| Term | Definition |
| Scientific Revolution | 1543 CE |
| Cajamarca | 1532 CE |
| Enlightenment | 1689 CE |
| Onset of food production | 8500 BCE |
| Classical Greece | 5th and 5th century BCE |
| Christianity becomes official religion of Roman Empire | 395 CE |
| Magna Carta | 1215 |
| Onset of Food Production in Eastern US | 2500 BCE |
| Reformation | 1517 CE |
| Middle Ages | 500 CE to 1500 CE |
| Renaissance | Late 15th century |
| Gutenberg Printing Press | 1450 CE |
| Fall of Rome | 476 CE |
| Black Death | 1347 - 1350 CE |
| Anne Boleyn | Henry the VIII's second wife |
| Martin Luther | Started reformation with 95 theses |
| Execution of Joan of Arc | 1431 |
| Torquemada | Main figure of Inquisition |
| Ellipses as orbits | Kepler |
| Machiavellian | a leader who rules through ruthlessness and deceit |
| Aristotle | Relid on Empiricism more than his teacher did, Humans superior to animals. Plato's student |
| Thales | First Scientist, all is made of water |
| Plato | Cosmos is a living thing, things are composed of form and matter, Aristotle's teacher |
| Socrates | Knowledge must be subject to criticism |
| Democritus | Nature is a teacher |
| Pythagoras | Mathematics leads to spiritual illumination |
| Ray | Defined Species |
| Linnaeus | Binomial Nomenclature |
| Copernicus | started scientific revolution with helocentric model |
| Galileo | Confirmed Copernicus' work with observation |
| three fundamental components of Christianity | dualism, Hierarchy, and designed creation |
| three interpretations of human-nature relationship in Christianity | Despotic, Stewardship, and citizenship |
| Feudalism, according to Bromely | Property gives liberty, connection between land and governance, private property rights, veneration of private property |
| Newton | Laws of Gravity and motion |
| Locke | Published Two treaties of Government |