Enlightenment was the Renaissance philosophy and art movement that continued until the 19th century. Enlightenment is an optimistic belief that humans can improve themselves by applying logic and reason. It rejects untested beliefs, superstitions, and "barbarism" in the early Middle Ages, accepting the literary, architectural and artistic forms of the Greek-Roman world. Enlightenment thinkers are fascinated by geometry and mathematics, and the perfection of all music and balance. The poetry of this era was proved by two main characters, Pope Alexandre and John Dryden. The main philosophers include Voltaire, Rousseau, Montesquieu and Rock. Often these enlighteners use satire to ridicule the illogical errors they believe in governments, social customs and religious beliefs. This article examines Alexander's ideology and belief. It will also study some ideologies of other philosophers
In enlightenment, people emphasized thinking power and reasoning power very much. In this era, people think and infer about a series of topics. Some people care about the problem of God and let many people question the church. Others will focus on the organization of the universe and the position of humans in the universe. The first paper by Alexander's "Human Paper" conveys the three main concerns of enlightenment, so it can be thought of as the details of enlightenment. He talks about human self-reasoning and ability of thought, questions the nature of the church and Christianity, and also guesses the human position in the world as part of the life chain.
Inference ability is the central focus of enlightenment. The pope started his thesis by attracting the audience. He wrote, "Together