and the nature of the universe
friendly . . . undermined the power of secular rulers and brought mankind closer to the “heavens”
hostile . . . challenged the church’s beliefs on creation and the nature of the universe
Throughout the Scientific Revolution, the Papacy was extremely hostile to any developments that challenged the church’s established doctrine on creation and the nature of the universe. This was particularly true of any revelations to do with astronomy, to the point where Copernicus waited until after his death to have his work on the heliocentric model of the solar system published, and Galileo lived in constant fear of punishment and execution.
Example Question #42 : Ap European History
Innovations in the understanding of magnetism during the Scientific Revolution made __________ easier and far more reliable.
manufacturing
cartography
navigation
geometry
agriculture
navigation
In 1600, William Gilbert published his groundbreaking work on magnetism, specifically in regard to the magnetic nature of the Earth’s atmosphere. This made navigation and the use of compasses far easier and more reliable and allowed European explorers and traders to push further afield and to have much greater faith in the security of their journeys.