The Mechanics of Modernity in Europe and East Asia: Institutional Origins of Social Change and StagnationRoutledge, 2004年8月2日 - 256 頁 Why, from the eighteenth century onwards, did some countries embark on a path of sustained economic growth, while others stagnated? This text looks at the kind of institutions that are required in order for change to take place, and Ringmar concludes that for sustained development to be possible, change must be institutionalized. Taking a global view, Ringmar investigates the implications of his conclusion on issues facing the developing world today. |
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... seventeenth century, the Greeks and the Romans knew nothing about gunpowder, the compass and the printing press.6 All three were instead recent inventions, achievements of the modern age. This ability to invent new, previously unheard ...
... seventeenth century, the Greeks and the Romans knew nothing about gunpowder, the compass and the printing press.6 All three were instead recent inventions, achievements of the modern age. This ability to invent new, previously unheard ...
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... seventeenth century onwards, the future became far more important than the past and the Europeans increasingly looked forward rather than backward. In the course of the eighteenth century this forwardlooking optimism was translated into ...
... seventeenth century onwards, the future became far more important than the past and the Europeans increasingly looked forward rather than backward. In the course of the eighteenth century this forwardlooking optimism was translated into ...
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... seventeenth century still could rival the power and wealth of Europe, in the nineteenth century came to be seen as hopelessly behind the times? To an economist these are questions concerning the sources of economic growth. What happened ...
... seventeenth century still could rival the power and wealth of Europe, in the nineteenth century came to be seen as hopelessly behind the times? To an economist these are questions concerning the sources of economic growth. What happened ...
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... seventeenth century the meaning became more specific as the term was adopted by the new science of optics.2 Here reflection came to apply to the way in which rays of light bounce off obstacles, change course, and go off in new and ...
... seventeenth century the meaning became more specific as the term was adopted by the new science of optics.2 Here reflection came to apply to the way in which rays of light bounce off obstacles, change course, and go off in new and ...
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