The Effects of Technology on Early Modern History
Essay by Arrchim • May 23, 2013 • Research Paper • 1,205 Words (5 Pages) • 1,737 Views
As technology progresses and enters into multiple spheres of our lives, its repercussions are seen in the way society functions. The Industrial Revolution marked the dominance of machines. Animal and human labors were replaced by magnificent equipment that surpassed them in efficiency and strength. This brought multiple changes to the socioeconomic structure of most western nations. Societies evolved with urbanization and new stratification levels, and economic schools such as capitalism developed and gave rise to communism.
Before the boom of the Industrial Revolution, the majority of western populations was agrarian with close to eighty-percent of its population living outside cities (Ashton & Hudson, 1998). Towns met the needs of the local farmers, and production centers serviced their immediate communities. As factories sprung up and supplied mass-produced goods, their prices, rates, and quality became impossible to compete with on a cottage industry basis. Because only the wealthy could afford the new machinery, craftsmen lost their livelihoods to the competition and migrated to the cities with the hope of a job in the factory system (Ashton & Hudson, 1998). Cities such as London, the birth place of the Industrial Revolution, teemed with people and grew from an estimated population of 700,000 in 1700 to over 8,600,000 inhabitants by 1939 (London Online, 2012). Unfortunately, cities had neither public health and sanitation services nor infrastructures for procuring basic necessities of water and shelter and removing waste for this concentration of people. Governments were not prepared or experienced to handle the needs of this influx of people who arrived (Ashton & Hudson, 1998). Poverty, ignorance, and the lack of public works resulted in outbreaks of malaria, cholera, and typhoid in a dense society. Acts such as the Public Health Act of 1875 were passed in response and materialized into public works that are the basis of successful urban life (Ashton & Hudson, 1998).
With a large population concentrating on factory work, a new level of stratification emerged in society, the working class. This class of people was paid hourly wages for the manual labor of assisting factory production. Its people had low levels of education and depended on their bodies to make a living (Goloboy, 2008). Prior to the Industrial Revolution, European society was divided between three classes, the aristocrats, the church and the laboring class made up of tradesmen. Factories caused a change in this classification by replacing many trades and employing a massive work force needing no specialized skills. These recruits and their families emerged into the working class (Goloboy, 2008). Wealthy capitalists took advantage of the lack of policies and practiced extreme exploitation on their workers. Sixteen-hour days of labor for measly wages were common. Men were recruited by droves, fined for small infractions, and replaced as they wore out. Their poverty and plight were believed to be self-inflicted. To make ends meet women and children joined the work force (Goloboy, 2008). The proletariat class grew to be so large that in time schools were built to meet their needs, as society imposed acts against child labor, and politicians were forced to appeal to them and accommodate demands from their unions who gathered to protect themselves from greedy capitalists (Goloboy, 2008).
The Industrial revolution also had an effect on economic systems. Capitalism, an economic system that placed the control and ownership of capital goods and natural resources in private individual's hands, had been slowly developing since the Middle Ages through its precursor, mercantilism and was appealing and rewarding to industrialists (Flutcher, 2004). The advancements in technology coupled with the lack of restrictions on business practices during the Industrial Revolution were the perfect combination for capitalism to rise
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