The Economist has an interesting review of a new book by Johann Norberg entitled Peak Human. This is my eyes:
The Emperor of Song was a reserve of S, who was a keen eager to rule on the rule of law, and was framed for S. For predictable control, they hired many officials through competent exams. The first Song Emperor enacted “unconventional policy reforms.”[not] Kill the officials who opposed him.”
The farmers were given property rights and were allowed to move around rather than be bound by the land of the Lord. The farm’s output was more than doubled, and by an early age, extra food was supported. In the 1100s, the capital, Kaifen, was 65 times the population of London. The canals have made domestic trade easier. International trade continued. . . . Artisans have devised new industrial processes, such as burning coal and burning iron. With the movable invention of the 1040s, one philosopher stopped people from studying classics at heart because printing books was so cheap. By 1,200 songs, China had acquired the world’s most intense economy, going to the merchant navy with “possibility to discover the world” and tinkering inhabitants who could have brassettes in the Industrial Revolution centuries before Europe.
Unfortunately, China’s golden age did not last as the Ming Dynasty switched from classical liberalism to statistical nationalism.
The domestic free movement has ended. Free exchange gave way to forced labor. Foreign trade was punished by death, and even the construction of ships worthy of the sea was banned. Pinned in the good old days, Emperor Blauchit has regained his 500-year-old fashion. The man who put it with the wrong hair sticker was castrated along with the barber. The Chinese fell in half between 1080 and 1400, mainly thanks to the reactionary Ming police. The country did not retrieve the mojo until it reopened in the second half of the 20th century.
By modern standards, all ancient civilizations were very folded. Nevertheless, Norberg shows that, at least in the sense of receiving, the golden age of civilizations of many different eras are bound by deco when political and economic politics are slightly less restrictive.