You argue the other side of consensus when you're talking about biblical archaeology. Consensus is bunk. I admire your skepticism there and do not admire your appeal to authority / crowds here. We should be skeptical of all of it.
Jabin said:
Also, there is/was a consensus of historians that the Bible and its translations drove literacy in northwestern Europe. The King James translation was referred to as the "People's Bible", for example. Sweden passed a law mandating the teaching of reading and writing specifically so that people could read their Bibles.
If that consensus of the academy does not exist today, it is most likely due to the blinders of the "woke" scholars that today have taken over the academy, rather than any new information that contradicts the previous consensus.
The high literacy rates were already in place at the start of the IR, so the IR cannot have been their cause. In fact, it's more likely the other way around - the high literacy rates were likely a substantial cause of the IR.Quote:
The IR is considered to have started in 1760 on the early end, 1840 on the late end. So hitting high literacy rates in 1800 falls in line with that.
Did the booming economy cause the increasing literary, did the increasing literacy cause the booming economy, or were both caused in whole or in part by something else?Quote:
For example, the Swedish law mandating teaching the Bible came in 1686, which was decades after a prior mandate to create schools to educate kids in general. Rates go up 23% over the next 100 years. Not bad. But it goes up 27% as the economy booms over the next 50. Bigger increase in half the time that coincides with political and economic overhaul.
The king James comes out in 1611. Literacy rates are around 40%. Almost 150 years later in 1750: 53%. 1820 (200 years later): 53%. They finally tick up again over the next 50 years as the economy booms.
Ha ha, turning my own skepticism against me. That's a very valid point. We should all be skeptical of everything, particularly "experts".Zobel said:
You argue the other side of consensus when you're talking about biblical archaeology. Consensus is bunk. I admire your skepticism there and do not admire your appeal to authority / crowds here. We should be skeptical of all of it.
You're arguing that economics drove literacy. I'd suggest that Protestantism drove both economics and literacy.The Banned said:
The high literacy rates were there at the start for two, maybe three, countries depending on what we count as high. But after the IR kicks off, they spike everywhere.
No doubt there were pockets where fundamental Protestantism had a stronger affect on literacy, work and the economy. The problem with your theory as a whole is that there are too many outliers.
Take the US. All Protestant but Maryland. All more literate on average than their home countries. Yet literacy rates and educational infrastructure was much higher in the north. Why? Economic incentives.
I won't deny that the Protestant work ethic wasn't a major contributor to economic success. If you want to say that Protestantism led to economic growth that led to literacy increases, i can get on board with that. But I don't see a case for "everyone could get a Bible and started learning to read asap". Especially when those numbers are weighted against the data Zobel shared.
And yet the UK in general had higher literacy rates than continental Europe.Quote:
The Anglicans had no desire to educate the masses or to allow the unwashed to read the Bible for themselves.
History cannot "control" for other factors in an engineering or statistical sense. There's simply not enough data nor is the quality of the data high enough. But that doesn't mean that it should be ignored.Quote:
it still wouldn't show causation unless you also control for other things that produce literacy - economic, educational shifts, etc.
Because of the influence of Puritanism in the UK. The more "Protestant", the higher the literacy.Quote:
And yet the UK in general had higher literacy rates than continental Europe.
What knots? You're trying to create them where they don't exist.Quote:
When you're starting with the premise that Protestantism is the end product of Western Civ and all of human history lead up to it, you start tying yourself up in knots like this.
Zobel said:And yet the UK in general had higher literacy rates than continental Europe.Quote:
The Anglicans had no desire to educate the masses or to allow the unwashed to read the Bible for themselves.
When you're starting with the premise that Protestantism is the end product of Western Civ and all of human history lead up to it, you start tying yourself up in knots like this.
The problem with your story is that it just doesn't match the facts. For one thing, the first free markets were in places like Venice and Genoa in the 1300s. Bruge had the first stock exchange in 1309! By your method of post hoc analysis we should say that stock exchanges cause Protestantism, not the other way around.Quote:
The Reformation also changed the cultures of the Protestant countries, permitting individual freedom, both political and economic. It's no coincidence that free markets first developed in Protestant countries.
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And for countries dominated by the EOC and its vernacular Bibles, I assume that until the printing press reached the east, such Bibles were relatively rare, correct? I am not that familiar with the history of the EOC countries, but weren't many of them under the oppressive rule of the Ottomans for many centuries? It would be interesting to trace the impact of the printing press and the widespread availability of Bibles in the East. If there is such a study, I'm not aware of it.
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And I do believe that Protestantism, while not the "end product", brought to people the infinitely valuable gift of free and ready access to God's word. That access resulted in not just spiritual benefits, but also societal benefits. The more that society and organized churches attempt to restrict people from free access to God's word, the more that society suffers.
A Harvard professor of anthropology pointing out how Protestantism spread literacy and the "downstream consequences" of that on multiple facets of society, including capitalism:Quote:
And then came the real revolution. Undergraduates, to whom Renaissance humanism had begun to feel outdated, were among the first to take Luther at his word and read the text straight through. Ordinary men and women also began forming groups to read the Bible, in secret where necessary.
Was it mere coincidence that, within a half-century, Bible-reading Netherlandish Christians had successfully rebelled against the Hapsburgs and founded a Dutch Republic? Although it took them another half-century decisively to defeat the imperial Hapsburg army, in that half-century the Dutch Republic became the wonder of the world. A marshy backwater governed by rebellious, Bible-reading commoners had suddenly become the richest, most tolerant, freest country in the world; it boasted clean, safe streets and careers open to talent, and was governed by an elected council. The Dutch Republic was far from egalitarian, far from perfectly democratica wealthy elite rapidly tightened its grip on powerbut its very existence was a miracle of biblical proportions.
England, for its part, would soon wrest power from its kings, beheading one in the process. Even before the English secured government by parliament, an astonishing series of Bible-reading republics was created across the Atlantic in New England. They were built by a mass migration of 30,000 like-minded Puritans who left England between 1630 and 1640, settling on a coastline where the relatively sparse native population had been decimated by European diseases inadvertently introduced by fishermen.
The New England colonieseffectively self-governing until the 1760swere the most democratic, egalitarian, and prosperous countries the world had seen since the invention of farming. Only Athens in its golden age and the early Roman republic are comparable.
I recount all of this by way of returning us to Peter Wehner's well-taken assertion that "the Bible changed lives, and changed the world, for the better."
?? Bro.Quote:
Holland's rise of GDP seems to accelerate after the printing press.
Don't wear yourself out carrying goalposts. You said "free markets first developed in protestant countries." This is not true. Here is some info for you.Quote:
You also seem to claim that capitalism was alive and well in Venice, Genoa, and Bruge in the 1300s. You're going to have to provide at least some evidence or support for your claim other than your mere assertion! I don't think that the existence of a mere "market", whatever that might be, is evidence of widespread capitalism.
It's typical of me to not be honest with the facts? You know what? Get bent.Quote:
You also assert that places subject to EOC dominance had the Bible taught in the vernacular. Typical Zobel - you're not being honest with the facts.