Monday, February 10, 2014

Industrial Revolution Led to a Quicker Moral Decline

Gradually, then rapidly and ever more widely, the Industrial Revolution changed the economic form and moral superstructure of European and American life.  Men, women, and children left home and family, authority and unity, to work as individuals, individually paid, in factories built to house not men but machines.  Every decade the machines multiplied and became more complex; economic maturity (the capacity to support a family) came later; children no longer were economic assets; marriage was delayed; premarital continence became more difficult to maintain.  The city offered every discouragement to marriage, but it provided every stimulus and facility for sex.  Women were "emancipated" - i.e., industrialized; and contraceptives enabled them to separate intercourse from pregnancy.  The authority of father and mother lost its economic base through the growing individualism of industry.  The rebellious youth was no longer constrained by the surveillance of the village; he could hide his sins in the protective anonymity of the city crowd.  The progress of science raised the authority of the test tube over that of the crosier; the mechanism of economic production suggested mechanistic philosophies; education spread religious doubts; morality lost more and more of its supernatural supports.  The old agricultural moral code began to die.

Will & Ariel Durant, "The Lessons of History," p.39

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