Big History: The Big Bang, Life on Earth, and the Rise of Humanity - David Christian

Page 185

Threshold 8—The Modern Revolution Lecture 38

Then, things seemed to suddenly go very strange. From 1500 onwards, the pace of change accelerates. Suddenly, the isolation of the different world zones is broken in the ¿rst phase of what today we call “globalization.” The world suddenly comes together. It’s interlinked for the ¿rst time in human history. Then, from about 1700, changes appear that within 300 years will have transformed the entire world. Population numbers go crazy.

I

n the last millennium, the pace of change accelerated sharply and decisively. The isolation of the world zones was breached in the 16th century. Then, from 1700 the pace of innovation began to accelerate so rapidly that, within just three centuries, the entire world had been transformed. Global population rose from 250 million in 1000 C.E. to about 700 million in 1700 C.E. and more than 6 billion in 2000 C.E. As Lynn Margulis and Dorion Sagan put it, humans had become a sort of “mammalian weed.” Yet productivity rose even faster, so (so far!) there has not yet been a global Malthusian collapse. These transformations mark the eighth threshold of increasing complexity in this course. They lead us into the “Modern era” of human history. The Modern era is the third major era of human history. So far, it has lasted just a few hundred years. Though all periodizations are somewhat arbitrary, here is the periodization we will use. We will date the beginning of the Modern era to about 1700 C.E., because that is when we ¿rst begin to see, in some regions of the world, a transition to radically different types of society capable of extraordinary rates of innovation and change. However, the roots of change lay in the previous millennium, so our explanations of the Modern era will begin more than 1,000 years earlier, in the 1st millennium C.E. I will divide the period after 1700 into two main periods. Between 1700 and 1900, parts of the world—particularly in the Atlantic region—were transformed, acquiring unprecedented wealth and power in the process. During the second period, beginning in about 1900, the Modern Revolution transformed the rest of the world. 175


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Glossary

31min
pages 250-272

Bibliography

23min
pages 273-288

Big History—Humans in the Cosmos

7min
pages 233-237

Permissions Acknowledgments

1min
pages 289-290

The Next Millennium and the Remote Future

6min
pages 229-232

The Next 100 Years

6min
pages 224-228

Human History and the Biosphere

6min
pages 219-223

The World That the Modern Revolution Made

6min
pages 214-218

The 20th Century

6min
pages 209-213

The Early Modern Cycle, 1350–1700

5min
pages 195-198

Threshold 8—The Modern Revolution

7min
pages 185-189

The Medieval Malthusian Cycle, 500–1350

6min
pages 190-194

Spread of the Industrial Revolution to 1900

6min
pages 204-208

Breakthrough—The Industrial Revolution

7min
pages 199-203

The Americas in the Later Agrarian Era

7min
pages 180-184

The World That Agrarian Civilizations Made

6min
pages 156-159

Long Trends—Rates of Innovation

6min
pages 165-169

Comparing the World Zones

7min
pages 175-179

Long Trends—Expansion and State Power

7min
pages 160-164

Long Trends—Disease and Malthusian Cycles

7min
pages 170-174

Agrarian Civilizations in Other Regions

6min
pages 152-155

Sumer—The First Agrarian Civilization

7min
pages 147-151

From Villages to Cities

6min
pages 142-146

Homo sapiens—The First Humans

6min
pages 104-108

The First Agrarian Societies

6min
pages 128-132

Early Power Structures

6min
pages 137-141

Power and Its Origins

5min
pages 133-136

The Origins of Agriculture

7min
pages 123-127

Threshold 7—Agriculture

6min
pages 118-122

Change in the Paleolithic Era

7min
pages 113-117

Paleolithic Lifeways

6min
pages 109-112

Life on Earth—Single-celled Organisms

5min
pages 82-85

Life on Earth—Multi-celled Organisms

6min
pages 86-90

Threshold 6—What Makes Humans Different?

7min
pages 99-103

Hominines

5min
pages 91-94

Evidence on Hominine Evolution

6min
pages 95-98

The Origins of Life

7min
pages 77-81

The Evidence for Natural Selection

6min
pages 73-76

Darwin and Natural Selection

6min
pages 69-72

Threshold 5—Life

6min
pages 64-68

Plate Tectonics and the Earth’s Geography

6min
pages 59-63

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