European History Chapter 24

European history

40 cards   |   Total Attempts: 188
  

Cards In This Set

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The overall European population was growing at the end of the nineteenth century. but
A) the birthrate was falling in almost every country.
In the late nineteenth century, politicians and social theorists began to worry about a marked decline in fertility, which they blamed on all of the following except
A) late marriages among the working class.
In the late nineteenth century, marriage reformers proposed
A) placing marital finances in equal control of men and women, legalizing divorce, and providing government subsidies for mothers.
The term modern was often applied to this period because it
A) captures the accelerated pace of life, urbanization, mass politics, and artistic responses to all of these changes.
Despite rapid modernization, old ways and customs still survived in eastern Europe, as exemplified by the Balkan retention of the
A) zadruga.
In Great Britain, theorist Havelock Ellis (1859-1939) emerged as a practitioner of the new field of
A) sexology.
Max Nordau argued that
A) nervous complaints and a bizarre art world were symptoms of cultural degeneration.
Sigmund Freud's theory of the human psyche alarmed many because it stated that
A) humans were motivated by irrational drives, not only by logical thought.
The controversial approach of psychohistory uses the approach of Freud to
A) show how childhood traumas caused historical figures to make the decisions they did.
One way Max Weber differed from positivists was that he asserted that
A) a leader who acted on intuition might be better able to deal with a crisis than laws or bureaucracies based on rational or scientific approaches.
The work of some late-nineteenth-century philosophers known as pragmatists and relativists reflected a change in Western perceptions of the world and argued that
A) human understanding was contingent upon the complex conditions of daily existence, and therefore no theory or standard was ever definitive.
Scientists Antoine Becquerel (1852-1908), Marie Curie (1867-1934), and Max Planck (1858-1947) all argued that
A) matter was not solid but, rather, made up of mutable atoms, themselves made up of subatomic particles moving about a core.
Which of the following was not a scientific innovation during this period?
A) Watson and Crick's discovery of DNA
A number of groups critical of growing nationalism sprang up in central and eastern Europe in the attempt to secure freedom of expression for
A) artists, particularly the avant-garde.
How did fauvism, cubism, and expressionism differ significantly from art nouveau?
A) Fauvism, cubism, and expressionism stressed the unpleasant aspects of industrial society, while art nouveau emphasized beauty that could help people escape from it.