Implications Of Enlightenment Ideas

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Implications of Enlightenment ideas for institutions such as the traditional monarchy or the Roman Catholic Church were fairly distressing at the time. With people starting to freely think and "dispelling ignorance, prejudice, and superstition," (Perry et al. 2016) government systems began to need reforming by the want of the people, and churches lost power and control over people. With the stress of the new ideas arising, churches were rivaled against. Politics began to fall apart due to the new ideas and lost power due to the disruption. Groups who were following the Enlightenment ideas began to rise in popularity and power and rival with the churches because of their harshness and intolerance. Christianity was under attack and began losing more and more ground in the eighteenth century when philosophes started to denounce the churches. With this, rulers in place did what they felt was in the best interest of people. These institutions that once unified the land were now the enemy because of their ways and faced much criticism and hostility. The enlightenment ideas lead to a new era, the High Enlightenment, which went against the churches beliefs in every way.