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The Printing Press

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The Printing Press
What Was the Most Important Consequence of the Printing Press?
Numerous people from the Renaissance time tried to make a living on their own by painting and writing books. Although it seemed very hard to spread their ideas around the world, by 1444 their worries began to shrink. A man from Germany named Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press, which made possible for people to have copies of books and letters in a much lesser time. What was the great outcome of the printing press? The efficiency of the printing press allowed ideas to spread quickly, as well as religion and exploration and geography.
First and foremost, the printing press allowed for standardized knowledge and an increase in the spread knowledge. Following Gutenberg’s invention, three-fourths of 20 million newly were classical or medieval works. Like, Iliad and Odyssey, The City of God, and Divine Comedy. [Ten Important Works of Classical and Medieval Authors*] Furthermore, publishers began to print the similar works, therefore increasing the influence of these ancient ideas even further. By the 16th century works by modern authors came to publication. Works like, The Praise of Folly, Utopia, The Prince and Don Quixote. [Ten Important Works of Early Modern Authors] Modern and recent ideas could spread more rapidly and on a striking scale. Isaac Newton’s bookshelf consists of Galileo’s Dialoges, Descartes’ Principles of Philosophy, Aristotle’s Organon and much more. Newton used these for his own new principles and results. [Isaac Newton’s Bookshelf] He began to think of gravity and in just two years a mathematician was born. Therefore the invention of the printing press extended the level of knowledge to a remarkable capacity.
Another result of the printing press was conflicting religious ideology. Martin Luther apparently posted his 95 Theses on the door of the Castle Church in Germany. For the printing press, Luther’s 95 Theses spread throughout Europe, which sparked the Reformation.

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