Sunday, July 03, 2011

Fordman: Human Accomplishment: Technology

The fourth installment in Fjordman’s series on Human Accomplishment was published at Tundra Tabloids while I was away in D.C. Some excerpts are belatedly below:

In the technology ranking of Human Accomplishment, the instrument maker and mechanical engineer James Watt (1736-1819) of Scotland and the prolific inventor Thomas Alva Edison (1847-1931) of the USA, who created an early research laboratory, are tied for the maximum score of 100. There is a large gap from them down to Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519), who is then followed by Christiaan Huygens (1629-1695) from the Netherlands, one of the greatest polymaths in all history; Archimedes of Syracuse (ca. 290-212 BC); the Italian radio pioneer Guglielmo Marconi (1874-1937); the Roman engineer Marcus Vitruvius Pollio – Vitruvius – from the first century BC, author of the celebrated multivolume work De Architectura (“On Architecture”); John Smeaton (1724-1792), a great civil engineer from Leeds, England and a member of the Lunar Society of Birmingham; the English inventor and steel manufacturer Henry Bessemer (1813-1898); and Thomas Newcomen (1664-1729), an English ironmonger and creator of the atmospheric steam engine, the first version engine that did useful work.

After them follows Charles Babbage (1791-1871), the English inventor of the mechanical computer; the innovative German-born inventor and engineer Carl Wilhelm Siemens (1823-1883), whose brother Werner von Siemens (1816-1892) founded the telecommunications company Siemens in Berlin in 1847; the dynamic English industrialist and ironmaster John Wilkinson (1728-1808); Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790), the prolific scholar, writer, publisher, diplomat and statesman from North America who also invented the lightning rod, bifocal eyeglasses and the Franklin stove; the English physicist and inventor Charles Wheatstone (1802-1875); the industrial chemist and armaments manufacturer Alfred Nobel (1833-1896) from Sweden, who invented dynamite and used his wealth to found and fund the famous Nobel Prizes; the great English naturalist and electrical engineer Michael Faraday (1791-1867); Denis Papin (1647-1712), the French-born engineer who invented the steam digester and the pressure cooker in 1679, major stepping-stones in the evolution of the steam engine; the English civil engineer George Stephenson (1781-1848), who together with his son Robert built the world’s first inter-city public railway line employing steam locomotives between Liverpool and Manchester in 1830; and finally the American painter Samuel Morse (1791-1872), one of the main creators of the electric telegraph and co-inventor of Morse code.

Names such as Karl Benz, Gottlieb Daimler, Wilhelm Maybach, Jean Lenoir, Nikolaus Otto and Rudolf Diesel are listed for their contributions to the development of internal combustion engines and cars, the English entrepreneur Richard Arkwright for aiding the development of a modern factory system during the Industrial Revolution, and Joseph Nicéphore Niépce, Louis Daguerre, William Fox Talbot, George Eastman and others for the creation of photography. But why is a first-rate scientific instrument maker like Jesse Ramsden not mentioned at all?

Read the rest at Tundra Tabloids.

Previously: Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3.

4 comments:

urah2222 said...

Conspicuous in it absence are the contributions of the Islamic world in science and technology.
Fjordman, I get it - the Mohammed Quotient in applied science is essentially a (Hindu) Zero.

Dr. Shalit

Profitsbeard said...

Don't forget the first great early inventor, Hero of Alexandria, who devised the first coin-operated dispenser (of holy water) and an automatically opening doorway (when an altar fire was ignited it triggered a steam system that operated hidden pulleys which winched open the temple doors).

The ancient Edison.

Dymphna said...

Well, here's my p.c. contribution. I've admired this man since I was a kid (and got rocks thrown at me for my school essay - some hatreds die hard)

The Greatest Southern American Inventor

One of the things I liked about him even then was his lack of interest in patenting his discoveries.

What a profound blessing it was to meet the Baron & discover this same philosophy re his own work: plenty more ideas where those came from.

He copyrights very little. Thus when I come across numerous reproductions of his images used as people's avatars, put up on their sidebars, etc., it's a pleasant surprise.

Maybe i'll do a post on The Philosophy of Abundance some day...

...Or maybe not. I'd sell the Baron's right arm to have a tenth of his energy & stamina.

Sigh.

Van Grungy said...

I like James Burke's Connections..

Perhaps Fjordman needs to get audio/visual with the facts..

a great swell of open minds needs facts.. in an accessible form of medium