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Sure, the wheel was a great invention, but it seems such obvious technology

Posted on 2/3/15 at 8:46 am
Posted by Rex
Here, there, and nowhere
Member since Sep 2004
66001 posts
Posted on 2/3/15 at 8:46 am
that it's hard to be impressed with its necessary mindpower.... sort of like discovering that fire can help keep you warm.

For my money, the invention of the alphabet is a more sublime human achievement. That unknown Phoenician who first realized that a sound could be represented with a scribble on a piece of parchment, and then that a group of scribbles could represent a word, and then that a string of those groups could represent an entire dialogue or story.... that stuff was never obvious, and that guy has my immense admiration.
Posted by jimbeam
University of LSU
Member since Oct 2011
75703 posts
Posted on 2/3/15 at 8:47 am to
Id say communism


For surex
Posted by terd ferguson
Darren Wilson Fan Club President
Member since Aug 2007
108846 posts
Posted on 2/3/15 at 8:47 am to
quote:

more sublime human achievement


Posted by Breesus
House of the Rising Sun
Member since Jan 2010
67023 posts
Posted on 2/3/15 at 8:47 am to
The alphabet in which language?

Posted by TigerFred
Feeding hamsters
Member since Aug 2003
27223 posts
Posted on 2/3/15 at 8:49 am to
I would argue that Beer/Wine/Alcohol is the single greatest invention.
Posted by Antonio Moss
Baton Rouge
Member since Mar 2006
48357 posts
Posted on 2/3/15 at 8:54 am to
quote:

that it's hard to be impressed with its necessary mindpower.... sort of like discovering that fire can help keep you warm.

For my money, the invention of the alphabet is a more sublime human achievement. That unknown Phoenician who first realized that a sound could be represented with a scribble on a piece of parchment, and then that a group of scribbles could represent a word, and then that a string of those groups could represent an entire dialogue or story.... that stuff was never obvious, and that guy has my immense admiration.


I'll give you one better. The Neolithic Revolution, the use of agriculture and domestication of animals, was much more important to the formation of civilization than the wheel.
Posted by GreatLakesTiger24
One State Solution
Member since May 2012
56014 posts
Posted on 2/3/15 at 8:54 am to
I don't get how it took until the 60s to invent drugs
Posted by constant cough
Lafayette
Member since Jun 2007
44788 posts
Posted on 2/3/15 at 9:01 am to
quote:

Sure, the wheel was a great invention, but it seems such obvious technology that it's hard to be impressed with its necessary mindpower.





That how come the wheel was never invented in the New World? They did not have that technology till the Europeans arrived.
This post was edited on 2/3/15 at 9:02 am
Posted by Clames
Member since Oct 2010
16731 posts
Posted on 2/3/15 at 9:03 am to
Must be a slow day for you over at the DUmp.
Posted by Shexter
Prairieville
Member since Feb 2014
14161 posts
Posted on 2/3/15 at 9:09 am to
Fire
I would say the wheel was also more of a discovery than a true invention. No one sat down and thought up the wheel. It was more of a progression from rolling things on a round rock.
Whoever put that wheel on an axle was the true inventor.
This post was edited on 2/3/15 at 9:13 am
Posted by TROLA
BATON ROUGE
Member since Apr 2004
12569 posts
Posted on 2/3/15 at 9:11 am to
It wasn't the actual idea of a wheel but the production of the wheel that was so innovative.. The process isn't exactly easy even in today's society
Posted by DanW1
Member since Jan 2013
1105 posts
Posted on 2/3/15 at 9:25 am to
For me it's the our network systems. It amazes me how far it's come in the last 20 years.

From Wikipedia:
quote:

In 1993, total Internet traffic amounted to approximately 100 TB for the year. As of June 2008, Cisco Systems estimated Internet traffic at 160 TB/s (which, assuming to be statistically constant, comes to 5 zettabytes for the year). In other words, the amount of Internet traffic per second in 2008 exceeded all of the Internet traffic in 1993.


It's crazy, IMO, that this is the first generation that has ever had the capabilities to record history the way we can now.

Very few details of history will be "forgotten" from here on.
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