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Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

Date post: 01-Jan-2016
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Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution
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Page 1: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution

Page 2: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

https://youtu.be/eFboV2m1yuw

Page 3: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

Problems caused by Industrial Revolution

• Child labor• Bad working conditions• Bad living conditions• Urbanization• Pollution• Income inequality• Public Health • Life Expectancy

Page 4: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

• Liberals• Democratic Liberals• Utopian Socialists• Marxists

Page 5: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

The Liberals: Believed in “laissez-faire” (little

involvement by the gov’t towards business)

Based on Adam Smith’s views in “The Wealth of Nations”

Noninterference was good for both businessmen & community

Bound to be poor people Working man should blame himself- not

the factory owner- for his poor living conditions

Page 6: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

Democratic Liberals

Liberals that turned against laissez-faire policy and urged government reforms to help suffering workers

Favored higher wages, a reduction in working hours, safer conditions in factories, the formation of labor unions, and the granting of voting rights to workers

Page 7: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

Utopian Socialists

Charles Fourier wanted to create a “perfect society”

Organized small communities “phalanxes” where no one would be rich and no one poor

Wanted to eliminate the pressures & problems of an industrial society

Most undesirable jobs would be given to children…since they were less likely to complain

Page 8: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

Followers: Robert Owen Purchased a mill in Glasgow, Scotland,

where he employed workers under the best of conditions (improved housing, low priced stores, founded schools)

Went to USA to start a model community in New Harmony, Indiana

Page 9: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

Marxists Karl Marx: leading socialist thinker of his time He & Friedrich Engels wrote the “Communist

Manifesto” (today forms the basis of communist thought)

Marx saw history as a struggle between “capitalists” (owners of businesses and industries) and the “proletariat” (wage earners)

Believed that capitalists had always controlled the government and used it to their advantage

Working class (no political power) had a miserable existence

Page 10: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

Eventually, the proletariat would rise up and overthrow the capitalists in a violent communist revolution

Socialism: new form of government Factories, mines, railroads, and

banks would be owned by the government

Wealth, etc. would be more evenly divided among all people

Unemployment, poverty, hunger, and slave-like working conditions would be eliminated

Page 11: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

Who do you think had the best ideas for solving the problems of the working class– liberals, democratic liberals, Utopian socialists, or Marxists?

Page 12: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

Of the many “evils” brought about by industrial revolution, which two do you think are the worst? Why?

Page 13: Patterns of Thought during the Industrial Revolution.

Of all these patterns of thought we’ve discussed, do you think any of these ideologies still exist today in the USA?


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