Telly
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2003
- Messages
- 2,423
"The Birth of Plenty"
Subtitled "How the prosperity of the modern world was created". By William J. Bernstein, copyright 2004.
An interesting book, though I find reading it slow going with all the info. That is not a criticism, just best read in multiple sittings.
A few snippets:
"Since 1850, the pace of technological progress has been slowing, not accelerating. The average inhabitant of the Western world alive in 1950 would have no trouble grasping the technology of the year 2000. On the other hand, a citizen from 1800 would have been completely disoriented by everyday life fifty years later"
"... the Renaissance and the early Enlightenment only minimally elevated the lot of the average person."
"When we look at the numbers, it becomes crystal clear that something happened at some point in the early nineteenth century. Before then, the rate of improvement in the lot of mankind was small and stuttering, and after, substantial and steady."
What that something was, the identification of important building blocks required to create it, and how it came about through history is what this book is all about. And why previous civilizations couldn't pull it all together.
I also learned more about the Magna Carta, it's real purpose, and it's centuries later impact on our founding fathers, than I ever learned in school!
Subtitled "How the prosperity of the modern world was created". By William J. Bernstein, copyright 2004.
An interesting book, though I find reading it slow going with all the info. That is not a criticism, just best read in multiple sittings.
A few snippets:
"Since 1850, the pace of technological progress has been slowing, not accelerating. The average inhabitant of the Western world alive in 1950 would have no trouble grasping the technology of the year 2000. On the other hand, a citizen from 1800 would have been completely disoriented by everyday life fifty years later"
"... the Renaissance and the early Enlightenment only minimally elevated the lot of the average person."
"When we look at the numbers, it becomes crystal clear that something happened at some point in the early nineteenth century. Before then, the rate of improvement in the lot of mankind was small and stuttering, and after, substantial and steady."
What that something was, the identification of important building blocks required to create it, and how it came about through history is what this book is all about. And why previous civilizations couldn't pull it all together.
I also learned more about the Magna Carta, it's real purpose, and it's centuries later impact on our founding fathers, than I ever learned in school!