Unit 6 Scientific and Economic Revolution

Free Enterprise – freedom of private business to organize and operate for profit in a competitive system without interference by government beyond regulation necessary to protect public interest and keep the national economy in balance

Laissez-faire economics – free market unregulated by the government. Free trade leads to prosperity.

Industrialization – the process that involves building and operating factories and businesses in a city, region, country, etc.

Inventiveness – the quality of being adept or prolific at producing inventions

Communism – all factors of production would be owned by the people with no private property existing

CAUSES AND EFFECTS OF IMPORTANT TURNING POINTS IN WORLD HISTORY FROM 1750 TO 1914

Scientific Revolution

Challenges how people view the universe. Scholars began to use observation, experimentation, and scientific reasoning to gather knowledge and draw conclusions about the physical world

Causes – New knowledge gained from translated works of Muslim scholars and classical manuscripts published new theories about astronomy which were spread by the printing press, Age of Exploration and the emphasis on navigation lead to greater research in mathematics and science

People

Copernicus-Heliocentric theory wrote the book On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres

Kepler- Proved theHeliocentric theory

Galilio-Law of the Pendulum, Laws of Motion, Telescope

Newton- Law of Gravity

Marie Curie- radioactivity

Industrial Revolution and impact on modern economic systems

Capitalism

Adam Smith The Wealth of Nations: economic liberty leads to economic progress without need of government interference the thought that free markets are more productive and beneficial and effective

Malthus and Ricardo: believed that as population grew, most people would be poor. In a market system, there would be many workers and abundant resources that could be obtained cheaply. Wages forced down as population grew.

Laissez-faire thinkers opposed government efforts to help poor workers. Creating minimum wage laws and better working conditions upsets the free market system lowers profits, and undermines the production of wealth.

Socialism

Governments should intervene so that the wealthy and the government should take action to improve people’s lives

Factors of production are owned by the public and operate for the welfare of all (Charles Fourier & Saint-Simon)

Belief in progress and concern for social justice

Government should actively plan the economy as to abolish poverty and promote equality

Unitarianism: Jeremy Bentham – government should promote the greatest good for the greatest number of people; John Stuart Mill: policies that would lead to a more equal division of profits

Utopian movements: improvement of working conditions; Robert Owen - low-rent housing for workers, children under ten not allowed to work in his mills

Marxism: bourgeoisie (“haves”) and proletariats (‘”have-nots”); conflict resulted because the wealthy controlled factors of production while workers did all the hard labor

Marx and Engels in The Communist Manifesto it was the working class that was exploited by capitalism

Capitalism would destroy itself after workers controlled the government and a classless society would develop (communism)

Economic and Social Reforms

  1. Union movement with collective bargaining and strikes
  2. Reform Laws in Britain that addressed child labor and number of hours that could be worked
  3. Abolition of slavery – William Wilberforce in Great Britain (1807); 13th Amendment in the U.S.
  4. Women’s Rights movements develop in Great Britain and the United States

EFFECTS OF FREE ENTERPRISE IN THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION

Challenges to mercantilist theory by David Hume and Adam Smith that wealth does not remain constant and does not have to involve acquisition at another country’s expense

Merchant class replaced by industrialists as the dominant economic group in Britain and other industrial nations

Decline in traditional artisan skills by artisans, journeymen, and guilds

Increase in commercial agriculture leads to mechanization of agricultural production

Development of factory system with a complex division of labor and routine work tasks

Abandonment of protectionist policies that were part of mercantilism

ManchesterSchool in Britain: movement to lower tariffs

Repeal of Navigation Acts and Corn Laws in Britain (1840s) that less protectionism in the economy

Abandonment of quotas and tariffs to support Adam Smith and David Ricardo’s support of free trade

17th AND 18th CENTURY EUROPEAN SCIENTIFIC ADVANCEMENTS LED TO THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION

Agricultural Revolution – enclosure system that allowed for cultivation of larger fields, Jethro Tull’s seed drill, crop rotation, new methods of breeding livestock – all lead to a population increase, less labor-intensive, and land displacement of smaller farmers who move to cities and begin working in factories

New inventions in the textile industry – flying shuttle, spinning jenny, spinning mule, water frame – modernize the cotton and textile industry

Development of iron-making industries

Increased use of mineral resources like coal

Factory system that is used for the housing of large machinery

Steam engine as a source of power – James Watt

Steamboat makes water transportation easier – Robert Fulton (American)

Improvement of roads in England – turnpikes and tollgates for profit; macadam roads of crushed rock that make transportation easier

Railroads

HOW THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION LED TO POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, AND SOCIAL CHANGES IN EUROPE

Political

  • New laws to reform industrialization
  • Extension of suffrage to larger number of people
  • Growth of nationalism in industrialized nations led to desires for expansion both through war and imperialism
  • Establishment of colonies in Africa and Asia to obtain sources of raw materials and markets for the sale of manufactured goods, governments had more involvement in and more world wide power
  • Women demanding reforms for labor polices

Economic $$$

  • Creation of the factory system that led to mass production of goods
  • Reduction of tariffs to promote trade (Corn Laws, etc.)
  • Spread of free enterprise, as well as responses to free enterprise through socialist and communist philosophies
  • Child labor was cheap which helped increase wealth for the factory owners

Social

  • Increase in population and life expectancy due to improvements in food production and health care
  • Long work hours, low wages, and dangerous working conditions for industrial workers
  • Class tensions between the upper/middle classes and the working classes
  • Increase in child labor which later led to child labor reform laws
  • Poor housing conditions for workers that result in poor sanitary conditions and health epidemics
  • Urbanization of industrial areas in Europe and the United States
  • Destruction of factories and machinery by the Luddites in response to the demise of cottage industries
  • Beginnings of labor unions that result in better working and housing conditions for workers
  • People have access to public parks, education, and transportation

MAJOR POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, AND SOCIAL MOTIVATIONS THAT INFLUENCED EUROPEAN IMPERIALISM

Political – nationalism leads to a desire for overseas colonies. The Berlin Conference of 1884-1885 divides Africa between 14 European nations.

Economic – Industrial Revolution led for a search for new markets and raw materials; rubber, palm oil, and cocoa become cash crops in European colonies; mining in diamonds, copper, gold, and tin provide Europeans with great wealth

Social – Social Darwinism promotes the ideas that the fittest for survival enjoy wealth and success and superior to others; Christian missionaries wanted to “civilize” non-westerners

MAJOR CHARACTERISTICS AND IMPACT OF EUROPEAN IMPERIALISM

Forms of colonial control

  • Colony – governed internally by a foreign power
  • Protectorate – country with its own internal government, but controlled by an outside power
  • Sphere of influence – (China) area claimed by an outside power for exclusive investment and trading
  • Economic Imperialism – independent countries controlled by private interests (e.g., the Dole Fruit Company in Hawaii)

Patterns of management

  • Indirect control – local government officials with limited self-rule; laws based both on European styles and local rules
  • Direct control – exclusive use of foreign officials with no self-rule; laws based only on European law; policies of assimilation to absorb local cultures into European culture
  • Resistance movements from native cultures, (e.g. Zulu Wars in South Africa, Algerian resistance movement, Sepoy Rebellion in India, Ho Chi Minh in French Indochina, Emilio Aguinaldo in the Philippines)

European imperialism Causes

Political – Nationalism leads to a desire for overseas colonies. The Berlin Conference of 1884-1885 divides Africa between 14 European nations.

Economic – Industrial Revolution led for a search for new markets and raw materials; rubber, palm oil and cocoa become cash crops in European colonies; mining in diamonds, copper, gold, and tin provide Europeans with great wealth.

Social – Advancements in technology lead Europeans to develop racist attitudes as they see they are superior to others; Social Darwinism promotes the ideas that the fittest for survival enjoy wealth and success and superior to others; Christian missionaries wanted to “civilize” non-westerners.

Negative consequences of imperialism

Native people lose control of their lands and independence

New diseases like smallpox reduce native populations

Resistance movements, famines resulting from shifts to cash crop production, and harsh working conditions also reduce native populations

Problems of identity as westerners contemptuously view native cultures

Areas stripped of natural resources (The Congo under Belgian rule)

Artificial boundaries either combine rival groups or divide kinship groups that continue to create political problems in former colonies

Positive consequences of imperialism

Improved literacy & life expectancy

Railroads and improved infrastructure

European military presence reduces local warfare

Humanitarian efforts improve sanitation and education that leads to growth in life expectancy and literacy

Colonial lands equipped with infrastructure to aid in economic growth

Products from colonies valued in the international market

British Imperialism

Queen Victoria will reign for over 63 years and during her reign The British Empire will expand into include areas in North and South America, Africa, area in the Middle East, India (known as the brightest jewel in the crown), and Australia. During the Victorian Age the British were able to maintain control of its empire because of their strong naval power

EFFECTS OF PHYSICAL AND HUMAN GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS

Opening of the Suez Canal (1869):

Connects the Mediterranean Sea to the Red Sea to expand international trade between European countries and their colonies in Asia and Africa

Modernizes Egypt but expenses used to maintain communication networks and irrigation projects enable Britain to oversee the canal’s financial affairs and then occupy Egypt

Becomes Britain’s “Lifeline of the Empire” as it brings quicker access to its colonies in Africa and Asia

Quicker access to trade

Opening of the Panama Canal (1914)

Creates a worldwide network of trade by connecting the Atlantic and PacificOceans

Latin America becomes a crossroads of world trade

Malaria and yellow fever are controlled

United States maintains a political and economic presence in Latin America by controlling the canal until 1977

Quicker access to trade