Skip to main content
Top

1975 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

Industrialisation in the Twentieth Century

Authors : R. M. A. van Zwanenberg, Anne King

Published in: An Economic History of Kenya and Uganda 1800–1970

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan UK

Activate our intelligent search to find suitable subject content or patents.

search-config
loading …

The basis of the wealth of the western capitalist world and Soviet Russia, wealth which has been created over the last hundred and fifty years, has been the rapid growth of manufacturing industry (which for convenience we can call ‘industrialisation’). All societies, however simple their technology, manufacture some goods which include clothes and tools for production and defence. During the last two hundred years or so we have learnt how to manufacture not only the old things which people have always wanted, like clothes, on a vast scale, but also new things like motor cars and aeroplanes, which our forefathers never even dreamt about. We have learnt how to produce all these things by understanding our material environment. Men have always understood their environment to some extent; those aspects which they could not explain in material terms, they explained in terms of the working of supernatural powers. But it has only been since the time of a scientific understanding of the material environment that man has been able to consciously manipulate it in order to produce the goods he wanted. The difference between an historical understanding of the physical environment and a scientific understanding is as follows.

Metadata
Title
Industrialisation in the Twentieth Century
Authors
R. M. A. van Zwanenberg
Anne King
Copyright Year
1975
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan UK
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-02442-1_7

Premium Partner