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[Music]
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hi
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good day i'd like to talk about an event
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that happened
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18th century europe but is still very
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current today
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i'd like to talk about enlightenment
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the title of my talk is the
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enlightenment still burning bright
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we assume that today we have the right
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to choose
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for our lives the right to choose our
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career
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the right to choose a religion
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or not have a religion at all the right
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to express our opinions and on
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government
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without fear of arrest but do you
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realize that
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over three centuries ago such rights did
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not exist
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in most parts of the world so what made
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the
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difference that was the enlightenment
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this in fact is a topic of our talk
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today
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i want to talk about
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three things how the flame of the
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enlightenment was ignited in europe
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how the flames spread to the philippines
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and finally
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how the flame continues to burn brightly
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still
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today all over the world let us go to
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france
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which at that time was the most
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prosperous in the largest country in
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europe in terms of population
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such freedoms did not exist in france
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then
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what you had was a large
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commoner mass of people peasants
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working men and ambusho c
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consisting of educated merchants
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manufacturers and government officials
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they were heavily taxed and yet
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the clergy and the nobility who
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constituted only two percent of the
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population
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and owned most of the land in france
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were hardly taxed so there was
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resentment
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unfortunately the nobility were powerful
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do you realize that the noble man could
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have you
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imprisoned if he is if you displease a
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noble man
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and he could have imprisoned on on
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charges for the rest of your life
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meanwhile uh clergy were not questioned
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at all
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um they were the man of god so how can
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you question them
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so um they they spoke as they pleased
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and also crimes against religion were
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considered crimes against the state
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so if you were accused of blasphemy you
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could be executed
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so uh what gave the men of france the
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courage to question all these things
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and to raise their lives something that
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happened earlier
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before the enlightenment which was
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the advent of galileo galileo
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in italy had developed a new approach
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called sienza the italian for knowledge
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in english we simply use the word
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science
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he developed this at the start of the
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17th century
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now his approach to reality was quite
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different
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he said let us do controlled
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experimentation
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let us gather observable data and
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finally let us apply
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mathematical reasoning to make sense of
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this data
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so there was no need actually for
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external authority
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because it's observation plus reason
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now what did he do he applied this
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to trying to understand the cosmos
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and he realized looking through his
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telescope which is just invented
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that actually the planets and the earth
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revolved around the sun not the sun and
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the planets revolving around the earth
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this was contrary to what the ancient
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greeks
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and the bible said now the church of
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course was horrified this was something
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new they didn't know what to do with
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this
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so they asked galileo to recant
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under pain of torture which it did
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galileo was under house arrest but
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it was too late because
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his ideas had spread throughout europe
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especially sienza
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science and it was copied everywhere and
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found to be very important so
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um reason in the case of galileo
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triumphed
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against um prejudice
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so um intellectuals therefore asked
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why can we not use science to make this
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world
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a better place let us use rational
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inquiry
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thus was born enlightenment
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enlightenment because it was seen as
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reason
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combating ignorance the radical thinkers
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were called philosoph
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the french word for philosopher they're
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also called lumiere
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the french word for light
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the enlightenment from emanuel kant
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was really a man realizing his potential
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through the use of his
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mind that was the aim of enlightenment
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to improve the world
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in fact modernity is the view that the
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world and the self
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can be improved through reason so
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um enlightenment and modernity are
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closely allied
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okay we can see very clearly the inf um
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the practicality the desire of the
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enlightenment to improve the world
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in the encyclopedia or encyclopedia
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which
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the figures of enlightenment came out in
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the 1750s
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um it's a multi-volume encyclopedia the
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first of its kind
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it brought together the sciences the
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arts
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and the crafts a book of several volumes
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uh you can see how much they revered
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even ordinary knowledge
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this page illustrates for you how pins
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are made
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can you imagine that pins they
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illustrated this
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why because they wanted all this
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knowledge they're available
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ordinary people in the hope that they
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could
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improve on this current knowledge
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unfortunately the church objected
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why because some passages of
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enlightenment
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question religion it questioned
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the truth of miracles because if
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everything
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is subjected to reason even miracles
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have to be proven
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but the philosophers fought back they
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were fighting for the right
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to think freely the champion was
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voltaire
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was a popular figure all over europe
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because of his writings tolerance has
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never provoked a civil war
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but intolerance has covered the world in
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carnage
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so um it took up cases
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of people who were victimized even
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though they were innocent
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the celebrated case was that of a young
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french nobleman jean-francois de la barr
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who was accused of blasphemy blasphemy
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in what way
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because jean-francois did not take off
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his hat
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when a procession passed by at the same
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time he was accused of vandalizing a
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public crucifix
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so what was his punishment they tore off
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his tongue
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and then cut off his head now voltaire
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of course was outraged
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he publicized the case all throughout
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europe
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with his writings authorities in france
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were forced
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to listen now voltaire did not succeed
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in having the case reviewed but he
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succeeded
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in having this as the last blasphemy
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execution
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ever the favorite um expression of
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altair was
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he classed you have to crush the horror
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and this is still very true today we
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have to crush the horror
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the second fight of the enlightenment
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was for equality
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resource said man is born
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free but is everywhere in chains
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he says yes we europeans
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have conquered the world but does that
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make us
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necessarily superior to those we have
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conquered necessarily
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because um you have um
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people who are illiterate half naked
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you call them savages but they're
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they're capable of many things we're not
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capable of
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if we were in the wilderness without our
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technology
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without our ladders we would never be
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able to climb a tree
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but look at these um savages they're
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quite able to climb a tree with such
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agility
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it only shows that the savages are as
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intelligent
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as the colonizer okay the other thing he
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was concerned about
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was that private property in land is not
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present in all societies
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so um turning to france
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turning to europe he said he was hinting
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the nobility should not imagine
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that their privileges have been around
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for centuries
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in fact such privileges do not exist
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in some other societies especially in
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simple societies
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so such privileges are the product of
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convention
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and if they're the product of convention
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they can be modified
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he was not calling for the elimination
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of private property
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rather he was saying that the laws of
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the state can mitigate
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social inequality why because the state
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itself
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is not divinely ordained the state
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is really a social contract between the
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citizens
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and those who govern them the citizens
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can demand
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[Music]
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benefits from the state in exchange for
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giving up
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some of the rights now
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voltaire and russo were exiled they were
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punished
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in fact some of the writers encyclopedia
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were also jailed
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nonetheless their works spread
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all over europe so too late
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they already had a following all over
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all over in fact
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open-minded members of the bourgeoisie
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the nobility and even the clergy were
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listening to them
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in fact some of the kings were
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sympathetic so what happened was that
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very slowly some of the legal codes were
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re-examined
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attitudes changed however
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unfortunately taxation without
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representation
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still prevailed hence the american and
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the french revolutions
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exploded in 1776 and 1789
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the result was those
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who came to power tried to
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uh enact laws that finally
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um acknowledged the right to liberty the
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right equality
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so um the french revolution published
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this wonderful document the declaration
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of
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the rights of man and the citizen it's
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said that social
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distinctions can only be founded on the
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common good
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so the article uh two in fact points out
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the right of
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political association is inherent so
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there is no reason to prevent people
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from
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forming organizations the state should
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not be suspicious
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the enlightenment spread to the
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philippines because here there are
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plenty of grievances
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against the government it was a colonial
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government
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after the capital mutiny exploded in
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1872
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the government overreacted because it
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was afraid of a revolution
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so what it did was it arrested
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three innocent priests and had them
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strangled publicly
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to quell dissent these were fathers
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gomez
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burgos and zamora so educated filipinos
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were horrified
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they decided it was time to organize a
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movement
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to call attention to what was happening
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in the colony
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as well as they wanted to to demand
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representation in the spanish parliament
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so they could have a voice unfortunately
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um the government did not listen still
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members of the propaganda persisted like
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jose rizal he decided to write
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novels uh dramatizing what was happening
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so in olympia it points out how the
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maneuverings of two friars
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destroy two innocent lives christos
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ibarra is forced to feed the country
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because it's
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accused of rebellion and his fiancee
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maria clara
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enters the nunnery and ends up crazy
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um in his second novel oserisal says
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there are no tyrants where there are no
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slaves this is the novel alfie busterism
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because result was convinced that
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yes we need radical change
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but radical change has to come from
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within
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okay otherwise you exchange one tyrant
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for another
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no unfortunately the spaniards didn't
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still didn't listen so what happened
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andres bonifacio decided it's time to
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form a revolutionary government
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it's time to separate from spain the
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ideologue
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of the catepunan was emilio jacinto
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who wrote articles for the underground
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paper
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he said that it's important to
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distinguish
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between glitter and light
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we worship glitter but reject light
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so a magnificent courage courage passes
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by according to hacinto
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we are enthralled we are impressed but
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the owner may actually be a thief
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and it's important for us to realize
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that this may be why the colonial
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government is able to
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take take such hold on us
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because we're impressed by the glitter
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so um pacinto was
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emphatic about the importance of light
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it's unfortunate that we don't
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generally connect result a sinto
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and others to the enlightenment but in
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fact
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there's such a close connection um if
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only we could use
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the word illustrato in the original
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spanish sense
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original spanish chance of israel has
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nothing to do with being wealthy
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illustrado has me two meanings in
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spanish to be
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first to be educated whether you're rich
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or poor that is illustrato
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secondly to believe in enlightenment
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again whether you're rich or poor
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because enlightenment in spanish is
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illustration
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so definitely a poor fellow like
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haciento
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was an illustrator twice because he was
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educated
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and because he believed in enlightenment
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he was
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after or a light better
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so what happened to rizal and asinto
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they too suffered
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result as we know was executed while
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pujacinto
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took up arms outsmarted the spaniards
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but
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found himself fighting the americans he
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died from
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wounds sustained in battle their ideals
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however
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inspired the philosophy of our republic
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in fact the ideals also imparted
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modernity
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to the philippines because many
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filipinos assume today
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that they have a right to question the
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status quo
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in order to improve their lives so
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um is the flame still burning brightly
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today yes
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definitely many countries have
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constitutions with the bill of rights
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the united nations enacted the
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declaration of
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human rights in 1948 because
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it wanted its charter countries to
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follow suit
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meanwhile churches like the catholic now
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advocate religious tolerance
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and democracy and policymakers
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now consult science experts regularly
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science-based evidence is very important
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today
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unfortunately it is not just utopia
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because
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science itself is under attack when it
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challenges power for interest
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for instance in the question of climate
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change
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the logical thing to do since carbon
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dioxide is trapped in our
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atmosphere by our emissions is to
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conserve the forests expand the forests
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as well as to reduce our
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dependence on fossil fuels but this is
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not happening
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because powerful commercial interests
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are denouncing
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climate change as a hoax this is despite
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what the scientists are doing
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the other thing is there's actually been
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a counter-attack against human rights
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religious intolerance
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is once more rearing its ugly head
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in fact there are victims of
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religious intolerance all over the world
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when um
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extreme extremist christians or hindus
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or muslims or buddhists assume control
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they persecute people from other faiths
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moreover racism is once again rampant
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so if you're out of a different caller
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if you're darker and you get arrested
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you stand a higher chance
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of getting killed by the police there's
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also
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um discrimination against women women
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constitute one half of the population
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but they still receive lower paid than
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men
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in many places and finally um
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many governments may have constitutions
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that declare themselves
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democratic but try criticizing some
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governments today
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and they hit back at you for upsetting
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the social order
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so definitely freedom's speech is
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endangered
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however i'd like to remind us not to
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lose hope
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sapere aude dare to know was what
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emmanuel kant said dare to know
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dare to ask dare to question
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at the same time let us consider what
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emilia hasinta said
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i think hanapin and luana wactio becomes
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an ending
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let us look for the light and not be
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dazzled by glitter
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i would like to conclude by commanding
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three sectors in the philippines that to
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my mind
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still carried enlightenment forward one
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is the ebon foundation
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a research foundation that since the
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1960s
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specialized in
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doing solid research on
00:20:32
social economic issues and as an
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alternative view of poverty
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unfortunately um conservative powers
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look at ebon
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as troublemakers so they have been
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persecuted for
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for harboring descent's dissidents the
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second group
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i'd like to commend are academics who
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use scientific data
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to advocate for more effective
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government policies
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for instance in ateneo you have dr john
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cruz
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who has studied um
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the infection rate during this pandemic
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covet 19 he thinks that the infection
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rate in the philippines is really much
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higher than government figures
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it could probably be running to 2
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million to 3 million
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this is based on statistical probability
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because
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other countries in southeast asia the
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five biggest countries
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um actually um
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seem to have higher rates than would be
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otherwise
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indicated unfortunately um
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the government does not seem to want to
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take the next logical step
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which is uh have
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mass testing and finally i would like to
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commend writers and journalists who
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expose what really is being
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done by the state on particular issues
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for example the corruption in government
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for their efforts um like voltaire
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like rousseau they have been jailed
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worse like missile they sometimes get
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killed
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so it's a problem indeed
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despite the growing shadows
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the enlightenment flame continues to
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burn bright
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thank you
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[Music]
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[Laughter]
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[Music]
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you