ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Technology Videos 160 videos
What's the deal with wind? And why does it have to be so...windy?
How did people move stuff around before the wheel was invented? More importantly, why didn't they take a break for a few minutes from moving stuff...
History of Technology 6: The Impact of Gutenberg's Printing Press 305 Views
Share It!
Description:
Find out how Gutenberg's printing press impacted the world as we know it. We're not saying it has to do with crushing an alien invasion, but we're also not not saying that...
Transcript
- 00:02
Gutenberg's printing press hit the scene and shook up the world like [printing press shakes world]
- 00:05
the glitteriest of snow globes. But how exactly did it do that? Did it stock up
- 00:11
on truckloads of glitter at Costco? Doubtful. Though, we're sure it grabbed a [printing press goes to Costco]
- 00:16
bunch of samples while it was there. So Costco trip aside, how did it actually do
- 00:20
it? Well, Gutenberg's printing press meant more knowledge got into the hands of [person grabs books]
Full Transcript
- 00:24
more people. Previously, Western scholarship and literacy had been
- 00:27
available only to the educated few, who hoarded knowledge and laughed maniacally [elite person hoards knowledge]
- 00:32
at their power... Which, sure, that might be just how we think it happened. They probably
- 00:37
laughed pretty normally. But with printing press, suddenly there were thousands
- 00:41
of copies of the same book available for anybody with a little extra cash. We [plebeians read]
- 00:45
hope all those regular Joes laughed maniacally at those hoity-toity hoarders, for once.
- 00:49
Some scholars have claimed that this was a new democracy of knowledge. It's easy [Oprah gives out knowledge]
- 00:54
to see how access to books directly led to major movements, like the Protestant
- 00:58
Reformation and the Renaissance. Well, both of those movements relied on [movements pop up]
- 01:02
greater availability of knowledge to criticize the powers that be, or powers
- 01:07
that were, we guess. The printing press also did a lot to [powers fall]
- 01:11
advance science. Scientists and scholars could now print and publish their
- 01:15
findings, which made the conversation about Science and Technology global. [scholars publish work]
- 01:19
Scientists could now build upon each other's work and make some real progress [scientists make pyramid]
- 01:23
together, rather than a dozen monks hanging out alone in their respective [monks study peas]
- 01:27
monasteries studying peas. Well, you know what they say--"Two heads are better than
- 01:32
one"--and thousands of heads are better than two, [brain lifts, bro]
- 01:35
especially if you're in the shrunken head business. Well, language also became
- 01:40
a lot more standardized because of the printing press. Before the popular
- 01:43
printed word, many European languages were primarily spoken because most [people speak languages]
- 01:47
people couldn't write them. That means there weren't standard ways of spelling
- 01:52
words or regular grammar rules, so think fewer grammar nazis and more grammar [grammar cowboys take out grammar nazis]
- 01:57
cowboys on the Wild Wild West. Intellectual property rights also
- 02:02
started to become a thing. The first copyright laws appeared in the
- 02:05
15th and 16th centuries when people started to say, "Uh, I spent years writing [people want to have credit for their work]
- 02:11
that, but sure... You go ahead and take all the credit. That's fine. I'm fine.
- 02:16
Who needs money anyway? With new ideas and inventions being published and
- 02:20
disseminated more quickly than ever, people wanted credit and some Benjamins
- 02:24
for their ideas. Well, this shift included ideas like plagiarism and authorship,
- 02:29
which had never been that important before. We can thank Gutenberg for the [author has money now]
- 02:33
laws against pirating the latest episode of Game of Thrones. Gutenberg's press was
- 02:38
also a new kind of machine, which was made out of interchangeable parts. Much
- 02:43
later, in the Industrial Revolution, the idea of building machines out of bunches [machine-building process]
- 02:47
of easily replaceable parts would turn out to be super important. And much later
- 02:52
still, the machines would treat humans as interchangeable parts by using them as
- 02:56
batteries in pods. Or, hang on a second... maybe that was The Matrix. We're [humans used as batteries]
- 03:02
always getting The Matrix and real life confused. [Matrix video]
Related Videos
GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
When you're about to marry the love of your life, not many things could stop you. However, finding out that your future hubby is keeping his crazy...
Here at Shmoop, we work for kids, not just the bottom line. Founded by David Siminoff and his wife Ellen Siminoff, Shmoop was originally conceived...
ACT Math: Elementary Algebra Drill 4, Problem 5. What is the solution to the problem shown?