Chapter 26 Section 4 Study Guide
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Transcript Chapter 26 Section 4 Study Guide
Chapter 26 Section 4
Study Guide
19th Century Progress
It's wasn't just new stuff…
…it was that the pace of change sped up
Gasoline & internal combustion engine
Electricity & electric generators in factories
Key Inventors & Inventions
Thomas Edison:
Alexander Graham Bell
& the phonograph
– Using electricity to transmit sound
Telephone, 1876
Guglielmo Marconi & the "wireless," 1895
– Morse Code developed as international code
cars
1st automobile made in Germany
Henry Ford & the Model T, 1908
– Interchangeable parts
– Assembly line
Cars transformed life, esp. in U.S.
– Where people could live, "suburbs"
– Gas stations, gas refineries, etc.
– Traffic laws
– Motor hotels = "motels"
"mass culture"
Increased literacy
Improvements in communication
– e.g. Radio allowed for nationwide broadcasts
Increased leisure time for the working
class, middle class
– "the weekend"
– 40-hour week
Motion pictures, spectator sports, etc.
Medicine & Science
Germ theory, 1850s
Louis Pasteur & bacteria
Joseph Lister, 1865
– Antiseptics
– Cleanliness
– Improved city planning & sanitation
Diseases
– Vaccines & cures
Medicine & Science, cont'd
Charles Darwin, Origin of Species
– Theory of evolution
Gregor Mendel & his peas
– Inherited traits, etc.
John Dalton & atoms, atomic theory
Dmitri Mendeleev & the Periodic Table
Medicine & Science, cont'd
Marie & Pierre Curie
– radioactivity
Ernest Rutherford & Albert Einstein
– Physics
Psychology
– Pavlov
– Freud
Take Away Points to Ponder
What was "mass" about the mass culture?
Why did Pavlov's & Freud's ideas challenge
the ideas of the Enlightenment?
Why might there have been a general
feeling of optimism at the dawn of the
20th century?