Coal, steam, and the Industrial Revolution

109문장 100% 한국어 번역 7명 참여 출처 : 칸아카데미

Coal, steam, and the Industrial Revolution

John: Hi I'm John Green.

This is Crash Course world history and today we're going to discuss the series of events that made it possible for you to watch Crash Course.

It also made this studio possible and made the warehouse containing the studio possible.

A warehouse, by the way, that houses stuff for warehouses.

That's right, it's time to talk about the Industrial Revolution.

Although it occurred around the same time as the French, American, Latin-American and Haitian Revolutions between say 1750 and 1850, the Industrial Revolution was really the most revolutionary of the bunch. No way dude.

All those other revolutions resulted in new borders and flags and stuff.

We've studied 15,000 years of history here at Crash Course with me in the past.

Borders and flags have changed plenty, and they're going to keep changing.

But in all that time nothing much changed about the way we disposed of waste or located drinking water or acquired clothing.

Most people lived on or very close to the land that provided their food.

Except for a few exceptions, life expectancy never rose above 35 or below 25.

Education was a privilege, not a right.

In all those millenial we never developed a weapon that could kill more than a couple dozen people at once or a way to travel faster than horseback.

For 15,000 years most humans never owned or used a single item made outside of their communities.

Simon Bolivar didn't change that and neither did the American Declaration of Independence.

You have electricity, Industrial Revolution. Blueberries in February, Industrial Revolution.

You live somewhere other than a farm, Industrial Revolution.

You drive a car, Industrial Revolution.

You get 12 years of free formal education, Industrial Revolution.

Your bed, your antibiotics, your toilet, your contraception, your tap water, your every waking and sleeping second, Industrial Revolution.

(music) Here's one simple statistic that sums it up.

Before the Industrial Revolution about 80% of the world's population was engaged in farming to keep itself and the other 20% of people from starving.

Today in the United States, less than 1% of people list their occupation as farming.

When it comes so far that we don't even have to farm flowers anymore.

Are these real by the way? I can't tell if they're made out of foam or digital.

So what happened? Technology. Here's my definition:The Industrial Revolution was an increase in production brought about by the use of machines and characterized by the use of new energy sources.

Although this will soon get more complicated, for our purposes today, industrialization is not capitalism, although as we will see next week, it is connected to modern capitalism.

And the Industrial Revolution began around 1750 and it occurred across most of the earth but it started in Europe, especially Britain. What happened? Well let's go to the thought bubble.

The innovations of the Industrial Revolution were intimately interconnected.

Look for instance at the British textile industry.

The invention of the flying shuttle by John Kay in 1733 dramatically increased the speed of weaving, which in turn created demand for yarn, which led to inventions like the Spinning Jenny and the Waterframe.

Soon these processes were mechanized using water power until the steam engine came along to make flying shuttles really fly in these huge cotton mills.

The most successful steam engine was built by Thomas, they didn't name anything after me, Newcomen, to clear water out of mines, and because water was cleared out of those mines, there was more coal to power more steam engines, which eventually led to the fancying up of the Newcomen steam engine by James,

I've got a unit of power and a University named after me, Watt, whose engine made possible not only railroads and steamboats, but also ever more efficient cotton mills.

For the first time, chemicals other than stale urine, I wish I was kidding, were being used to bleach the cloth that people wore.

The first of which was sulfuric acid, which was created in large quantities only thanks to lead wine chambers, which would have been impossible without lead production rising dramatically right around 1750 in Britain thanks to lead boundaries powered by coal.

All of these factories came together to make more yarn that could be spun and bleached faster and cheaper than ever before.

A process that would eventually culminate in $18 Crash Course mongol shirts available now at DFTBA.com.

Thanks thought bubble for that shameless promotion of our beautiful high quality t-shirts available now at DFTBA.com.

So the problem here is that with industrialization being so deeply interconnected, it's really difficult to figure out why it happened in Europe, especially Britain.

And that question of why turns out to be one of the most contentious discussions in world history today.

For instance, here are some Eurocentric reasons why industrialization might have happened first in Europe.

There is the culture superiority argument that basically holds Europeans are just better and smarter than other people.

Sometimes this is formulated as Europeans possessing superior rationality.

By the way, you'll never guess where the people who make this argument tend to come from, unless you guess that they come from Europe.

And then others argue that only Europe had the culture of science and invention that made the creation of these revolutionary technologies possible.

Another argument is that freer political institutions encouraged innovation and strong property rights created incentives for inventors.

And finally people often site Europe's small population because small populations required labor-saving inventions.

Oh it's time for the open letter?

(music) An open letter to the steam engine, but first let's see what's in the secret compartment today.

Oh, it's a tartus, truly the apex of British Industrialization.

Dear steam engine, you know what's crazy?

You've never really been improved upon.

Like this thing? Which facilitates time travel? Probably runs on a steam engine.

Almost all electricity around the world, whether it's from coal or nuclear power, it's just a steam engine.

It's all still just water and heat.

And it speaks to how truly revolutionary the Industrial Revolution was.

Since then it's really just been evolution. Best wishes, John Green.

So you may have heard any of those rationales for European Industrialization or you may have heard others.

The problem with all of them is that each time you think you're at the root cause, it turns out there's a cause of the root cause. A quote Leonardo DeCaprrio, James Cameron in Coal Mine Operators, "We have to go deeper."

But anyway, the problem with the Eurocentric why answers is that they all apply to either China or India or both.

And it's really important to note that in 1800 it was not clear that Europe was going to become the world's dominant manufacturing power in the next 100 years.

At the time China, India and Europe were all roughly at the same place in terms of industrial production.

First let's look at China. It's hard to make the European cultural superiority argument because China had been recording its history since before Confucius and plus there was all that bronze and painting and poetry.

It's also kind of difficult to make a blanket statement that China was economically inferior to Europe since they invented paper money and led the world in exports of everything from silk to china.

I mean pre-industrial revolution population growth was the surest sign of economic success and China had the biggest population in the world.

I guess that answers the question whether they're digital.

It's also difficult to say that China lacked the culture of invention when they invented gun powder, and printing and paper and arguably compasses.

And China had more free enterprise during the Sung Dynasty than anywhere in the world.

Some argue that China couldn't have free enterprise because they had a long history of trying to impose monopolies on items like salt and iron.

And that's true but when it comes to enforcing those monopolies, they also had a long history of failure.

So really in a lot of ways China was at least as prime for an Industrial Revolution as Britain was, so why didn't it happen?

Well Europeans, specifically the British, had two huge advantages. First coal.

When you trace the story of improved transportation or communication or industrial efficiency, or better chemical manufacturing, it always comes back to coal.

The Industrial Revolution was all about using different forms of energy to automate production and England had large amounts of coal that were near the surface, which meant it was cheap to mine, so it quickly replaced wood for heating and cooking and stuff.

So that encouraged the British to look for more coal.

The only problem with coal mining, aside from it being deadly and everything, is that the coal mines flooded all the time.

I guess coal mining is also a little problematic for the health and [unintelligible] of the planet.

Because there was all this incentive to get the coal out of the ground, steam engines were invented to pump water out of the mines, and because those early steam engines were super inefficient, they needed a cheap and abundant source of fuel in order to work, namely coal, which meant they were much more useful to the British than anyone else.

So steam engines used cheap British coal to keep British coal cheap, and cheap British coal created the opportunity for everything from railroads to steel, which like so much else in the Industrial Revolution, created a positive feedback loop.

Because they run on rails, railroads need steel and because it is rather heavy, steel needs railroads. Secondly there were wages.

Britain, and to a lesser extent the low countries, had the highest wages in the world at the beginning of the 18th century.

In 1725 wages in London were the equivalent of 11 grams of silver per day.

In Amsterdam they were 9 grams.

In Beijing, Venice and Florence they were under 4.

And in Delhi they were under 2.

It's not totally clear why wages were so high in Britain.

One argument is that the black death lowered population so much that it tightened labor markets but that doesn't explain why wages remained low in plague-ravaged Italy.

Mainly high wages combined with cheap fuel cost meant that it was economically efficient for manufacturers to look to machines as a way of lowering their production costs.

To quote the historian Robert Allen, "Wages were high and energy was cheap.

These prices "led directly to the Industrial Revolution by giving firm strong incentives to invent "technologies that substituted capital and coal for labor."

Ah, see I'm a little worried that people are going to still accuse me of Eurocentrism.

Of course other people would accuse me of an anti-European bias.

I don't have a bias against Europe. I love Europe.

Europe gave me many of my favorite cheeses and cross country skiing and Charlie Chaplin. Who inspired today's Danica drawing.

Like the fact of coal being near the surface in Britain can't be chalked up to British cultural superiority but the wages question is a little different because it makes it sound like only Europeans were smart enough to pay high wages.

But here's one last thing to consider.

India was the world's largest producer of cotton textiles despite paying basically the lowest wages in the world.

Indian agriculture was so productive that laborers could be supported at a very low cost.

And that, coupled with a large population, meant that Indian textile manufacturing could be very productive without using machines, so they didn't need to industrialize.

But more importantly from our perspective, there is a strong argument to be made that Indian cotton production helped spur British industrialization.

It was cotton textiles that drove the early Industrial Revolution and the main reason that Britain was so eager to produce cotton was that demand was incredibly high.

They were more comfortable than woolens but they were also cheaper because cottons could be imported from India at such a low cost.

So Indian cottons created the market and then British manufacturers invested in machines and imported Indian know-how to increase production so that they could compete with india.

And that's how at least one way in which European Industrialization was truly a world phenomenon.

For those of you who enjoy such highly contentious and thorny cultural historical debates, good news, next week we'll be talking about capitalism.

Thanks for watching. I'll see you then.

번역 0%

Coal, steam, and the Industrial Revolution발음듣기

John: Hi I'm John Green.발음듣기

This is Crash Course world history and today we're going to discuss the series of events that made it possible for you to watch Crash Course.발음듣기

It also made this studio possible and made the warehouse containing the studio possible.발음듣기

A warehouse, by the way, that houses stuff for warehouses.발음듣기

That's right, it's time to talk about the Industrial Revolution.발음듣기

Although it occurred around the same time as the French, American, Latin-American and Haitian Revolutions between say 1750 and 1850, the Industrial Revolution was really the most revolutionary of the bunch. No way dude.발음듣기

All those other revolutions resulted in new borders and flags and stuff.발음듣기

We've studied 15,000 years of history here at Crash Course with me in the past.발음듣기

Borders and flags have changed plenty, and they're going to keep changing.발음듣기

But in all that time nothing much changed about the way we disposed of waste or located drinking water or acquired clothing.발음듣기

Most people lived on or very close to the land that provided their food.발음듣기

Except for a few exceptions, life expectancy never rose above 35 or below 25.발음듣기

Education was a privilege, not a right.발음듣기

In all those millenial we never developed a weapon that could kill more than a couple dozen people at once or a way to travel faster than horseback.발음듣기

For 15,000 years most humans never owned or used a single item made outside of their communities.발음듣기

Simon Bolivar didn't change that and neither did the American Declaration of Independence.발음듣기

You have electricity, Industrial Revolution. Blueberries in February, Industrial Revolution.발음듣기

You live somewhere other than a farm, Industrial Revolution.발음듣기

You drive a car, Industrial Revolution.발음듣기

You get 12 years of free formal education, Industrial Revolution.발음듣기

Your bed, your antibiotics, your toilet, your contraception, your tap water, your every waking and sleeping second, Industrial Revolution.발음듣기

(music) Here's one simple statistic that sums it up.발음듣기

Before the Industrial Revolution about 80% of the world's population was engaged in farming to keep itself and the other 20% of people from starving.발음듣기

Today in the United States, less than 1% of people list their occupation as farming.발음듣기

When it comes so far that we don't even have to farm flowers anymore.발음듣기

Are these real by the way? I can't tell if they're made out of foam or digital.발음듣기

So what happened? Technology. Here's my definition:The Industrial Revolution was an increase in production brought about by the use of machines and characterized by the use of new energy sources.발음듣기

Although this will soon get more complicated, for our purposes today, industrialization is not capitalism, although as we will see next week, it is connected to modern capitalism.발음듣기

And the Industrial Revolution began around 1750 and it occurred across most of the earth but it started in Europe, especially Britain. What happened? Well let's go to the thought bubble.발음듣기

The innovations of the Industrial Revolution were intimately interconnected.발음듣기

Look for instance at the British textile industry.발음듣기

The invention of the flying shuttle by John Kay in 1733 dramatically increased the speed of weaving, which in turn created demand for yarn, which led to inventions like the Spinning Jenny and the Waterframe.발음듣기

Soon these processes were mechanized using water power until the steam engine came along to make flying shuttles really fly in these huge cotton mills.발음듣기

The most successful steam engine was built by Thomas, they didn't name anything after me, Newcomen, to clear water out of mines, and because water was cleared out of those mines, there was more coal to power more steam engines, which eventually led to the fancying up of the Newcomen steam engine by James,발음듣기

I've got a unit of power and a University named after me, Watt, whose engine made possible not only railroads and steamboats, but also ever more efficient cotton mills.발음듣기

For the first time, chemicals other than stale urine, I wish I was kidding, were being used to bleach the cloth that people wore.발음듣기

The first of which was sulfuric acid, which was created in large quantities only thanks to lead wine chambers, which would have been impossible without lead production rising dramatically right around 1750 in Britain thanks to lead boundaries powered by coal.발음듣기

All of these factories came together to make more yarn that could be spun and bleached faster and cheaper than ever before.발음듣기

A process that would eventually culminate in $18 Crash Course mongol shirts available now at DFTBA.com.발음듣기

Thanks thought bubble for that shameless promotion of our beautiful high quality t-shirts available now at DFTBA.com.발음듣기

So the problem here is that with industrialization being so deeply interconnected, it's really difficult to figure out why it happened in Europe, especially Britain.발음듣기

And that question of why turns out to be one of the most contentious discussions in world history today.발음듣기

For instance, here are some Eurocentric reasons why industrialization might have happened first in Europe.발음듣기

There is the culture superiority argument that basically holds Europeans are just better and smarter than other people.발음듣기

Sometimes this is formulated as Europeans possessing superior rationality.발음듣기

By the way, you'll never guess where the people who make this argument tend to come from, unless you guess that they come from Europe.발음듣기

And then others argue that only Europe had the culture of science and invention that made the creation of these revolutionary technologies possible.발음듣기

Another argument is that freer political institutions encouraged innovation and strong property rights created incentives for inventors.발음듣기

And finally people often site Europe's small population because small populations required labor-saving inventions.발음듣기

Oh it's time for the open letter?발음듣기

(music) An open letter to the steam engine, but first let's see what's in the secret compartment today.발음듣기

Oh, it's a tartus, truly the apex of British Industrialization.발음듣기

Dear steam engine, you know what's crazy?발음듣기

You've never really been improved upon.발음듣기

Like this thing? Which facilitates time travel? Probably runs on a steam engine.발음듣기

Almost all electricity around the world, whether it's from coal or nuclear power, it's just a steam engine.발음듣기

It's all still just water and heat.발음듣기

And it speaks to how truly revolutionary the Industrial Revolution was.발음듣기

Since then it's really just been evolution. Best wishes, John Green.발음듣기

So you may have heard any of those rationales for European Industrialization or you may have heard others.발음듣기

The problem with all of them is that each time you think you're at the root cause, it turns out there's a cause of the root cause. A quote Leonardo DeCaprrio, James Cameron in Coal Mine Operators, "We have to go deeper."발음듣기

But anyway, the problem with the Eurocentric why answers is that they all apply to either China or India or both.발음듣기

And it's really important to note that in 1800 it was not clear that Europe was going to become the world's dominant manufacturing power in the next 100 years.발음듣기

At the time China, India and Europe were all roughly at the same place in terms of industrial production.발음듣기

First let's look at China. It's hard to make the European cultural superiority argument because China had been recording its history since before Confucius and plus there was all that bronze and painting and poetry.발음듣기

It's also kind of difficult to make a blanket statement that China was economically inferior to Europe since they invented paper money and led the world in exports of everything from silk to china.발음듣기

I mean pre-industrial revolution population growth was the surest sign of economic success and China had the biggest population in the world.발음듣기

I guess that answers the question whether they're digital.발음듣기

It's also difficult to say that China lacked the culture of invention when they invented gun powder, and printing and paper and arguably compasses.발음듣기

And China had more free enterprise during the Sung Dynasty than anywhere in the world.발음듣기

Some argue that China couldn't have free enterprise because they had a long history of trying to impose monopolies on items like salt and iron.발음듣기

And that's true but when it comes to enforcing those monopolies, they also had a long history of failure.발음듣기

So really in a lot of ways China was at least as prime for an Industrial Revolution as Britain was, so why didn't it happen?발음듣기

Well Europeans, specifically the British, had two huge advantages. First coal.발음듣기

When you trace the story of improved transportation or communication or industrial efficiency, or better chemical manufacturing, it always comes back to coal.발음듣기

The Industrial Revolution was all about using different forms of energy to automate production and England had large amounts of coal that were near the surface, which meant it was cheap to mine, so it quickly replaced wood for heating and cooking and stuff.발음듣기

So that encouraged the British to look for more coal.발음듣기

The only problem with coal mining, aside from it being deadly and everything, is that the coal mines flooded all the time.발음듣기

I guess coal mining is also a little problematic for the health and [unintelligible] of the planet.발음듣기

Because there was all this incentive to get the coal out of the ground, steam engines were invented to pump water out of the mines, and because those early steam engines were super inefficient, they needed a cheap and abundant source of fuel in order to work, namely coal, which meant they were much more useful to the British than anyone else.발음듣기

So steam engines used cheap British coal to keep British coal cheap, and cheap British coal created the opportunity for everything from railroads to steel, which like so much else in the Industrial Revolution, created a positive feedback loop.발음듣기

Because they run on rails, railroads need steel and because it is rather heavy, steel needs railroads. Secondly there were wages.발음듣기

Britain, and to a lesser extent the low countries, had the highest wages in the world at the beginning of the 18th century.발음듣기

In 1725 wages in London were the equivalent of 11 grams of silver per day.발음듣기

In Amsterdam they were 9 grams.발음듣기

In Beijing, Venice and Florence they were under 4.발음듣기

And in Delhi they were under 2.발음듣기

It's not totally clear why wages were so high in Britain.발음듣기

One argument is that the black death lowered population so much that it tightened labor markets but that doesn't explain why wages remained low in plague-ravaged Italy.발음듣기

Mainly high wages combined with cheap fuel cost meant that it was economically efficient for manufacturers to look to machines as a way of lowering their production costs.발음듣기

To quote the historian Robert Allen, "Wages were high and energy was cheap.발음듣기

These prices "led directly to the Industrial Revolution by giving firm strong incentives to invent "technologies that substituted capital and coal for labor."발음듣기

Ah, see I'm a little worried that people are going to still accuse me of Eurocentrism.발음듣기

Of course other people would accuse me of an anti-European bias.발음듣기

I don't have a bias against Europe. I love Europe.발음듣기

Europe gave me many of my favorite cheeses and cross country skiing and Charlie Chaplin. Who inspired today's Danica drawing.발음듣기

Like the fact of coal being near the surface in Britain can't be chalked up to British cultural superiority but the wages question is a little different because it makes it sound like only Europeans were smart enough to pay high wages.발음듣기

But here's one last thing to consider.발음듣기

India was the world's largest producer of cotton textiles despite paying basically the lowest wages in the world.발음듣기

Indian agriculture was so productive that laborers could be supported at a very low cost.발음듣기

And that, coupled with a large population, meant that Indian textile manufacturing could be very productive without using machines, so they didn't need to industrialize.발음듣기

But more importantly from our perspective, there is a strong argument to be made that Indian cotton production helped spur British industrialization.발음듣기

It was cotton textiles that drove the early Industrial Revolution and the main reason that Britain was so eager to produce cotton was that demand was incredibly high.발음듣기

They were more comfortable than woolens but they were also cheaper because cottons could be imported from India at such a low cost.발음듣기

So Indian cottons created the market and then British manufacturers invested in machines and imported Indian know-how to increase production so that they could compete with india.발음듣기

And that's how at least one way in which European Industrialization was truly a world phenomenon.발음듣기

For those of you who enjoy such highly contentious and thorny cultural historical debates, good news, next week we'll be talking about capitalism.발음듣기

Thanks for watching. I'll see you then.발음듣기

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