Quizzes & Puzzles42 mins ago
inventors and revolutionaries etc . . . .
. . . . who are long gone but their legacy is still with us, what would they think of now a days?
Such as Guttenburg and how millions of papers and books are printed every day, even from a computer.
Or Darwin with all the missing link fossils and dinosaur remains we've found and how so many people now believe him and his ideas are being taught in schools.
The list goes on, but what would they think of how their ideas or inventions have come along?
Such as Guttenburg and how millions of papers and books are printed every day, even from a computer.
Or Darwin with all the missing link fossils and dinosaur remains we've found and how so many people now believe him and his ideas are being taught in schools.
The list goes on, but what would they think of how their ideas or inventions have come along?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I don't think Darwin would be all that amazed at the fossil record but DNA would have amazed him. The mechanism for inherited characteristics was unknown then.
Lavoisier would have been very pleased to see and understand the periodic table
But the one historical character I would love to show around the twenty first century was Roger Bacon - probably the only man who's foresight exceded Leonard da Vinci's
Lavoisier would have been very pleased to see and understand the periodic table
But the one historical character I would love to show around the twenty first century was Roger Bacon - probably the only man who's foresight exceded Leonard da Vinci's
I often contemplate those who came up with the really basic stuff.
Somebody was the first person to invent trousers. What an awesome breakthrough. (Probably originally the draftless skirt). Laceup shoes. Buttons. Shirts. Sewing, weaving, knitting.
Someone was the forst to do this stuff. The insight and creativity was profound in comparision to the inventiveness of those who later combined technologies. These were fundamental technologies without precedent.
So many receipies. Cake, bread, gravy, beer, wine. Imagine having consumed these things for the first time in a world where they were previously unheard of.
Somebody was the first person to invent trousers. What an awesome breakthrough. (Probably originally the draftless skirt). Laceup shoes. Buttons. Shirts. Sewing, weaving, knitting.
Someone was the forst to do this stuff. The insight and creativity was profound in comparision to the inventiveness of those who later combined technologies. These were fundamental technologies without precedent.
So many receipies. Cake, bread, gravy, beer, wine. Imagine having consumed these things for the first time in a world where they were previously unheard of.
I hope that Johannes Gutenberg would have the good grace to admit that he did not invent printing with moveable type! Even the Gutenberg Museum (in Mainz, which I visited last year) recognises that Bi Sheng did so, hundreds of years earlier.
Even recent inventors, such as John Bardeen (who died in 1991) and Walter Brattain (who died in 1987) might be stunned to see where their invention has led us to. They were the co-inventors of the transistor, without which the 'electronic revolution' could never have taken place. They were around to see the beginnings of personal computers and devices such as bank ATMs, yet they might still be amazed at the rise of the internet, mobile phones, PDAs, media players, debit cards, bar code technology, electronic management of car engines, digital TV, MRI scanners and the thousands of other applications which wouldn't exist without their work. (They were awarded the Nobel prize but, amazingly, hardly anyone seems to know about one of the most important inventions ever!).
Chris
Even recent inventors, such as John Bardeen (who died in 1991) and Walter Brattain (who died in 1987) might be stunned to see where their invention has led us to. They were the co-inventors of the transistor, without which the 'electronic revolution' could never have taken place. They were around to see the beginnings of personal computers and devices such as bank ATMs, yet they might still be amazed at the rise of the internet, mobile phones, PDAs, media players, debit cards, bar code technology, electronic management of car engines, digital TV, MRI scanners and the thousands of other applications which wouldn't exist without their work. (They were awarded the Nobel prize but, amazingly, hardly anyone seems to know about one of the most important inventions ever!).
Chris
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