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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Machine_AgeMachine Age - Wikipedia

    The Machine Age [1] [2] [3] is an era that includes the early-to-mid 20th century, sometimes also including the late 19th century. An approximate dating would be about 1880 to 1945. Considered to be at its peak in the time between the first and second world wars, the Machine Age overlaps with the late part of the Second Industrial Revolution ...

  2. Welcome to The Machine Age, a new Expansion for Stellaris developed by Paradox Development Studio! NEW ENDGAME CRISIS A tempest rages in space, a Fallen Empire goes dark, and a long-forgotten enemy emerges to shake the foundations of power. Cetana, the Synthetic Queen, promises to deliver the galaxy from suffering.

    • (596)
    • Paradox Interactive
    • Paradox Development Studio
    • May 7, 2024
  3. Apr 28, 2024 · The Machine Age: Announcement Trailer.The Machine Age is an age of technological glory, rapid social change, and unbridled ambition… But in the depths of space, a danger unlike any encountered before is about to emerge, a looming threat that will throw the very meaning of life into question.

  4. May 20, 2013 · “The Machine Age,” an essay written for The New York Times by Norbert Wiener, a visionary mathematician, languished for six decades in the M.I.T. archives, and now excerpts are being published.

  5. Sep 21, 1986 · By 1927, it was widely agreed that the name of the age could only be the ''Machine Age.''. In that year, a category by that name appeared for the first time in The New York Times Index. That same ...

  6. How did the machine shape the modern world? This article explores the history of the factory and the machine from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century, and challenges the Marxist view of the machine as an autonomous force.

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  8. The Machine Age in America 1918-1941 represents the first attempt to cut across categories of style by identifying the machine’s influence as the unifying feature of the era. In addition, it is the first exhibition to assess the objects of that era on their own merits, and not in terms of contemporary European work.

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