Many European nations having this ability prevented any one from rising about the rest. The affect the balance of power had on the Thirty-Years War was its result, and with most of the nations involved being on roughly equal footing there was no clear winner between the Protestants and Roman Catholics. By the Treaties of Westphalia the various nations and religions involved were forced to recognize the others right to exist, if only begrudgingly and to the most minimum extant possible. The Thirty-Years War was ended and peace negotiated by ambassadors, and was not due to any power involved dealing a decisive victory. The balance of power also resulted in previously powerful nations such as Spain relegated to a second class power due to failures in both military might, and the authority and abilities of its ruling …show more content…
Both were men of science, and applied science as they understood it to their philosophies. Bacon believed in inductive reasoning which would be the basis for the scientific method. Determining truth was a matter of performing experiments, noting the conclusion, and vigorously testing the results. Descartes on the other hand was a believer of deductive reasoning, reasoning that one could infer truth from building upon self-evident statements and mathematical clarity. Descartes contributed greatly to western thinking largely due to his insistence on skepticism in science, which combined with Bacon’s inductive reasoning represents the commonly accepted method used by scientists to this