Thursday, November 15, 2007

Why I like History

I find history very interesting. I think it's very important to learn because it helps us understand our world today. You can't make educated decisions as a citizen without an accurate knowledge of history.

2 comments:

JohnnyGS said...

On the brink of global revolution?

Global warming. Hardly any winter. Unpredictable weather. Disastrous hurricanes. Wild tornados. Devastating tsunamis. Polar ice caps and glaciers melting. Sustainable Development. Nuclear power. Wind power. Solar power. Hydro-electric power. Alternative fuels...

Could the human population be on the brink of another historical revolution likened to the Neolithic Revolution? The Neolithic revolution absolutely changed the existence and impact of humans on the world. No longer needing to spend our time and energy looking for food to sustain the small population, men(and women!) could be creative, build massive structures, create complex governments with bureaucracy, devote time and energy to worshipping gods and goddesses, building empire, etc. WHAT A REVOLUTION!!!

THEN, several hundreds of years later....the Industrial Revolution!! Trains, cars, factories, steam engines, gasoline power cars, electricity, radios, computers, televisions, more cars, weapons, video recorders, records, cds, dvds, ipods, etc. etc. etc. -- a continuing revolution!!

But, now, are we on the brink of a global changing revolution that our neolithic and technological revolution has created? More and more in the news, in the movies (An Inconvenient Truth), in the Congress, and in the U.N., there are discussions about the human impact on the environment. What we do today will impact the planet 100 years from now. It seems that FINALLY, our governments are ready to address this issue! China, an emerging global power, is acknowledging the rampant pollution in its own country as it goes through its own industrial revolution today.
There is even discussion about "sustainable clothing" in future fashion developments!

So this lead me to an earth-altering question: are we on the verge of another tremendous revolution will be as significant as the Neolithic revolution? Will it take thousands of years or a hundred years or 20 years?

Tyler S., The Ultimate said...

Well, yes that is true but clearly if it goes on the negative (self-destruction of our resources) or positively developing new technologies that can alter that, what you just said has nothing to do with what Marcus wrote. It is a global revolution, just with awful side effects. And the industrial revolution was a Trend going throughout regions which had horrendous side effects.