924
Lectures Watched
Since January 1, 2014
Hundreds of free, self-paced university courses available:
my recommendations here
Peruse my collection of 275
influential people of the past.
View My Class Notes via:
Receive My Class Notes via E-Mail:

VIEW ARCHIVE


Contact Me via E-Mail:
edward [at] tanguay.info
Notes on video lecture:
Science, Capitalism and European Imperialism
Choose from these words to fill the blanks below:
China, guns, minerals, 500, continents, Pakistan, military, organized, Europe, barbarous, Safavid, 80%, finance, mirage, 1750, bought, surprising, thought, Iran, Roman, railroads, finances, marginalized
in the last        years, the scientific revolution has almost completely changed the lives of humans
science can only flourish in alliance with an ideology which justifies, guides, and                  scientific research and decides what to do with the new powers scientific research brings
the two most important forces which have shaped scientific revolution
1. European imperialism
2. capitalism
science and European imperialism
one thing we need to realize about the rise of the European empires is how                      it was
before the scientific revolution, Europe and in particular Western Europe was a poor and                          area of the world
even the            empire, although it had its capital in what is not Italy, derived most of its power from Northern Africa and the Middle East
the Western European provinces were a kind of Wild West and contributed little to the power and wealth of the empire except                  and slaves
Northern Europe was so desolate and                    in the times of the Romans that they didn't even bother to conquer it because they didn't think there was anything there worth conquering
no important religion, ideology, technological invention or economic system came from              before the modern age
only at the end of the 15th century did Europe start to become a center of                 , cutlural and technological developments
between 1500-        , it gained momentum and became the master of the external world, i.e. the two American continents and the oceans
even in the 18th century, Europeans were still weaker than most Asian and Middle Eastern powers, but these powers showed little interest in the new                     
early modern era
Ottoman Empire (1299-1923)
golden age in modern era
1453 conquest of Constantinople by Mehmed II
               Dynasty in Persia (1501-1736)
marked the beginning of modern Persia
marked turning point in Muslim history
Mughal Empire (1526-1857)
India and                  areas
Ming Dynasty (1368-1644)
one of the greatest eras of orderly government and social stability in human history
ruled under Han Chinese
Qing Dynasty (1644-1912)
began in Manchuria
even in 1775, Asia accounted for        of the world's economy
India and China alone was two-thirds of the world economy
the global center of power shifted from Asia to Europe only between 1750 and 1850
when European powers conquered large parts of Asia
by the late 19th century, Europeans generally controlled the world's economy
1950: America and Europe accounted for more than half of economic production
China was down to 5%
Europeans created a new, global culture
today most humans are European in their               , tastes, and the way they see the world, even if they are anti-European and anti-Western in their rhetoric
even China is built today on European models of production and               
European technology
in the late 19th century, it was often said about European wars in Africa: no matter what happens, we have machine guns and they don't, so don't worry
but this wasn't the case before 1850
in 1800, the technological gap between Asian, European and African powers was relatively small
when Britain began to build                   , how was it that Germany, France, and the United States were able to follow quickly whereas China lagged behind
how is it that Italy, Russia, and Austria were able to quickly close the technological gap and join the industrializing club whereas Persia, Egypt and the Ottoman Empire failed to do it?
after all, the technology of the first industrial wave was relatively simple: was it so hard for Chinese or Persians to engineer steam engines, to manufacture machine         , or to lay railroad track?
the first railroad in the world opened in Britain in 1830 between Manchester and Liverpool, twenty years later Western European nations were crisscrossed with 40,000 kilometers of railroads, at the same time in Africa and Latin America, there were only 4,000 kilometers of track
in 1880, Western countries had over 350,000 kilometers of railroads while all the rest of the world together had only 10% of that: 35,000 kilometers of railroad track, and most of these railroads were built by the British in India
the first railroad in            opened only in 1876 which was only 24 kilometers long and was built by Europeans in China and the Chinese government destroyed it the year after it was opened
in 1880, the Chinese government did not operate a single railroad line
was 50 years too short a time for the Chinese to learn how important railroads were or to learn to build and operate them?
in Persia, modern day         , the first railroad was built in 1888 and was 10 kilometers long and was constructed by a Belgium company, in 1950, the entire railway network in Iran amounted to only 2,500 kilometers, this in a country that is seven times the size of Britain
what the Persians and the Chinese lacked was not technological inventions, even if they couldn't have produced them, they could have easily              them and learned how to make them themselves
what Persia and China lacked were the social political structures and the judicial apparatus that took centuries to form and mature in the West, and which could not be so easily copied and internalized.
the Chinese and the Persians could not catch up with the British because they were                    differently
up until 1800, Europe did not enjoy any technological advantage over the Asian powers but Europe was gradually building a unique potential whose importance became obvious in the 19th century
the apparent equality between Europe, China and the Muslim world in 1750 was a             : their power was equal but their potential was very different
the two characteristics which gave Europe this decided edge were (1) modern science, and (2) capitalism.
when the big inventions of the 19th century and the industrial revolution came along, Europeans were in a much better position to harness them and use them.
modern science and capitalism are also the most important legacies which Europe left behind them in the post European world of the 21st century
Europeans no longer rule the world today, but science and capital are still the keys for economic and political success in the world
The Context of History and Our Extended Human Family
How Walking Upright Led to Better Social and Cooperative Skills
The Importance of Fire and Cooking
Why Did Other Human Species Become Extinct?
The Cognitive Revolution and the Beginning of Human History
The Language of Homo Sapiens
How Fictive Language Enabled Larger Social Groups
The Power of Imagined Realities
How the Ability to Tell Stories Enabled Humans to Cooperate in Massive Groups
The Cognitive Revolution and the Variety of Human Communities
Spiritual Beliefs of Early Humans
Politics and Warfare of Pre-Agricultural Societies
45,000 Years Ago: Human's Decimation of Australia's Large Mammals
14,000 BC: Human Migration to the Americas
Agriculture: The Good and the Bad
10,000 BC: Agricultural Revolution
The Origins of Agriculture
The Code of Hammurabi and Other Imagined Realities
Inter-Subjective Reality and Romantic Consumerism
The Human Brain's Outsourcing of Mathematics
Unjust and Imagined Hierarchies
Imagined Hierarchies in History
Culturally Defined Gender
Three Theories of Gender Domination
The Direction of Humankind: Global Unity
The Essence of Money
The History of Money
The Historical Definition of Empire
The Relationship between Science, European Imperialism and Capitalism
Science, Capitalism and European Imperialism
Columbus: Last Man of the Middle Ages, Vespucci: First Man of the Modern Age
European Empires, Science, and Capitalism
How Capitalism is Based on Trust in the Future
On the Interdependence of Science and Capitalism
How Capitalism Enabled Small European Countries to Explore and Conquer the World
The Relationship Between Capitalism, the Slave Trade, and Free Market Forces
Industrialization, Energy and Raw Materials
The Second Agricultural Revolution and its Effect on Animal Treatment
The Ethics of Capitalism and Consumerism
On Limitless Energy Resources and the Hegemony of Modern Time Schedules
State/Market vs. Family/Community
Humankind's Rigid and Violent Past, and Flexible and Peaceful Present
Reasons for Our Current Unprecedented Era of International Peace
Three Theories on the History of Happiness
Psychological and Biological Happiness
Measuring Human Happiness
The Future of Cyborgs and Robots
What Do We Want to Want?