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“What makes power legitimate?. Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) Leviathon. “Life in the state of nature is solitary, poor, nasty , brutish and short.” Hobbes. Motivated by Self-Interest and Pleasure. bellum omnium contra omnes. John Locke (1632-1704).
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“What makes power legitimate? Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)Leviathon
“Life in the state of nature is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short.” Hobbes
Nullius in Verba “On the words of no one” British Royal Society 1660
How much did it cost to have one hour of light at night to study? Medieval England: Seven Hours 18th Century England: Five Hours 2013: ½ second
England didn’t have enough land to produce food and heat1800—only 5% of Britain was covered by forests
By 1800 England was producing 90% of the world’s output of coal
1707 Britain outlaws the importation of Indian Textiles 1717 France Passes a law against wearing Indian Cotton or Chinese Silk
Textiles were key 1830 England had 12 million people—1/2 million worked in Textile Factories
Much of the IR was based on: Scientific Invention; Ample supply of food; Supply of Raw Materials; Slave Labor
Capital Raw Material Markets
1699-13,000 lbs of tea • 1721-1.2 million lbs of tea • 1750-4.7 million lbs of tea • 1800-23 million lbs of tea
Outside the City • October - March • No Guns • No Women • 100 Yard Limit
Qianlong 1736 - 1799 “We possess all things. I set no value on objects strange or ingenious, and have no use for your country’s manufactures.”
1760 – 3 million ounces of silver • 1770 – 7.5 million ounces of silver • 1780 - 16 million ounces of silver
1800 - 1810 = 26 million dollars paid to China • 1828 - 1836 = 38 million dollars paid to the British
Emperor Tao-Kuang 1821-1850 • 1836 Debate • Legalize It • Keep it Illegal
Lin Tse-Hsu • One year to clean up • Free sanitariums • No Mercy after one year • Canton problem • Surround the British Factory (21,000 chests of opium)
1842 Nanking Treaty • 21 million in siliver • Demolish Hong
“The Opium War introduced a century of humiliation for the Chinese people. The outcome of the War was inevitable, considering the decay of the Qing Dynasty and the new power achieved by Britain after the Industrial Revolution.”