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B1 中級 英語 11:05 Educational

Coal, Steam, and The Industrial Revolution: Crash Course World History #32

CrashCourse · 7,505,135 回視聴 · 追加日 3週間前

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00:00

Hi, I’m John Green; this is Crash Course World History, and today we’re going to

00:04

discuss the series of events that made it possible for you to watch Crash Course. And

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also made this studio possible. And made the warehouse containing the studio possible.

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A warehouse, by the way, that houses stuff for warehouses. That’s right, it’s time

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to talk about the Industrial Revolution.

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Although it occurred around the same time as the French, American, Latin American, and

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Haitian Revolutions - between, say, 1750 and 1850 - the industrial revolution was really

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the most revolutionary of the bunch.

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Past John: No way, dude. All those other revolutions resulted in, like, new borders and flags and stuff.

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Present John: [sigh] We’ve studied 15,000 years of history here at Crash Course, Me

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from the Past. And borders and flags have changed plenty, and they’re going to keep

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changing. But in all that time, nothing much changed about the way we disposed of waste or located

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drinking water or acquired clothing. Most people lived on or very close to the land that provided their food.

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

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was a privilege, not a right. In all those millennia, we never developed a weapon that

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could kill more than a couple dozen people at once, or a way to travel faster than horseback.

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

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

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

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You live somewhere other than a farm? Industrial Revolution. You drive a car? Industrial Revolution.

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You get twelve years of free, formal education? Industrial Revolution. Your bed, your antibiotics,

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your toilet, your contraception, your tap water, your every waking and sleeping second:

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Industrial Revolution.

01:40

[theme music]

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Here’s one simple statistic that sums it up: Before the industrial revolution, about

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80% of the world’s population was engaged in farming to keep itself and the other 20%

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

02:05

I mean, we’ve come so far that we don’t even have to farm flowers anymore. Stan, are

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

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what happened? TECHNOLOGY! Here’s my definition:

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The Industrial Revolution was an increase in production brought about by the use of

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machines and characterized by the use of new energy sources. Although this will soon get

02:22

more complicated, for our purposes today, industrialization is NOT capitalism - although,

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