Technology in World Civilization: A Thousand-Year HistoryMIT Press, 1991 M07 1 - 250 pages Most general histories of technology are Eurocentrist, focusing on a main line of Western technology that stretches from the Greeks is through the computer. In this very different book, Arnold Pacey takes a global view, placing the development of technology squarely in a "world civilization." He portrays the process as a complex dialectic by which inventions borrowed from one culture are adopted to suit another. |
Contents
Scientific revolutions and technical dreams | 168 |
Survival technology in the twentieth century | 187 |
208 | |
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Africa agriculture America areas armies Asia Asian Baghdad barrel became Biogas blast furnaces Bombay bridges Britain British built canals cannon century chapter China Chinese Civilization in China clock cloth construction cotton countries craftworkers crops culture dams dyeing economic electricity equipment Europe European example exported factories farmers figure fire-lance furnaces green revolution guns Hebei Hooghley ideas important India industrial revolution innovation invention Iran iron industry Ironbridge Gorge Museum irrigation Islamic world Japan Japanese Kaifeng labour later locomotive looms machines maize manufacture mechanical metal metres military mills mines Mongol Mughal muskets notably nuclear Ottoman Empire output Persian Persian Empire plant Portuguese printing production railroad rails region revolution rice Russia Science and Civilization shipbuilding ships silk skills Song dynasty spinning wheel steam engine stimulated survival technology symbolism technical techniques technological dialogue textile trade traditional transfer of technology Turkish water-wheel weapons West western whilst