"Without printing it's impossible to explain the source for that gigantic central bureaucracy of ancient China. All these bureaucrats had to be literate, and most of them had to pass nation-wide exams. Without widespread use of printing presses this would have been impossible."
Several reasons for this. First, the invention of paper (about 100 AD), one of the most important inventions of all time, and a sadly missing item in the Civ3 tech tree. People don't understand its importance, cos one can say, what about papyrus? But paper was so much cheaper it made widespread literacy possible. More than half of Chinese adults were literate while Europe was still in the Dark Ages. The other key factor was wood block printing, which worked well with China's writing: create a wood block image of a page and suddenly you can make thousands of copies. But to move from there to movable block printing wasn't mcuh of an improvement in China due to the sheer number of pictographs in the Chinese language.
But paper was vital for the printing press everywhere. Its no coincidence that Gutenberg "invented" the printing press not long after paper became widely used in Europe.
Several reasons for this. First, the invention of paper (about 100 AD), one of the most important inventions of all time, and a sadly missing item in the Civ3 tech tree. People don't understand its importance, cos one can say, what about papyrus? But paper was so much cheaper it made widespread literacy possible. More than half of Chinese adults were literate while Europe was still in the Dark Ages. The other key factor was wood block printing, which worked well with China's writing: create a wood block image of a page and suddenly you can make thousands of copies. But to move from there to movable block printing wasn't mcuh of an improvement in China due to the sheer number of pictographs in the Chinese language.
But paper was vital for the printing press everywhere. Its no coincidence that Gutenberg "invented" the printing press not long after paper became widely used in Europe.
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