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Intellectual Revolution that

defined the society


Freudian Revolution
 He profoundly changed our understanding of humanity, thought and culture.
 This is a method proposed by Sigmund Freud who is the “ Father of
Psychoanalysis”
 the human mind is structured into two main parts: the conscious and unconscious
mind. The conscious mind includes all the things we are aware of or can easily
bring into awareness.

Psychoanalysis
(1896)

Sigmund
Freud

Founding of the Founding of the


psychoanalytical journal Wednesday
“Imago” Psychological Society
Copernican Revolution
• The Copernican system was the first European heliocentric theory of planetary
motion, in which the sun was fixed at the center of the Copernicus solar system and
all the planets, including the earth, revolved around it. He derived his Copernican
hypothesis from old astronomical sources in the early 16th century.
• An idea proposed by Nicolaus Copernicus.

The Heliocentric Solution-


worked for three decades on his
theories of just how the Earth
and those heavenly bodies
visible in the night sky were
related to each other.

Nicolaus
Copernicus

The Reaction to De


Revolutionibus
Darwinian Revolution
• is a theory of biological evolution developed by the English naturalist
Charles Darwin (1809–1882) and others, stating that all species of organisms arise
and develop through the natural selection of small, inherited variations that increase
the individual's ability to compete, survive, and reproduce.

Evolutionary Biology
is a theory that theory that animals and plants
have their origin in other preexisting types and
that the distinguishable differences are due to
modifications in successive generations.

Charles
Darwin
The Origin of Species
> It argues that the numerous traits and adaptations The Descent of Man
that differentiate species from each other also
explain how species evolved over time and  presented evidence that humans are animals – we are
gradually diverged. members of the ape family, and are the descendants of apes.
> It is often called the most important book in the
history of biology
By: Vin Tristan E. Natividad

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