Urban life in the Second Industrial Revolution The trend of population-dense city centers that started in the 1800s continued until the 1900s. Human development in the city center is far from natural ways: in a farm or a sparse house. Industrial production requires tens of thousands of workers, especially scientists in the Second Industrial Revolution. In the city center that appeared during this period, such as Paris, London, Berlin, the proportion of the population is rapidly changing from 66% of the rural population in 1871 to nearly 66% of the first urban population. World War II (see "Sekon")
The industrial revolution before and after the Industrial Revolution occurred between the 18th and 19th centuries, during which the agricultural society of Europe and the United States was mainly industries and cities. Prior to the British Industrial Revolution in the second half of the 18th century, manufacturing was usually done at people's homes using hand tools and basic machinery. Industrialization means shifting to electricity, dedicated machinery, factories, and mass production
Opium and the Industrial Revolution Industrial Revolution brought social change and economic growth to the UK. This era provides a complete environment for the new social class to eliminate urban dilemmas. During the Industrial Revolution, a group of citizens sucked up polluted air, drank poisonous water, worked 14 hours in a dimly-lit factory, and lived nearby. This group is called working class. In Karl Marx's "Communist Party Declaration," he predicted as follows. The cause of the Industrial Revolution is the cause of the Industrial Revolution, which is still a controversial point. It is a product of change. British feudalism system after the war in Britain in the 17th century. The enclosure movement and the agricultural revolution in the UK made food production more efficient and less labor intensive and forced the surplus population that could no longer be found.
By convention, the Industrial Revolution ended around 1840. The Second Industrial Revolution - characterized by the emergence of large scale production and electrification - began around 1870. Then there was a computer and a third industrial revolution. Now, I think many people are experiencing the fourth industrial revolution brought about by artificial intelligence, automation, and new genetic technologies. These phases certainly have to cope meaningfully to the year of the development of our technology and industry. But from all perspectives of human history over 200,000 years it is more meaningful to pull back the lens and observe the four industrial revolution and treat them as the four stages of the event. In other words, the four stages of the industrial revolution began around 1800 and are ongoing.