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7/5/2025, 4:35:39 PM
accidentally posted.
- you have no idea how influential and innovative Europe was in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. Unparalleled even in scale to population, wealth and production in human history. Most of those innovations are probably German, then French and English, then Italian. Look at the Maths, physics, chemistry etc. foundational to our world today. Yes, they were improved in the United States, but the genealogical origin point of these developments are German, English or French.
It's a different story for the arts where England and France outperform Germany, but in hard sciences the contribution German scientists have made is ridiculous. Not saying that other European countries didn't make any contributions, but you could probably draw a circle like this (pic rel) and define the area in which the vast majority of innovations took place.
- you have no idea how influential and innovative Europe was in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. Unparalleled even in scale to population, wealth and production in human history. Most of those innovations are probably German, then French and English, then Italian. Look at the Maths, physics, chemistry etc. foundational to our world today. Yes, they were improved in the United States, but the genealogical origin point of these developments are German, English or French.
It's a different story for the arts where England and France outperform Germany, but in hard sciences the contribution German scientists have made is ridiculous. Not saying that other European countries didn't make any contributions, but you could probably draw a circle like this (pic rel) and define the area in which the vast majority of innovations took place.
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