Write one word histories of the centuries

Listening recently to Billy Joel's "We didn't start the fire" I thought about expressing history in single words. One of my favourite conversation starters is to ask people who the most remembered person of the 20th century will be in the 25th. (For the 15th century, the clear winners are Columbus, Leonardo, and Gutenberg, with Columbus the stand-out in the Americas.) When I ask, people will pick names like Hitler or Einstein. Based on Columbus' example, I think Neil Armstrong is a good contender, even though he can walk down the street today without being recognized.

So I came up with a challenge. Write the history of the 20th century in a single word as it will be perceived in centuries to come. In other words, "what's from the century will be deemed most significant by the people of the future?" This is easier to do for centuries further past, because what people consider most important about the 20th century will depend on their own more recent history.

You'll note that with a few exceptions, my words refer to science and technology, not politics, people, arts or philosophy. Because I feel these things affect the lives of the people far more. Wars may redraw borders and decide who is ascendant. History is written by the winners, but there is always a winner to write it. So you won't see items most historians would list, like WW2, in my top 5.

20th Century

Computer

My first choice, both because computers are now the prime tool of all the other fields, as well as the controllers of almost all industry, and they will be much more. In fact, I believe the people of the future will be computers, or part computer, and thus consider this the most significant invention of the 20th century.

DNA

(Or "genomics" if you don't think of DNA as a word.) We we rewrite who we are (if we don't become computers) with this knowledge.

Nanotechnology

This is a tricky one. It was conceived in the 20th century (in the 50s in fact!) but not implemented within it. So perhaps it belongs in another century, but it may as well become the foundation of all manufacturing, and of ourselves.

Nuclear

In the 20th century we came to understand much lower levels of physics, but we're not done. But if nuclear weapons destroy the world, this will make the cut.

19th Century -- Electricity

From our 21st century viewpoint we can see how much that altered the world, along with the things that came from it, like telegraphs, phones, radios and even computers.

Other contenders: Industry, Germs and Evolution

18th Century -- America

My one political event. The free constitutional democracy would change the world. We know that today. In 1805 people would have thought this a crazy one to put on the list. Other contenders, the start of the Industrial Revolution, and Vaccines.

17th Century -- Science

The scientific method traces back to ancient days, and owes much to some earlier figures like Roger Bacon, but it was in this century that it truly flowered. The other contender: Steam

16th Century -- Conquest

Perhaps this is biased by being in the Americas, but this was the century of world exploration and conquest, mostly by European powers. Other contenders: Astronomy

15th Century -- Firearms

In particular the Arquebus and Rifle. The musket would come later. The firearm set the stage for all wars to come. Another big contender, Gutenberg's press.

What are your contenders for these centuries and others?

Comments

I was so tempted to go "The Graduate" and say "plastics". Actually, before I saw your list, I would have submitted 'nuclear' thinking of the atomic bomb (but that's 2 words). But one more to add is "Suburbia"

The computer was invented in the 19th century.

I don't know if it will properly characterize the
20th century as a whole, but I'd say the greatest
invention of that century was antibiotics. Spend
some time learning about what life and medical care
was like before their invention, and you're likely
to come around to this point of view.

I'm not sure there is a word that summarizes what I
think characterizes the 20th century -- "globalness"
or "globalicity?" The 20th century saw the rise of
the whole world being connected and able to communicate
with itself quickly enough that much of the planet
could be concerned with the same issue at the same
time. (I.e., the recent tsunami, global warming.)
Also, mankind's ability to effect the environment on
a worldwide scale also finally solidified. Throw in a
couple of "world" wars... The notion of "spaceship Earth"
is also in the ballpark of the concept I'm reaching
for, although of course that's two words.

In many ways more happened in the 20th century than all the others put together. But I'm looking for the perspective of the future if I can, hard as that is. And no, the computer was not from the 19th century. There were design attempts which were never finished, and no matter how important you consider them, computers had no impact on the 19th century, and indeed only really started their impact in the late 20th, and all their real development (to this point) took place then. However, it is always a challenge as to what century to attribute things. For example, I attributed the germ theory and vaccines to earlier centuries though some arguments would also put their real flowering in the 20th. Penicillium was discovered in the very late 19th century, and like computers, it was ignored. But even so, while antibiotics saved billions (including some who would do great things, including myself quite probably) to some extent that has some of the element of "changing who, but not what." Not entirely of course, they (and the germ theory) are quite important.

But the challenge of a one word history is you will not note some very important things. I predict that in the future, every science, every area of research, every area of entertainment and communication and travel will be based on computers. And indeed, eventually every area of thought. That computers will be thinking beings, among those who will be writing the history, or perhaps even the only ones. In this event, there's really very little to debate about what was most significant about the 20th century. (In fact, it's entirely possible new information technologies will be the most significant thing of the 21st as well!)

For the 19th Century, I'd say: Corporations.

It's true that they were invented earlier, but they came into their own, especially in the US, UK, and France, as sources of big projects and astounding frauds and government influence.

Some will argue that the Dutch and British East India Companies of earlier centuries were the precursors, but they were not stock companies talking to an open market every day (with truth and lies) like the railroads and steel companies of the 1800s.

The influence of corporations did not end with the end of the 1800s, but many of the companies you at the EFF are fighting today, trusts you hope to bust, were founded in the 19th century (and, I have to admit, use electicity in one way or another).

I would say Internet for the 20th century. It has changed, and is changing, the world far more than unconnected computers could have.

Thinking of unconnected computers sitting in rooms, I can't imagine them helping people evade censorship, threaten media monopolies, establish a global marketplace, or make knowledge available to all (as Wikipedia does).

A computer without the internet is just a toy. OK, this overstates my case, but still. Saying "Computer" instead of "Internet" is like saying "Cannon" (or whatever the preferred weapon was) instead of "Conquest", or "Telescope" instead of "Astronomy". The internet even transcends computers: My phone has it.

So "Computer", heck no. I'm going with "Internet".

Is a product of computers, nothing without computers even more than computers are nothing without the internet. Which they aren't, they did a great deal before they were connected, even if becoming connected was their destiny. But computers (and the internet) also have much to do, and computers have much to do even without being connected, all yet to come.

20th century: "technology" - covers it all, computers, gene research, moon landing, TV, internet, medical innovations

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