Greatest Inventions Last 2000 Years
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Average customer review:Product Description
The editor and literary agent John Brockman recently challenged the salon of scientists that he hosts on his website by asking: 'What is the most important invention of the past two thousand years?' Not content to be merely right, his contributors vied for originality, provocativeness and intellectual panache. This book provides a showcase for more than a hundred of their responses, which are as varied, and in some cases strange, as the participants themselves. Gutenberg's printing press wins the most endorsements and passing nods. But the neuroscientist Colin Blakemore and others argue for the birth-control pill. The biologist Richard Dawkins nominates the spectroscope. The physicist Freeman Dyson makes a case for hay. John Maddox, the former editor of Nature, favours the calculus.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #127693 in Books
- Published on: 2001-03-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 288 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
What's the greatest human invention of the last two millennia? The Greatest Inventions of the Past 2,000 Years grew out of a Web-site project called Edge (www.edge.org), wherein the invited intelligentsia recorded their deep thoughts on a variety of topics. In 1998, editor John Brockman asked them to choose the creation that most shaped our world since year one. For this book, Brockman picked 100 of the most compelling entries from intellectual celebrities like Stewart Brand, Richard Dawkins, Steven Pinker and Murray Gell-Mann.
The printing press received a number of votes, as did the computer and television. Other entries were more eclectic: organised science, the contraceptive pill, the gun or even hay. Chairs and stairs; anaesthesia; cities. Each invention is justified by a short essay, some of which read like ... well, Web-site prose. Also, a glaring sexism flaws the book--Brockman chose fewer than 10 women's submissions. Nevertheless, Greatest Inventions is a worthy addition to your millennial reading list and lots of fun besides. --Therese Littleton
About the Author
John Brockman, president of the Edge Foundation and a founder of The Reality Club, is a writer and literary agent based in New York. He is has written and edited twenty books, including The Third Culture, How Things Are: A Science Tool-Kit for the Mind and The Greatest Inventions of the past 2000 Years.
Customer Reviews
Disappointing
This is a loosely put-together hodge podge of small essays and ideas put forward by prominent people in various fields. To be fair this is stated straightforwardly in the introduction, but I was led to believe otherwise when I bought it. Some insights can still be found if one patiently delves into it, but overall this book was quite disappointing.



