This was already answer in your previous question !?!!??
1. I found out that the Enlightenment Period lasted for over ten years.
2. I found out that the Enlightenment Period was formed because of an Age of Reason.
3. I also found out that the Enlightenment Period lead to the American Revolutionary.
1.An eighteenth century intellectual movement whose three central concepts were the use of reason, the scientific method, and progress. Enlightenment thinkers believed they could help create better societies and better people.
2.The Enlightenment Influence on the American Revolution. The Enlightenment was the root of many of the ideas of the American Revolution. It was a movement that focused mostly on freedom of speech, equality, freedom of press, and religious tolerance.
The one question I have for this topic is what was the most important idea to come out of Enlightenment.
If this is the book I'm thinking of then this question is in my favor. This is The Magician's Nephew that is apart of the Narnia series, right? (Granted, I haven't read the whole book)
The protagonist of The Magician's Nephew by C. S. Lewis is a young boy named Digory. He behaves like any other 'normal' boy. He's got a taste for danger and adventure, and doesn't mind disregarding the rules for the sake of curiosity or invalidation. With his friend Peggy by his side, they are transported into the magical world of Charn. There, they find the queen, awake her, and cause the conflict that disrupts the story. Digory is saddened by this, but determined to make it right.
The antagonist of this story is debatable, but most likely Uncle Andrew. He is greedy, self-centered, and ignorant of the possibilities of magic (and the affect it has on things). Uncle Andrew is only obsessed with power and being the strongest, and he is willing to use manipulation to get what he wants (though he's very bad at this). What he is searching for and unable to find is the power he seeks and the escape from the conflict he inevitably started.
Answer:
Paragraph 3, the importance of memory in recalling what can be rather than what is.
Why:
Wiesel's number one intention with his book is to let the people in the world know the atrocities that took place in those concentration camps. This is a man's call to humanity to not make this mistake ever again.
He intends to achieve this by exposing detailed acts of cruelty carried out by Nazi soldiers in their concentration camps. He is as well exposing the human being's intolerance and inhumanity towards another human being. This is accomplished when Eli describes awfully himself as "a stomach" because of his severe hunger and deprivation.