How Britain’s cultural revolution transformed the world

By Seán Keyes Feb 17, 2012

Sean Keyes

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For the ordinary person, life didn’t change a jot from pre-history to around 1800.

It didn’t matter whether you were born in bucolic 17th century England or a Stone Age cave. Your lot in life would be hardscrabble toil, a cramped dirt-floor home and a swift death at the age of around 30. It would be the same life as your grandparents and your grandchildren.

Why didn’t 10,000 years of civilisation improve people’s living conditions? Because wealth comes from work per person, and work per person comes from innovation. And the process of innovation back then was agonisingly slow. Hundreds and thousands of years separated breakthroughs like stone tools, agriculture, iron ploughs and sailing ships.

Slow progress would never be enough to improve man’s lot because something else instantly pulled down average living standards - children. Bigger families and bigger populations kept humanity at starvation level for thousands of years. So even though we gradually built great civilisations and towering cathedrals, the ordinary person fought a constant battle for his family’s survival.

So the rate of technological advance was the crucial factor. When technology improved slowly, general living standards couldn’t rise. Before 1800 the economy was like any other ecological habitat. Any improvement in conditions could only be temporary, because more mouths pulled living standards back to subsistence level in the long run. The stock of new ideas grew, but it grew too slowly. It couldn’t outrun the birth rate. Better farms led to bigger farm families, and not idle farmers.

Mankind was caught in a trap. To escape infant mortality and dirt floors, we needed new ideas. We needed to speed up the adoption of new technologies, new rules and new values.

The change finally came in Britain, at around 1800. It was the crucial turning point in human history. That’s where the ‘birth rate’ of new ideas passed population growth. Ideas are like families: they propagate and they proliferate. They spark off each other to form newer ideas, and those ideas do the same, and on and on exponentially.

From 1800 on, new ideas created wealth faster than population growth could take it away. Ideas had the momentum on their side, and since then new technologies and rules and values have created wealth at an accelerating pace. Before 1800, wealth per person stayed more or less static. Now we’re ten to 20 times better off than before, and our wealth doubles every generation or two. Humanity has sprung the trap.

Why Britain?

But why Britain? And why then?

There are plenty of theories. But one writer - Deirdre McCloskey – thinks it all comes down to cultural values.

McCloskey is a scholar of economic history, and she believes that the revolution in living standards ultimately stemmed from a change in attitude towards commerce and the pursuit of wealth.

Economists think in terms of what’s calculable: trade volumes; average height; tonnes of grain. McCloskey is trying to move the economic conversation towards, well, human conversation. She argues that words and values are badly under appreciated by economic historians. Culture and attitudes are a powerful force, she says, and they shape how individuals choose to live their lives.

Why does McCloskey believe that causation ran from rhetoric to wealth, rather than the other way around? She reaches her answer by carefully dismissing the other explanations offered, leaving her culture story as the last man standing.

It wasn’t down to property rights – these had been around for hundreds of years. It wasn’t about the empire either – imperialism wasn’t a new development, it didn’t enrich the ‘mother country’, and also the timing was wrong. Foreign trade was too small and it was prevalent everywhere.

As for religion, Catholics prospered alongside Protestants in bourgeois societies. And science? British science was, if anything, behind China and Arabia’s. “In short”, says McCloskey, “the Europeans were not economically special until about 1700”.


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The power of words

So that just leaves a change in attitudes. The pre-industrial world’s hostility towards and scorn for commerce cannot be underestimated. Status came from the royal court, the battlefield or the church. Dealing and trading was seen as vulgar. To buy and sell for profit was to take advantage of others - in the same way that usury was strictly banned by canon law. 

In France or Spain at the time, a nobleman caught engaging in commerce could be stripped of his rank. In Confucian China, merchants were the fourth and lowest of the social classes.

Trading was seen as a threat to the old order. Thomas More typified 1516’s view of merchants: “They think up… all ways and means… of keeping what they have heaped up through underhanded deals, and then taking advantage of the poor by buying their labour and toil as cheaply as possible… these depraved creatures”.

It wasn’t until the 18th and 19th centuries, that Dutch and then British culture began to treat merchants and townspeople with respect for the very first time. There came to be a new dignity in making, building, inventing, and profiting where there was none before.

At around that time the first texts in ‘political economy’ were published, mainly in England and Scotland. Adam Smith’s ‘The Wealth of Nations’ in 1776 could be seen as a manifesto for the new bourgeois order. It explained clearly for the first time how grubby traders improve the nation while they enrich themselves. Economics was the new philosophy of a confident merchant society.

Even the language changed. In Shakespeare’s plays, the only bourgeois characters are fools or worse, like Antonio or Shylock. They don’t even feature in Jane Austen’s rarefied worlds. When Shakespeare wrote the word ‘honest’ he meant noble, in an aristocratic sense. By the 18th century in Britain it came to mean truth-telling - the merchant’s virtue of reliability.

British society was learning the first lesson of economics: trade can be a ‘positive sum game’. As McCloskey puts it, “By the new, pro-bourgeois talk, the positive-sum game was freed partly from zero-sum politics.”

The novel idea that decent people could make profits took root. Aristocratic cultural dominance was coming to an end. That freed both landed gentry and lowly artisans. With the stigma removed, people ‘broke rank’ and came together to pursue opportunities and ideas, which led to further inventions and further opportunities.

Cultural barriers had kept innovation hemmed in. When these dissolved, ideas were finally free to proliferate. So the new culture made all the difference between ideas forming slowly and in isolation; or quickly, and together.

In return, the merchants made Britain stunningly rich. The newly respectable middle class bought and sold and invented a new type of economy. They built machines and cities and they made Britain the centre of the world.

Their values spread and eventually destroyed the feudal order from Tokyo to New England. French bourgeois, German burghers and American freeholders took control of their nations. And the gentry didn’t stand a chance against the inventive, trading, scheming, prospering townsfolk.

Napoleon sneered that Britain was “a nation of shopkeepers”, and he was right. But British shopkeepers could innovate and trade their way to a better life. It might be that British culture harnessed the potential of ordinary people, and invented a new world in the process.

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  • 1. Nicholas

    (17 February 2012, 01:29PM)  Complain about this comment

    I just wanted to say that this is a great article. Informative, but more importantly coming from exactly the right angle, explaining it in terms of the technological family tree outpacing the biological one. It's easy to see that you really "get it," if you know what I mean.

  • 2. Brendan

    (17 February 2012, 02:06PM)  Complain about this comment

    I agree with Nicholas, fantastic article and an interesting challenge to my own suspicion of merchants.

  • 3. Spike

    (17 February 2012, 03:58PM)  Complain about this comment

    This is just a rehash of Max Weber's "Protestant Work Ethic" theory of 1905. Nothing new here.

  • 4. Alec

    (17 February 2012, 04:10PM)  Complain about this comment

    As interesting as this idea is, it has already been put forward by Albert Hirschman in his book The Passions and the Interests; basically why Capitalism was promoted and succeeded as a better alternative to war, royal waste, and the rest of European nonsense. Max Weber had something to say about this too, about roughly a hundred years ago. So neat argument, but not novel, and it would be in good form to give credit to prior scholarship.

  • 5. pk

    (17 February 2012, 04:21PM)  Complain about this comment

    Yes Spike, because everyone is so familiar with that piece of work? Save it for the Saturday night book club. Good article although the rate of technological increase has been exponential if you measure over 10,000 years (just that the first 7,000 were really slow) and was bound to explode at some point. I think england just had the right physical conditions as well in terms of island nation + resources

  • 6. Seán Keyes

    (17 February 2012, 04:38PM)  Complain about this comment

    @Spike, Alec - The protestant work ethic is quickly mentioned in the article, and more thoroughly disputed in McCloskey's work. Not enough space for a full lit review unfortunately...

    @pk - but as the first 100,000 (not 7,000!) years show, you can wait almost indefinitely for the knee of the curve to arrive....

  • 7. Deirdre McCloskey

    (17 February 2012, 05:42PM)  Complain about this comment

    Dears,

    The article is just super! We academics get a trifle tangled up in our 500-page tomes. It's refreshing to see the points made so lucidly and engagingly. (There's another good piece last week from the Genevan paper Le Temps.) Mr. Keyes: if you want to coauthor a popular book, I'm on board!

    As Mr. Keyes observes, I devote considerable space to examining Weber in the book. (Albert Hirschman is an old friend, whom I acknowledge as first in this field; his particular argument is more relevant to the next volume in the series, which in the oven.) Briefly, Weber said it was doctrine, which many, many students of the matter have shown it was not (it was, to the extent that the Reformation explains the change in attitudes, church governance of a more democratic sort). And then Weber said the doctrine led to accumulation, and accumulation was the key to the modern world. My contribution is to show that it wasn't, not in Smith's form or Marx's or Weber's or Wallerstein's.

  • 8. Critic Al Rick

    (17 February 2012, 07:05PM)  Complain about this comment

    Quotes:
    '... our wealth doubles every generation or two.'
    'Dealing and trading was seen as vulgar.'

    Perhaps the turning point came when humans began to significantly co-operate by working together for the common good rather than largely as fragmented entities.

    Since then we, in the West, have been through another turning point; co-operation for the common good has been replaced by selfish greed, on one extreme, and sheer idleness on another; from striving for survival for most to parasiting to some degree for most.

    Dealing and trading may no longer be considered as vulgar, but honest endeavour is not considered 'clever'. In the West, I very much doubt wealth gain to remain an exponential trend; and we know how exponential trends end - dramatically.

    What's 50 years in 10.000?

  • 9. Dr Moose

    (17 February 2012, 08:23PM)  Complain about this comment

    This article tells us how greed became accepted and the capitalist mentality of today was first introduced. Ever since the mankind has been on the wrong path of insecure consumer society hoping that material possessions are ultimately the end goal. The recent evens are telling us it was a dead end and we are desperate to find another meaning to our existence.. Good luck to us all!

  • 10. Markthebee

    (17 February 2012, 10:32PM)  Complain about this comment

    Ethnocentric history is no history at all just an unfounded pile of national myths with no basis in the real world, if this is the kind of history being studied today we are in a sorry state. The Britsih empire was built on slavery, genocide and exploitation, to say this was only 'small' is so clueless.

    Do you really think living standards did not improve during the Roman period?? Stick to covering subjects you something about.

  • 11. Boris McDonut

    (18 February 2012, 12:53PM)  Complain about this comment

    I am uneasy with Sean's opening line about life not changuing a jot since pre-history. That over eggs the pudding. To suggest late 18th century Bath was no different to the cave dwellers is patently wrong. It ignores innovations in building, diet, transport (canals and bridges) and education. It ignores the renaiisance and the enlightenment, the printing press and most importantly,the three masted sailing ship. Yes, technology moved on rapidly from about 1800 but many changes took place before a sort of proto-industrialisation that brought real progress. Like no longer believing in witchcraft or the divine right of Kings.

  • 12. Boris McDonut

    (18 February 2012, 12:59PM)  Complain about this comment

    I am unconvinced about the large families argument. Lawrence Stone showed years ago that large families were not the norm before the industrial revolution. The largely rural populations of Europe delayed marriage until 26 and childbirth to age 28. Coupled with life expectancy of 45 and women hitting menopause at 36 it worked well to limit family size.
    Large families are a symptom of hardship more than a cause. They are an insurance policy against widespread death and disease and actually more necessary once many live to old age and need to be provided for. Hence large families prevailed after 1800 ...the first real era of the grandparent.

  • 13. Rembrandt

    (18 February 2012, 02:57PM)  Complain about this comment

    To "explain" history as a "change in attitude" doesn't explain anything. Of course there are changes in people's attitudes with time, how else could society change? But why didn't it change either before or after? Why changes in history happened in some specific places and no others? These kind of "explanations" are used to explain nazism as "Germans gone mad". It's like setting the cart in front of the horse. To put the key of history's change inside pleople's heads is to ignore the material world (geography, economy, social organization, etc.), and that's not science but superstition.

  • 14. Nibor

    (18 February 2012, 04:32PM)  Complain about this comment

    It is worth remembering that nearly 2,000,000 years ago there was a significant stone tool industry in East Africa that probably included materials selection, technology, specialisation of labour, storage of raw materials, intermediates and end-products, and finally the distribution of a variety of stone tools.
    What is especially notable about early technologies is the slow rate of technology transfer from one region to another; an obvious example would be the lack of exchange of shipbuilding technologies between, say, the Vikings and the Chinese. That appears to have greatly hindered the socio-economic development of society over a very extended period of time..

  • 15. Colin Selig-Smith

    (18 February 2012, 07:43PM)  Complain about this comment

    I think I'd go back a bit further back; to the Renaissance and place more emphasis on the european/continental influence and the gradual rise of humanism through the accelerated exchange of ideas afforded by the invention of movable type.

    Then perhaps the invention of a useful steam engine giving the British Empire a crucial early advantage on the exploitation of resources. This would have dramatically increased energy consumption (productivity) per capita. This was also based on continental ideas driven by the Renaissance.

    Plot a constant 1% growth on your spreadsheet, over 10, 100, 1,000 and 10,000 periods. The rate of change is constant 1%, the size of change is not. If you take a long enough axis it looks like there is a sudden explosion towards the end. The rate of change remains 1%.

  • 16. Andrew Jay

    (18 February 2012, 08:55PM)  Complain about this comment

    This article contains an impressive number of terrible generalisations and untruths. Not even poor undergraduate level. It is historically inaccurate and full of errors in the evolution of western thinking and technological innovations . No, the good old early 1800's did not bring a reduction in poverty levels. Poverty before then was not caused primarily by large families. Do not forget the land enclosures of this "golden period", and the appalling consequences. If progress in the West dates from such a recent time, how come the gap between the haves and the have nots is ever-widening, how come two terrible world wars marked the 20th century (plain economic causes)?

  • 17. Boris MacDonut

    (18 February 2012, 10:05PM)  Complain about this comment

    #18 Thank you Andrew for finishing what I wished to say. It is important to remind ourselves how living standards for ordinary folk went backwards in the early industrial revolution and did not markedly improve until after the agricultural depression of the 1870's. Then technological "progress" brought us two horrendous world wars. Even now it seems incapable of helping all citizens of this planet and ignores or discards billions into poverty. The idea that capitalism saved us from a humdrum life of disease and want is laughable.

  • 18. NeutronWarp9

    (19 February 2012, 11:58AM)  Complain about this comment

    Fundamentally, everthing begins with Mind. The folly in seeking one reason to explain an event is obvious. Historians talk with great confidence of past events in the knowledge that most people have no idea if they are right or wrong. However, stick any one of them on Any Questions? or Question Time and ask them to give their opinion or explain current events and their omniscience is soon blown pitifully asunder. In the same vein, ask any revered economist to predict how this financial mess will end. A series of (often)variable factors explains most events and, in some cases, some things happen because - they just do.

  • 19. Diarmuid O'Driscoll

    (19 February 2012, 02:29PM)  Complain about this comment

    Very enjoyable article Sean. Just a pity about the tired old streams of western self-loathing in many of the comments. Packed with all the usual babble about ethnocentrism and moral relativism. Mark Steyn sums these guys up nicely...
    “...discussing cultural relativism with cultural relativists is like playing tennis with some guy who says, "Your ace is just a social construct.”

  • 20. alex

    (20 February 2012, 10:26AM)  Complain about this comment

    @16. I totally agree, this article is a shining example of internet journalism at it's worst, without any proper research the writer has spun out a set of completely inaccurate generalisations and mistatements that have then been accepted eagerly as truthful by an equally poorly informed audience. The inital premise of the article is utter nonsense. The industrial revolution bought about a sharp reduction in life expectancy, increase in disease and povery, and reduction in quality of life that was only finally reversed in the 20th century.

  • 21. 4caster

    (20 February 2012, 11:33AM)  Complain about this comment

    Seán's article is most thought-provoking, and I have little if any disagreement with it. However he fails to mention what I regard as the single most important discovery: subterranean coal, and the means of exploiting it. This new source of energy gave Britain and the world mobility through railways and steamships, and mass production of iron and steel, and before long the telegraph. The 19th century brought advances in longevity for many, but still the lives of many men were curtailed by warfare, and the lives of many women by death in childbirth.

  • 22. Graham

    (20 February 2012, 11:44AM)  Complain about this comment

    A very interesting article. New ideas also lead to increasing the productivity of each working person which is fundamental to increasing wealth and from the 'green' point of view might help to save the planet if we apply ourselves to the problem soon enough. Doing work which requires workers to get dirty hands should be regarded with respect because building labour saving devices also increases our wellbeing.

  • 23. Seán Keyes

    (20 February 2012, 11:53AM)  Complain about this comment

    @alex: " The industrial revolution bought about a sharp reduction in life expectancy, increase in disease and povery, and reduction in quality of life"

    Take England. Average income doubles 1780-1860. That had never happened before in history. All that's unarguable.

    Qualitative stuff like quality of life is up for debate but I dont buy it personally.

  • 24. John Brown

    (20 February 2012, 12:16PM)  Complain about this comment

    I thought it was well-established that town/city living that came with the Industrial Revolution, brought increased disease from overcrowding and bad water and sewerage facilities.
    A recent BBC web-article on Victorian Britain states:
    "In 1851, a boy born in inner Liverpool had a life expectancy of only 26 years, compared with a boy born in the small market town of Okehampton, who could expect to live to 57."
    This enormous difference indicates a kind of slavery where the slaves live in the towns, and the masters in the countryside. We see this back in Shakespearian times when the well-off fled the London plague to live in their country retreats. ( to be contd.)

  • 25. John Brown

    (20 February 2012, 12:18PM)  Complain about this comment

    (contd.) So Victorian Britain was no different from earlier Roman and Greek civilisations where large numbers of slaves permitted a smaller elite to live well. It may well have been the Protestant work-ethic that also drove this elite to live more usefully. So we get Newton, Faraday, Watt, Cadbury, Titus Salt and the like, and a huge rise in innovation.
    The final crucial point is that work as a 3-loom weaver is more intellectually demanding than home-weaving. The Masters invest in the education and training of their "slaves", and take care that they do not die too young and waste their investment. In the Roman and Greek mines, you just worked new slaves to death, since work-experience was worth very little.

  • 26. John Brown

    (20 February 2012, 12:19PM)  Complain about this comment

    (contd.)Geneticists refer to the "granny effect" where women live longer than men because the wisdom of grannies is transmitted to their offspring and make the families more successful. So natural selection favours this female increase in life expectancy after the reproductive age.
    I think your author needs to read more widely before he starts to promulgate theories that justify the current behaviour of City Traders. I could write a lot more on these issues.
    The last three years have shown quite clearly that Economists, like Climate Specialists, "don't know nothing".

  • 27. John

    (20 February 2012, 12:25PM)  Complain about this comment

    A great article.But now is now. These virtures were lost long ago.
    It is time we woke up to reality.
    We lost World War 1
    We lost World War 2
    We have lost an empire.
    The country has a huge balance of payments deficit.
    Unemployent is rising.
    Need I go on?
    This artlcle may give comfort to some.
    But it does not help with the here and now.

  • 28. opstoker

    (20 February 2012, 02:23PM)  Complain about this comment

    Well, if it is all in the mind, think what would have happened if the ideas in Lucretius's De Rerum Natura had caught on and not been just about extinguished by the dead weight of the ChristianChurch. 1500 years of very slow progress was the result. If he had been listened to we would probably by now have long passed the I have more money than you stage and be more worried about cruising the Universe....

  • 29. John Brown

    (20 February 2012, 02:27PM)  Complain about this comment

    Surely the true analysis considers interacting forces.
    Crucible steel for ploughs and seed drills etc. was expensive (AbbeyDale Museum in Sheffield). So early agricultural industrialisaton was limited, using wood-based technology, where Britain with its empire and Navy excelled. Think of the early automated shipyards making block-and-tackle and ropes. Nelson’s victory ensured British prominence in this area, thanks to our large trading empire, long coastline and Westerly location encouraging coastal trade and growing sailors (Cook, Scoresby, “here’s the tender coming, pressing all the men”), and the tradition of sharing spoils amongst the crew.

  • 30. John Brown

    (20 February 2012, 02:30PM)  Complain about this comment

    (contd.) This last I guess from Drake and Raleigh under the encouragement of Queen Elizabeth I, who was spared the traditionalist attitudes of the Catholic Church by the Reformation of her father.
    France and Germany were thus behind Britain in industrialisation. Then came Bessemer with cheap steel (Kelham Island Museum). Farm machinery everywhere, labourers pushed off the land into towns ("Hull and Hell and Halifax"), new all-steel weaving frames etc. Then WWI with ironclads and steel rolling mills, triple expansion thermally efficient steam engines, and ships that could carry enough coal to cross the Atlantic.
    OK, maybe the prime mover is the Reformation. Is there an historian in the house?

  • 31. Adrian

    (20 February 2012, 03:11PM)  Complain about this comment

    I think there is the possibility of correlated events being confused with causative ones. The tipping point was possibly 30 years good harvest in England leading to increased survival to adulthood of workers who could not be supported on the land and farmers with money saved that went to banks rather than to buying more land because the class system meant large estates were not selling. Banks needed to invest in producing more than was obviously needed to produce a return on investment by creating a market. This was initially pottery.
    The drinking of tea and beer allowed towns larger than 1000000 without excess cholera which had effected all towns this size outside China until now. The combination of cheap workers, money and large markets set the ball rolling and the ideas possibly came with it.
    France had more land and more resources and would have been the logical choice for success but had no yoeman farmers who could accumulate wealth to kick start everything.

  • 32. John Brown

    (20 February 2012, 03:25PM)  Complain about this comment

    And what about the religious tolerance after the Reformation leading to the growth of wealthy Quaker families in Britain, but not apparently in Europe? Both Scoresby and Drake served apprenticeships on Quaker vessels, and there were wealthy Quaker ship-owners in Whitby, Falmouth, Bristol, and also those who emigrated to Nantucket.
    Has anybody got any idea why Quakers were attracted to shipping?

  • 33. JREwing

    (20 February 2012, 03:38PM)  Complain about this comment

    No mention of Bacon, Locke or Montesquieu. The impact of the enlightenment is what is truly missing. Bacon opened up the horizons of science, Locke created a great thesis for a society based on production and what we call today "productivity". Montesquieu (although French) recognised that England was more fertile for his ideas (built around liberalism and wealth accumulation). Principles of equality had to be created to "free up" labour in the prusuit of wealth. But most of all, religion had to be undermined somewhat. Ascetic Christianity was not useful for wealth creation unless the prohibitions on wealth accumulation and usury were removed. Locke, in fact, justified removal of all sumptuary laws and justified the accumulation of unlimited wealth. Why can't academics like McCloskey see all this?

  • 34. Boris MacDonut

    (20 February 2012, 05:39PM)  Complain about this comment

    I fear young Mr Keyes has been charged with stirring up a hornet's nest. His post at #23 betrays his poor grasp of history " I don't buy it" is what holocaust deniers say. Every generation sees itself as special and re-interprets the past to suit the current fashion.
    Sean ,it is a fact that living standards decreased across much of the globe between 1800 and 1875 as a direct result of rampant capitalism and industrialisation. Try telling the victims of the Irish spud famine (1845- 48) that they were twice as well off as their grandads. Just becasuse England did well for 75 years does not mean the world thrived with it.

  • 35. John Brown

    (21 February 2012, 12:25PM)  Complain about this comment

    Post 31 on the pottery market is very interesting. On the Stoke-on-Trent website, there is:
    "Rivers were subject to weather changes, and do not follow a logical network so journeys still needed to be supplemented by packhorse. By 1765 Wedgwood was busy getting support for a canal scheme for the Potteries. He subscribed £1,000 towards the initial cost, and was instrumental in presenting the canal bill to parliament.

    The Grand Trunk Canal or the Trent and Mersey as it became known, was designed by James Brindley, a local engineer and completed in 1777. It rapidly cut the cost of transport from 10d to 1 1/2 d per ton per mile, because a canal boat could carry a weight of over 20 tons as opposed to a packhorse weight of two cwts. "

    It makes you think of the container vessel cost of 1 gallon of diesel for 1400 ton-miles of freight. The potteries were copying expensively imported Chinese pottery, whilst now China with cheap labour is copying our manufactured products.

  • 36. Stunned ...

    (23 February 2012, 02:03PM)  Complain about this comment

    Thankfully a fair few have seen through this naive article ... and 'naive' is being gentle ... so I'll offer no further 'facts'.

    Part of the trick to seeing things closer to what actually they are is to not just to look 'at' them, but to look 'into' them.

    If anyone is taking this article at face value, and face content ... get thee to a library !

    Even a little personal research goes a long way ... especially if combined with a little compassion ... and, if possible, a little less prejudice about one's fellow man.

    To paraphrase and old adage:

    You can lead a man to knowledge, but you can't make him think !

  • 37. DwightJohnson

    (23 February 2012, 03:44PM)  Complain about this comment

    Any explanation for why growth accelerated around 1700 -1800 must also explain why the rate of growth has now gone in the opposite direction. I would posit that the acceleration occurred primarily because of the increase respect for the human person that emerged in the writings of Smith, Locke, and so many other thinkers of the time, leading to the distribution of power in human society typified by the US Constitution (We the People). In this case, the current reversal in the growth rate can be seen as the outcome of a re-concentration of power, which has certainly occurred in the US. The correction, of course, is to redistribute power to the People.

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