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How did the area of Europe advance so quickly?

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  • #76
    Yep, John... though I'll have to say, at the risk of sounding a bit Hegelian, competition was what made Europe great. Sure they fought wars, but those wars spurred technological progress. You wanted to be 'better' than the other guys. And in the process you had more technology in other fields as well.

    Look at any comparable sized area on earth to Europe... they are most ruled by one ruler (with the exception of India until the 1600s). One country in a large area would have gotten complacent, but many countries in that same area would always try to one up the other.
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    • #77
      seems like nobody got the honor/tradition/culture joke...
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      • #78
        Some factors have not been mentioned I think.

        1) Protestant reformation. This has been metioned I think but I'm metioning it again, because it led two my second factor.

        2) Commercial Revolution. This created a great drive for discovery and trade.

        3) Certain key technologies. Naval tech and cannons and tyhe printing press. Of course the steam engine is one also.
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        • #79
          Originally posted by Kidicious
          Some factors have not been mentioned I think.

          1) Protestant reformation. This has been metioned I think but I'm metioning it again, because it led two my second factor.
          I don't see how.

          2) Commercial Revolution. This created a great drive for discovery and trade.
          The rise of the merchant class didn't come out of nowhere. It was made possible by an agricultural revolution that resulted in 30% of the people free from agricultural duties instead of the old 10%.

          3) Certain key technologies. Naval tech and cannons and tyhe printing press. Of course the steam engine is one also.
          But none of these were privvy to Europe. Other parts of the world had them earlier. So if there were key techs, not these.
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          • #80
            A comparison with civ, since the thread started by a comparison with civ. Europe is terrible to play in civ because of competition, while China, Aztecs, America, are far easier to play for lack of (aggressive) neighbours.
            Thus, competition doesn't pay as much in civ as it did in history. If a civ survives competition, it should be stronger than an unchallenged civ.

            In history, Europe could evolve different civs because there were barriers (mountains, gulfs, capes, islands...). They could sustain these civs because the climate was appropriate: The fertile crescent turned into (mostly) a desert because of its soil/climate, under which agriculture became self-destructive.
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            • #81
              Originally posted by Ribannah
              The rise of the merchant class didn't come out of nowhere. It was made possible by an agricultural revolution that resulted in 30% of the people free from agricultural duties instead of the old 10%.
              True, then add improved productivity in ag.
              Originally posted by Ribannah
              But none of these were privvy to Europe. Other parts of the world had them earlier. So if there were key techs, not these.
              Having a technology and using it effectly is two different things.
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              • #82
                Thank ya, Snoop! As to the raw numbers, I would say that yes, that very much plays a part.

                Look at France during the 1400-1600 period. Far and away the biggest population, and a great many innovations came out of it during that timeframe.

                Not to say that numbers are everything, however. As has been stated, the industrialization of Europe took root first on the British Isle, and in Northern Europe (more sparsely populated than other areas).

                Where numbers come into play though is in playing the "odds". If, on average, there's one genius in a million people, then the country with the biggest population gets dibs (statistically, at least) on the biggest number of geniuses, so numbers play a role, but IMO, it's one of the lesser factors. Much more compelling are the environments (ie - a tiny nation with a kicka$$ university will draw people from other countries to study there, and there, innovations will abound).

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                • #83
                  Re: Re: How did the area of Europe advance so quickly?

                  Originally posted by Uber KruX


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                  • #84
                    I've read various historians claim that the division in Europe between religious authority and secular political authority (though nowhere near total) was much greater than was typical in most other civilizations and that this made for an environment that was friendlier to innovation and change.

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                    • #85
                      Maybe we should consider reasons why other civilizations didn't initiate unrestrained expansion. China had the means to do so, but the ascendency of a self-satisfied Confuscian philosophy stymied trade and exploration. The Hindus might also have become an expansionist civilization, and in fact artifacts from Indonesia show that they had their day at one time. It appears that the Muslims gained control of the Indian Ocean, effectivley checking Indian expansion. Islam might also have continued its expansion. It can be argued that the hegemony of the Ottomans actually slowed Muslim expansion. The Ottomans eventually swallowed up the entire Islamic community west of Persia and north of the Sahara, but they don't appear to have encouraged innovation. The strong but eventually containable presence of powerful Islamic states to the south and southeast of Europe seems to have stimulated European growth, military, economic, and scientific.

                      At the beginning of the Renaissance I believe that there was a convergence of factors promoting western growth and expansion, among them being a rediscovery of the Roman love of organization, the rediscovery of the value of scholasticism, a relative degree of political stabilization ( in comparison to the turmoil inflicted by barbarian invasions over the previous 1000 years ), and stimulating competition not only among the fledgling European states, but also between Europe as a whole and the power of the Ottomans. I think it is significant that the majority of the early explorers, who initiated Europe's long sea-borne invasion of the world, were citizens of the mediterranean, thereby coming from nations whose livelihood of commerce was being threatened by powerful Islamic nations in the east.
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                      • #86
                        Re: How did the area of Europe advance so quickly?

                        Originally posted by Sn00py
                        I want to keep this on the off topic forum, but most of us are civers here, and we all know that playing a european civ can limit your ability to grow, as quick as, say the American Indians or the Aboriginies even!

                        So what was it exactly that gave the Europeans the edge?
                        I'd say the Arabs and the Chinese.

                        The Chinese for inventing gunpowder and the Arabs for introducing it to Europe.

                        Mind you, credit the Greeks. A fairly simple alphabet probably helped a lot too. OK, few Greek characters were used by Western Europe - but they needed a model to improve in every case, I think.

                        EDIT: After some thought I believe the Arabs deserve a bit more credit... And maybe "Arabs" is the wrong word anyway.

                        First off, numbers. Arabic numerals are a world standard now.

                        Second, trade. Because they controlled a lot of the silk for so long, it gave Europe the desire to build up their own navies to get trade to the Far East.
                        Last edited by Cruddy; June 15, 2003, 00:43.
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                        • #87
                          " I think it is significant that the majority of the early explorers, who initiated Europe's long sea-borne invasion of the world, were citizens of the mediterranean,"

                          Actually, the early explorers were Portugese, which is not, last time I looked, a Med. country.

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                          • #88
                            Some really good and interesting answers


                            So shall we say that progression was created whenever it became neccessary to change, thus turning a wheel that would turn faster and faster.

                            Whereas for those Civ's who did not meet certain challenges, would have found it uneccessary to change.


                            But a hypothetical scenario. If there were no people in Europe, Middle East and Asia. Who would have been the greatest Civilization and how would they do it?
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                            • #89
                              Originally posted by Velociryx
                              Not to say that numbers are everything, however. As has been stated, the industrialization of Europe took root first on the British Isle, and in Northern Europe (more sparsely populated than other areas).
                              Actually Northern Europe was a latecomer in the industrial revolution, even though it caught up pretty fast once it began industrialising. Belgium and France were the first to follow Britain's example. (though further progress was rather slow in France)
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                              • #90
                                Oh another thing, after reading everyone's posts, I was surprised to see that not many people thought that the classical age was the point of major civilization change.

                                Because it seems that all other Civs would stay at the Stone or Bronze Age era.
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