The main events that stood out to me as most beneficial towards our society would be the 17th 19th and 20th century. Starting with the 17th century having Anton van Leeuwenhoek inventing the microscope in the late 1600’s opened doors to what kind of organisms could be seen and discovered. It was a start of what later on would be a connection to seeing correlations between the organisms and diseases. The 19th century was a booming era in health care as the industrial revolution allowed the growth of hospitals to be made over the U.S. During this time many medical advances were being made such as tools to help during certain procedures, for example dentists using anesthesia which later was used by other practitioners and it is still a medical
R/s according to Trisita, she has an old prescription for Xanax. R/s a prescription cannot be verified. R/s Trisita didn’t received prenatal care. R/s Trisita will be discharged tomorrow and the baby will be discharged on 07/26/2017.
Great examples of this are finding of antibiotics and penicillin during the revolution that saved many lives from things that were once not curable. Vaccination were also a big part of this. As stated in text 5, there were approximately 29,005 cases of smallpox before a vaccine was created, and now in 2010 there were zero reported cases. This eventually led to a great population increase and longer life spans. For example, as shown in text 1, the average life expectancy in the world has been raised from 27 in 1700 to 65 in 2000, and it is expected to reach 81 by the year 2100.
The Progressive Era was social activism and political reform between the 1890s and 1920s. The reformers of the Progressive Era tried to help the corrupt government, improve the not so great economic state for lower and middle class and immigrants, and invoke social change. The reformers were also very effective of making the problems of the 19th century known in America. Media development and some innovation did an excellent job of bolding all the corruption in the government and scandals of public health. Margaret Sanger and Alice Paul were very important reformers during the 19th century. With their help, immigrants and the lower classes were freed of the corruption and forced poverty placed upon them by business and government. These reformers were very successful in dealing with the problems at the turn of the century and really beyond,
In the 19th century, a considerable number of reforms took place in America which helped in its shaping because, in order to develop the country, the Americans wanted changes. Some of these changes concerned the abolition of slavery, the opening of public schools and improving the terrible conditions in American prisons, all for the purpose of creating a better country and better living. The crucial reform was the abolition of slavery, which had the most impact on the American society, and was definitely the most important reform in the 19th century. Slavery, which was one of the biggest issues, which caused a lot of havoc, had to end.
Toward the latter part of the 19th century, bustling America, in response to the trends of industrialization and urbanization that characterized its Gilded Age, began its new century by entering into a new historical/political epoch that came to be known as the Progressive Era. This distinctive period in history (spanning from the 1890s through 1920) found progressives seeking to use the American federal government as a means of change through social, political, and economic reforms. Politically, the passage of the 16th, 17th, 18th, and 19th amendments are evidence of the success of progressive reformers, despite the fact that some of the new laws failed to create desired social changes. The efforts of the progressives were mainly effective when it came to social reforms related to worker’s rights and child labor, but less productive in attaining improved civil rights for African-American citizens. In addition, the government was, to a large extent, successful in the establishment of economic reforms to aid the working class, such as those enforced by Woodrow Wilson’s “Triple Wall of Privilege”; however, President Roosevelt’s famous anti-trust efforts were ultimately not far-reaching enough at the time to eliminate all problematic corporate monopolies and related corruption.
1. Describe some of the events and scientific discoveries that shook the late nineteenth century’s confidence in the idea of progress. What effect did these events have on music, literature, and the arts?
The scientific revolution/ Enlightenment era influence society today by giving us books, art, and some of the machinery that we have today. The Enlightenment era brought us philosophers such as Rousseau, Voltaire, and John Locke. They have brought us many useful ideas and knowledge that’s why all of their ideas are still used today. We would have never of been able to read, learn, or write if it weren't for the scientific revolution/ enlightenment era. The three topics I chose to write about are Natural rights, freedom of religions, and the social contract.
This era was the greatest transformation in the history of humans, , but after the invention of writing, and the invention of the city and state. I believe that all these laid the foundations for the industrial revolution. With that in mind, laid the foundations for us to travel to the moon, cure the sick and live in a small world of Internet,
The Reformers During the early of nineteenth century, Americans began to created machines and technologies to help early of people. Machines and technologies make people’s life easier, save much more labor, and also help the economic boost. As the time went by, the way people’s life changes as well as the way people thought. In order to had a better sociality for Americans; many reformer thought that they shall abolish or change certain social issues to.
First on my list is surgery. While child birth has been around since the dawn of man, modern birthing practices did not come into effect until the 1800’s. Surgical procedures on the other hand, have been dated back to 6500 hundred years before common era (BCE). Skulls found in France show signs of a rudimentary surgery called trepanation, which involves drilling a hole in the skull. (Heisler. J., 2014). Surgery has been a major health tool for a very long time and we are still improving upon it today. Technology comes second on the list because ever since man realized he could manipulate the body, tools have been needed to do so. Even the skulls in France required
Within hours of taking power Reza Khan and Seyyed Reza the prime minister, ordered the arrests of 400 “grandees” (elites, princes) which the British Embassy confessed that the “arrested princes owed large sums to the government on various accounts” reasoning the arrests that the few hundred nobles, who hold the reins of power by inheritance had sucked, leechlike, the wealth and blood of the people.
In the 17th century, vaccination, pathology and obstetrics were the best advances. They form the basis of the 18th century in the field of medicine. England experienced a large burst in the industrial development in the century. The industrial growth came with its problems such as congestions of workers in the urban areas.
The first half of the 19th century was a time of sweeping changes. With transportation, and factories increasing, North America was in for a major upgrade. While all of those things are going on, the two regions that made up the growing nation was the North and South. These two sides were very different in their approach of lifestyle which would soon lead to conflicts. Two issues stood out more than others as the North and South headed towards civil war. One reason increase of tariffs and taxes the Congress placed on the south to ship goods to other countries. The other was the idea of keeping slavery in the country. The tariffs placed economic inequality between the northern states and the southern states.
In my survey of Shakespeare's Sonnets, I have found it difficult to sincerely regard any single sonnet as inferior. However, many of the themes could be regarded as rather trite. For example sonnet XCVII main idea is that with my love away I feel incomplete, sonnet XXIX says that only your love remembered makes life bearable, while sonnet XXXVIII makes the beloved the sole inspiration in the poet's life. These themes recycled in love songs and Hallmark cards, hardly original now, would hardly have been any newer in Elizabethan England. However the hackneyed themes of these sonnets is in a sense the source of their essence. These emotions, oftentimes difficult to adequately articulate, are shared by all that have loved, been
Demography is the study of the components of population variation and change. Death rate and birth rate are two determinants of population change. Theory of Demographic Transition is comparatively recent theory that has been accepted by several scholars throughout the world. This theory embraces the observation that all countries in the world go through different stages in the growth of population. A nation's economy and level of development is directly related to that nation's birth and death rates. Population history can be divided into different stages. Some of the scholars have divided it into three and some scholars have divided it into five stages. These stages or classifications demonstrate a