Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: The Most Powerful Idea in the World

Full title: The Most Powerful Idea in the World: A Story of Steam, Industry, and Invention
Author: William Rosen
Year: 2010
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 1.2
Genres/categories: History, Science

Purchase/research links:

ISBN:
9781400067053
1400067057
If all measures of human advancement in the last hundred centuries were plotted on a graph, they would show an almost perfectly flat line - until the eighteenth century, when the Industrial Revolution would cause the line to shoot straight up, beginning an almost uninterrupted march of progress.
   
In
, William Rosen tells the story of the men responsible for the Industrial Revolution and the machine that drove it - the steam engine. In the process he tackles the question that has obsessed historians ever since: What made eighteenth-century Britain such fertile soil for inventors? Rosen's answer focuses on a simple notion that had become enshrined in British law the century before: that people had the right to own and profit from their ideas.
   
The result was a period of frantic innovation revolving particularly around the promise of steam power. Rosen traces the steam engine's history from its early days as a clumsy but sturdy machine, to its coming-of-age driving the wheels of mills and factories, to its maturity as a transporter for people and freight by rail and by sea. Along the way we enter the minds of such inventors as Thomas Newcomen and James Watt, scientists including Robert Boyle and Joseph Black, and philosophers John Locke and Adam Smith - all of whose insights, tenacity, and ideas transformed first a nation and then the world.
 
William Rosen is a masterly storyteller with a keen eye for the "aha!" moments of invention and a gift for clear and entertaining explanations of science.
will appeal to readers fascinated with history, science, and the hows and whys of innovation itself.
Similar books:

Justinian's Flea
by William Rosen

Compass
by Alan Gurney

1492
by Felipe Fernandez-Armesto

The Evolution of Civilizations
by Carroll Quigley

Catastrophe
by David Keys

Civilization
by Roger Osborne

The Pinball Effect
by James Burke

Paper
by Mark Kurlansky

Maps of Time
by David Christian

Origin Story
by David Christian

Seven Wonders of the Industrial World
by Deborah Cadbury

Connections
by James Burke

Captain Bligh's Portable Nightmare
by John Toohey

The Twentieth Century
by Howard Zinn

Cotton
by Stephen Yafa

Civilization on Trial
by Arnold J. Toynbee

1491
by Charles C. Mann

The Great Influenza
by John M. Barry

1493
by Charles C. Mann

Polio
by David M. Oshinsky