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قراءة كتاب Twentieth Century Inventions: A Forecast

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Twentieth Century Inventions: A Forecast

Twentieth Century Inventions: A Forecast

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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laid down for examiners in those countries which make search as to originality—common public property. The labour involved in gathering the data for a forecast of the inventions likely to produce important effects during the twentieth century has been chiefly that of selecting from out of a vast mass of heterogeneous ideas those which give promise of springing up amidst favourable conditions and of growing to large proportions and bearing valuable fruit. Such ideas, when planted in the soil of the collective mind through the medium of official or other records, generally require for their germination a longer time than that for which the patent laws grant protection for industrial property. Many of them, indeed, have formed the subjects of patents which, from one reason or another, lapsed long before the expiration of the maximum terms. Nature is ever prodigal of seeds and of "seed-thoughts" but comparatively niggardly of places in which the young plant will find exactly the kind of soil, air, rain, and sunshine which the young plant needs.

If any one requires proof of this statement he will find ample evidence in support of it in the tenth chapter of Smiles's work on Industrial Biography, where facts and dates are adduced to show that steam locomotion, reaping machines, balloons, gunpowder, macadamised roads, coal gas, photography, anæsthesia, and even telegraphy are inventions which, so far as concerns the germ idea on which their success has been based, are of very much older origin than the world generally supposes. The author, therefore, submits that he is justified in referring inventions to the century in which they produce successful results, not to that in which they may have been first vaguely thought of. And in this view it is obvious that many of those patents and suggestions which have been published in current literature during the nineteenth century, but which, although pregnant with mighty industrial influences, have not yet reached fruition, are essentially inventions of the twentieth century. More than this, it is extremely probable that the great majority of those ideas which will move the industrial world during the next ensuing hundred years have already been indicated, more or less clearly, by the inventive thought of the nineteenth century.

George Sutherland.

    December, 1900.


CONTENTS.

  PAGE
CHAPTER I.
Inventive Progress 1
CHAPTER II.
Natural Power 22
CHAPTER III.
Storage of Power 53
CHAPTER IV.
Artificial Power 72
CHAPTER V.
Road and Rail 91
CHAPTER VI.
Ships 122
CHAPTER VII.
Agriculture 144
CHAPTER VIII.
Mining 167
CHAPTER IX.
Domestic 195
CHAPTER X.
Electric Messages, Etc. 216
CHAPTER XI.
Warfare 233
CHAPTER XII.
Music

Pages