All AP European History Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #51 : Cultural And Intellectual History
The discovery that the planets move in elliptical orbits is attributed to __________.
Tycho Brahe
Isaac Newton
Johannes Kepler
Nicholas Copernicus
Galileo
Johannes Kepler
All of these people made notable contributions to mankind’s understanding of the nature of the solar system and the universe, but the discovery that planets move in elliptical orbits, as opposed to perfect circles as was initially believed, was made by Johannes Kepler in the seventeenth century.
Example Question #52 : Cultural And Intellectual History
Descartes’ work on analytical geometry laid the foundation for __________.
Bacon’s work on the scientific method
Alexander Graham Bell’s invention of the telephone
All of these answers
Newton’s development of calculus
Darwin’s theory of natural selection
Newton’s development of calculus
Analytical geometry is the study of geometry that employs a coordinate system and marries geometry and algebra in a way previously not understood by European mathematicians. The work was pioneered by René Descartes in his work La Géométrie. It laid the foundation for the invention of calculus a few decades later by Isaac Newton and Wilhelm Leibniz.
Example Question #53 : Cultural And Intellectual History
Who is credited with first hypothesizing that the light travels faster than the speed of sound, but does not in fact travel instantaneously?
Isaac Newton
Galileo
Tycho Brahe
René Descartes
Edward Burke
Galileo
For much of history, from the time when Aristotle lived until the Scientific Revolution, it was assumed that light travelled instantaneously. However, Galileo postulated, correctly as it turns out, that all we can deduce is that light travels faster than the speed of sound, but does not necessarily travel instantaneously.
Example Question #54 : Cultural And Intellectual History
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek is most famous for his work on __________.
microscopes
mining safety
cartography
compasses
telescopes
microscopes
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek is considered to be the world’s first microbiologist. He greatly improved the capabilities of microscopes, and in doing so, opened up the world of the microscopic to human examination for the first time in human history. Among other things, he is believed to be the first human being to observe single-celled organisms, bacteria, yeast, and blood cells.
Example Question #55 : Cultural And Intellectual History
On the Fabric of the Human Body is the magnum opus of __________.
Anders Celsius
William Harvey
René Descartes
Andreas Vesalius
Evangelista Torricelli
Andreas Vesalius
On the Fabric of the Human Body is one of the most influential works on human anatomy in European history. It was written by Andreas Vesalius in the mid-sixteenth century and refuted the long held belief in Galen’s understanding of the “humors” and human blood.
Example Question #56 : Cultural And Intellectual History
Robert Boyle is primarily known for his innovations in the field of __________.
chemistry
mathematics
alchemy
biology
astronomy
chemistry
Robert Boyle was an Irish chemist who lived during the seventeenth century. He is most widely known for his innovations in the field of chemistry, particularly Boyle’s Law—an equation conveying the inverse relationship between pressure and volume of gas.
Example Question #51 : Ap European History
Which of the following individuals was the first to employ the term “cell” to describe the composition of organisms?
Charles Darwin
Robert Hooke
Francis Bacon
Charles Dickens
Robert Boyle
Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke was an English scientist in the seventeenth century who, among other things, pioneered work in the field of microbiology. He was the first man to employ the term “cell” to describe the composition of organisms that he observed under a microscope.
Example Question #52 : Ap European History
The first reliable mercury thermometer was invented by __________.
Francis Bacon
Lord Kelvin
Anders Celsius
Gabriel Fahrenheit
Isaac Newton
Gabriel Fahrenheit
The first reliable mercury thermometer was invented by the German scientist Gabriel Fahrenheit in 1714. The scale used to measure temperature was later altered by the Swedish scientist Anders Celsius, who set the freezing point of water at zero and the boiling point at one hundred and created the Celsius temperature measurement system. Lord Kelvin is famous for inventing the Kelvin scale that sets its zero point at absolute zero, the lowest possible temperature attainable before matter becomes completely motionless and devoid of energy.
Example Question #57 : Cultural And Intellectual History
Johannes Kepler, Nicholas Copernicus, and Galileo were all notable __________.
astronomers
architects
impressionists
mercenaries
clergymen
astronomers
Kepler, Copernicus, and Galileo were all notable astronomers in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Collectively they did a great deal to advance our understanding of the Earth’s place in the solar system and in the universe. Copernicus was the first to prove, mathematically (his work improved upon by Kepler), that the sun, not the Earth, was the centre of the solar system. For their efforts, all three of these men had to fear intense church retribution when publishing their works.
Example Question #54 : Ap European History
The “uncertainty principle” is most closely associated with __________.
Friedrich Nietzsche
Alfred Nobel
Werner Heisenberg
Marie Curie
Immanuel Kant
Werner Heisenberg
The “uncertainty principle” states that you can never simultaneously know the position and velocity of an electron; you can only know one or the other at a time. Essentially, if you know how fast it is moving, you do not know where it is, and vice versa. The exact reasons for this are too complicated to go into here, but the important thing to note is that the nature of this discovery is critical to understanding the scientific perspective of the first half of the twentieth century. The absolute faith in the power of science to explain the workings of the universe was being questioned anew, as science was creating more questions than answers.