Creative Speculation
Related: About this forumGreatest achievement of all time?
My husband says the Hubble Telescope....
I think running cold and hot water, right in your house.
How about you?
PJMcK
(22,850 posts)Stuart G
(38,726 posts)Perhaps more lives have been saved by that last one than all medical advances in history...Of course, no one would
believe that, but go back to the 1890s to see how many died from not pure, unclean, and infected water..
Prof. Toru Tanaka
(2,263 posts)Heartstrings
(7,349 posts)Definitely!
Stuart G
(38,726 posts)Timewas
(2,283 posts)Brainstormy
(2,426 posts)SonofDonald
(2,050 posts)The first written language, the first mathematician, the first to try to talk to another to settle differences instead of attacking them.
Many others.
Walking on the moon for one.
Shrike47
(6,913 posts)tomp
(9,512 posts)shraby
(21,946 posts)LakeArenal
(29,767 posts)Gotta admit fried is the best. But obviously any dough is good dough.
PS. Is pizza dough the same as baked dough?🍕
🍞🥧🥟🍩🍪
yesphan
(1,599 posts)OnlinePoker
(5,830 posts)LakeArenal
(29,767 posts)N_E_1 for Tennis
(10,707 posts)Without string we would have a very different world.
https://www.hakaimagazine.com/features/the-long-knotty-world-spanning-story-of-string/
A very interesting article...
In his 1956 book The Marlinspike Sailor, marine illustrator Hervey Garrett Smith wrote that rope is probably the most remarkable product known to mankind. On its own, a stray thread cannot accomplish much. But when several fibers are twisted into yarn, and yarn into strands, and strands into string or rope, a once feeble thing becomes both strong and flexiblea hybrid material of limitless possibility. A string can cut, choke, and trip; it can also link, bandage, and reel. String makes it possible to sew, to shoot an arrow, to strum a chord. Its difficult to think of an aspect of human culture that is not laced through with some form of string or rope; it has helped us develop shelter, clothing, agriculture, weaponry, art, mathematics, and oral hygiene. Without string, our ancestors could not have domesticated horses and cattle or efficiently plowed the earth to grow crops. If not for rope, the great stone monuments of the worldStonehenge, the Pyramids at Giza, the moai of Easter Islandwould still be recumbent. In a fiberless world, the age of naval exploration would never have happened; early light bulbs would have lacked suitable filaments; the pendulum would never have inspired advances in physics and timekeeping; and there would be no Golden Gate Bridge, no tennis shoes, no Beethovens fifth symphony.
Everybody knows about fire and the wheel, but string is one of the most powerful tools and really the most overlooked, says Saskia Wolsak, an ethnobotanist at the University of British Columbia who recently began a PhD on the cultural history of string. Its relatively invisible until you start looking for it. Then you see it everywhere.
LakeArenal
(29,767 posts)N_E_1 for Tennis
(10,707 posts)Hey me too. At our family dinner we always try to have some nugget for discussion.
I asked almost the same question you did. Three teachers, six college educated people no one even came close. Then the real discussion began.
Galileo126
(2,016 posts)but my top 5, no particular order:
(1) sanitation/plumbing (Korg hates dysentery! - beginnings of disease prevention.)
(2) control of fire (Fire warms Korg! Fire cooks meat for Korg!)
(3) metallurgy (Korg like new spear tip and new tools, thanks to #2)
(4) magnetic compass (Korg like travel!)
(5) wheel (Korg like travel AND hauling heavy things!)
maveric
(16,666 posts)PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,652 posts)what is euphemistically known as feminine hygiene products.
Along with indoor plumbing.
cloudbase
(5,730 posts)LakeArenal
(29,767 posts)canetoad
(18,102 posts)Both to make fire and fashion tools.
LakeArenal
(29,767 posts)Kaleva
(38,064 posts)Talitha
(7,440 posts)Wheels on luggage... what took them so long?
Laura PourMeADrink
(42,770 posts)lapfog_1
(30,095 posts)without which we would not have modern computers, radios, almost all electronics.
N_E_1 for Tennis
(10,707 posts)In his 1956 book The Marlinspike Sailor, marine illustrator Hervey Garrett Smith wrote that rope is probably the most remarkable product known to mankind. On its own, a stray thread cannot accomplish much. But when several fibers are twisted into yarn, and yarn into strands, and strands into string or rope, a once feeble thing becomes both strong and flexiblea hybrid material of limitless possibility. A string can cut, choke, and trip; it can also link, bandage, and reel. String makes it possible to sew, to shoot an arrow, to strum a chord. Its difficult to think of an aspect of human culture that is not laced through with some form of string or rope; it has helped us develop shelter, clothing, agriculture, weaponry, art, mathematics, and oral hygiene. Without string, our ancestors could not have domesticated horses and cattle or efficiently plowed the earth to grow crops. If not for rope, the great stone monuments of the worldStonehenge, the Pyramids at Giza, the moai of Easter Islandwould still be recumbent. In a fiberless world, the age of naval exploration would never have happened; early light bulbs would have lacked suitable filaments; the pendulum would never have inspired advances in physics and timekeeping; and there would be no Golden Gate Bridge, no tennis shoes, no Beethovens fifth symphony.
The Velveteen Ocelot
(120,601 posts)harnessing electricity, the telescope, the Internet, the printing press, the internal combustion engine (yes, I know it's polluting but it had a huge effect on the world), the domestication of animals and plants - too many to pick just one.
Stuart G
(38,726 posts)NO incredible Florida population growth...& other states with summer heat, parts of Texas and Arizona..
Doodley
(10,270 posts)LakeArenal
(29,767 posts)But stay tuned. You may be right.
Rustynaerduwell
(726 posts)John Fante
(3,479 posts)This enabled our brains to grow - they wouldn't be the powerful dynamos they are without cooking, and you can't cook without fire.
Put it another way. We would still be humans without the wheel, special relativity, or vaccines. Can't say they about fire.
nocoincidences
(2,313 posts)and taming horses to be our transportation.
Of course we domesticated our companions to work for us, and dogs still do, at least some of them, and cats have rightfully taken their place as gods and goddesses to be worshipped, no work expected from them anymore.
keithbvadu2
(39,961 posts)happyaccident
(136 posts)Observation,hypothesis,experimentation,theory, do over and over forever
Science ends Superstition, hooray for science!
This is the first time I have ever posted anything on the internet. kinda fun.
LakeArenal
(29,767 posts)DU is a lot of fun. Welcome.
JustFiveMoreMinutes
(2,133 posts)Dr. Skull
(26 posts)Invented in 1922, the electric washing machine began the freedom of women from the onerous task of doing laundry by hand, freeing many women to go to college, enter the workforce and politics. The washing machine also provided people with sterile underwear and clean clothes, promoting a general rise in health and longevity. The modern world as we know it (the first world, I guess) would not exist without the washing machine.
Stuart G
(38,726 posts)Last edited Wed Mar 10, 2021, 10:40 PM - Edit history (1)
Where is why...That first flight by the ..".Russians"....enabled the race to space and race to the moon......
In the process of.................."winning the race to the moon" ...the result was the miniaturization of computers and computer components.
It can be argued that the miniaturization of computers and computer components and their use in medicine and hospitals have saved thousands if not millions of lives. Yes, Instant communication that is the result of computers and miniaturization of them could have saved millions..................and speaking of saving lives.................................................................................................................................
How about the invention of the telephone?....calling for ambulance help and the ambulance coming
to help...saves a lot of lives every day.....doesn't it?
Gaugamela
(2,655 posts)Response to Gaugamela (Reply #43)
GReedDiamond This message was self-deleted by its author.
Nac Mac Feegle
(978 posts)It permitted a farmer to make more food than was needed to feed one family. This excess created commerce, one can exchange another good or service for food, creating specialists. This permitted the formation of villages, then towns, then cities, and onward to nations.
There had to be leaders, soldiers, administrators, blacksmiths, weaver's, shopkeepers, etc... that needed a common location and protection. Because one farmer could produce food for many people, there had to be a way to dispose of the excess. Things went onward from there, essentially necessitating civilization.
Not my own, I can't remember where I saw it originally.
Stuart G
(38,726 posts)You would have to read more about underground plumbing and sewers to get the truth on that one..
but getting rid of the s**t from the home, and out houses..saved millions of lives.
Yes..I used an outhouse at Boy Scout Camp in the late 50s..NO IT WAS NOT NICE..AND GUESS WHAT???
THE SCOUTS TOOK TURNS AT CLEANING THE TOLIET SEAT, AND THE AREA AROUND THE SEAT..
....NOW THAT WAS ABOUT 60 YEARS AGO...(more like 63 years ago) and I remember cleaning the outhouse
very well..the few times I had to clean the seat and area around it..Yes it stunk ..
Stuart G
(38,726 posts)....i said it earlier...but I will say it again.........
The Space Race required much smaller computers to go to the moon, (because only so much weight could go
in a space ship)..and as a result the insides of the computer started to ..............shrink..........and shrink again...
and more and more...
............In the early 80s, I took a course on the future of computers..and the professor said, that someday
we would hold a computer in our hand...and I & everyone else thought the fellow was...NUTS!!! ..And, he
also said, "Everyone would own a computer"...Everyone..???He was totally NUTS!!! in today..money $10,000
.........................TOTALLY NUTS.........
. .................and guess what.......???? he was totally correct.
LakeArenal
(29,767 posts)Wouldnt last long.
milestogo
(17,617 posts)LakeArenal
(29,767 posts)One of the things we misssssss.
Stuart G
(38,726 posts)Stuart G
(38,726 posts)Yes, a long time ago, and far, far away..you had to stick your arm out to single that you were turning.
You don't believe...It is true.
LakeArenal
(29,767 posts)Stuart G
(38,726 posts)Last edited Mon Apr 4, 2022, 09:04 PM - Edit history (1)
newdayneeded
(2,493 posts)in a short time we went from clip clop horse travel, maybe 6 mph, to railroad travel at 36+ mph.
In today's words, our commutes to work average say 40mph, we would now be able to go 240mph. We'd be able to commute to another state daily for work.
It must have been mesmerizing back then to travel a first time on a train at 50-60 mph, like riding on a jet.