The enlightenment was a great time of change in both Europe and
            
 America.  Some of the biggest changes, however, happened in the minds of
            
 many and in the writings of many philosophers.  These included some of
            
 the beliefs of David Hume, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Immanuel Kant, and
            
 Francois Voltaire.  Writers during this time focused on optimism, which
            
 is the opinion to do everything for the best (Chaney 119), and the best
            
 for these philosophers was to stretch the minds of the ordinary.
            
 	David Hume was Scottish and was born on April 26, 1711 and died
            
 in 1776.  He states that he was not born into a rich family and was born
            
 into the Calvinist Presbyterian Church.  However, after being influenced
            
 by the works of Isaac Newton and John Locke he began to draw back from
            
 the Church.  He writes in Enquiry, "The idea of God, as meaning an
            
 infinitely intelligent, wise and good Being, arises from reflecting on
            
 the operations of our own mind, and augmenting, without limit, those
            
 qualities of goodness and wisdom." (Pomerleau 214)  The questions he
            
 brought up against religion were that concrete experiences must lead us
            
 and that we must think about the quality of the stories that were handed
            
 down to us.  He wanted everyone to only believe the actions that one
            
 experienced, there has to be proof.  He also believed that there were
            
 four basic problems to the stories that we hear.  First of all, the
            
 facts to the stories are never the same to everyone.  Second, we stretch
            
 the truth to make everything interesting.  Third, people who do not
            
 understand these stories tend to make things up. Finally, not all of the
            
 religions agree.  Therefore, the stories conflicted each other leaving a
            
 person to not know what to believe.  He believes that "Our most holy
            
 religion is founded on Faith, not on reason; and it is a sure method of
            
 exposing it to put it to such a trial as it is, by no means, fitted to
            
 	Hume also believed...