The original big ideas came from innovative men and women whose
names are long lost. No monuments commemorate the inventors of the
bowl, the dugout canoe, or the wheel, nor those who first planted
crops, smelted copper, or etched marks into wet clay to inaugurate
writing. Yet their legacies are all around us, in the foundations
of the modern world.
With the advent of writing, big ideas came to be regarded as the
providence of big thinkers. These intellectuals, as they were
called, contributed valuable insights but seldom discovered or
invented anything. Instead they analyzed and rearranged the
relatively few facts that were then known, like jailhouse card
sharks forever shuffling the same deck of cards.
Science and technology did not so much build on the intellectual
tradition as react against it, returning to the habits of hands-on
tinkering that characterized prehistoric innovation. Pioneering
scientists like Galileo, Gilbert, Harvey, and Newton had little use
for scholarly analysis of venerable opinions. They were more apt to
agree with Francis Bacon, the great 17th-century prophet of
science, who likened his Cambridge professors to “becalmed ships;
they never move but by the wind of other men’s breath.”
The scientists preferred to find new facts, such as how gravity and
magnetism work, how blood circulates through the human body, and
how planets orbit the sun. Their points of reference came less from
reading old books than from experimentation and observation—what
Galileo called reading “the book of nature.”
The result of their campaign was an unprecedented improvement in
the lives of people around the world. Prior to the scientific and
technological revolutions, the average human being was illiterate,
earned a few hundred dollars a year, and was unlikely to survive to
see age 30. Today, over 80 percent of all adults are literate, the
global median annual income exceeds $7,000, and life expectancy at
birth is approaching age 70. All this happened so quickly, measured
against the long shadows of our history and prehistory,that many
people don’t yet realize that it has happened.
I keep on my desk a Neanderthal hand ax, chipped from a piece of
obsidian some 34,000 years ago. It’s a good ax; pick it up and you
immediately start imagining all sorts of things you could do with
it, from cutting meat to defending yourself to making another ax.
That spirit, of learning and being inspired through direct physical
interrogation of nature, is the real impetus behind science and
technology alike.
Bacon, writing at the dawn of modern science, argued that
experimenters “are like the ant; they only collect and use,”
whereas logicians “resemble spiders, who make cobwebs out of their
own substance. “But the bee takes a middle course,” Bacon wrote.
“It gathers its material from the flowers of the garden and of the
field, but transforms and digests it by a power of its own.”
Time proved Bacon right. Scientists today are so immersed in
technology, and technologists in science, that it can be difficult
to trace where one ends and the other begins. This messy process
satisfies the neat prescriptions of neither scholars nor priests,
but its results speak for themselves: More facts are now discovered
in a decade than were once acquired in a century.
Were Bacon alive today he might compare global science and
technology to fields of wildflowers fertilized by bees: astonishing
in their variety, yet each part testifying to the nature of the
whole. The volume you are holding is a way into that excitement and
splendor. Welcome, in short, to a beehive of a book.
--Timothy Ferris
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