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How Technology Changed The Course Of Humanity

Writer's picture: Aaryan PatilAaryan Patil

Each culture, community, kingdom, and empire has developed, risen to power, and then fallen throughout history with technology at the forefront. The majority of the fundamental inventions (technologies) still in use today were created by the ancient Sumerians in Mesopotamia, the so-called "cradle of civilization," including ships, the wheel, irrigation systems, metallurgy, and one of the earliest written scripts.

Ancient technology, like Adam's Calendar and the oldest arithmetic-based calculator, enabled the ancient kingdoms to manage time, convey numerical quantities, regulate their economies, and expand in size. The oldest science, math, and medicine are found in East, Southern, and Northern Africa.

Additionally, technology influenced agricultural techniques, which supported the robust ancient economies and contributed to the prosperity of ancient cultures. The growth of ancient towns and kingdoms was influenced by the creation of irrigation systems, architectural designs, glass, and baked clay. Following the industrial revolution, these ground-breaking discoveries gave rise to megacities, skyscrapers, and farms that now provide food for millions of people.

With the industrialization of agriculture, traditional agricultural techniques underwent a significant transformation. Mechanization simply refers to the replacement of traditional agricultural practices like work animals and physical labor with modern technologies and technology systems (including robots). This led to the adoption of more mechanized, highly effective farming techniques, creating far more abundant food resources for more people.

Most areas on Earth can still be reached by foot, but the development of trains, buses, vehicles, airplanes, speed boats, etc. has made it possible for individuals to travel to and from their desired location in considerably less time. Ridesharing applications like Uber and Lyft, which have made it exceedingly simple to go to a destination very fast and affordably, are another factor. The development of these systems has significantly contributed to shaping the modern world since infrastructure, which includes both telecommunication and transportation systems, is the foundation of any society.

Every advanced society must have telecommunications systems. People may stay linked in a globalized society by using smoke signals, bird communications, and email—systems that are quicker, more efficient, more effective, and more global. People may traverse the world and stay connected thanks to technologies like Skype, VOIP, and international telecom carriers. Remote workers or firms operating internationally can even use video conferences and conference conversations over the Internet to conduct uninterrupted business.

In the present world, learning almost any skill one needs to succeed—be it a new language, a programming language, a technical skill, or a little-known aspect of history—is as simple as using a Google search, podcast, or YouTube video. Nowadays, people may learn quicker, more effectively, and with the convenience of mobile computer systems and applications thanks to ebooks and even online seminars rather than needing to do it through printed paper books. Online portals and websites have also made it possible for educational institutions to offer educational materials in a brand-new, streamlined way, enabling students to master materials using computer systems that they are accustomed to using while also enabling them to gather their educational resources in one location.

In reality, the invention of stone tools and the capacity to control fire are two of the most significant instances of how technology helped alter human social behavior and probably even evolution. Both contributed to the survival of early hunter-gatherer societies, which produced the prehistoric behaviors for which Homo sapiens are famous (the hunter-gatherer model before the emergence of agricultural societies), thereby altering the genetic makeup of entire societies and thus, inadvertently, the course of our evolution (genetic flow). Since the beginning of civilization, technology has had a huge, almost inconceivable impact on human life. Although it is nearly hard to assess technology's whole impact on human civilization, it is obvious that technology has greatly improved the quality, convenience, and ease of human life.




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