![]() Yet I’m not sure we’re doing it all that well. Today, however, we have many more media available to us to encourage people to become inventors - from radio and film, to video games and various other kinds of social media. I suspect that books like Samuel Smiles’s bestseller Self Help - essentially a collection of pulled-themselves-up-by-their-bootstraps stories about inventors - played a part in inspiring people to also have a go at improvement in the late nineteenth century, a little after the period I mainly study. Inspiration can be indirect, with the written word complementing face-to-face interactions, or even prompting them to seek them, as well as giving people a taste of the improving mentality. Or take the young George Stephenson, pioneer of railway locomotion, who read a history of inventions that apparently prompted him to try to invent a perpetual motion machine (before another book, this time on mechanics, revealed to him the error in trying). (Whether it was the book or really the clergyman who inspired him, however, it is difficult to say.) Likewise, Francis Maceroni, an early nineteenth-century pioneer of kite-surfing, who also applied himself to improving swimming, paddle wheels, rockets, asphalt paving, and steam carriages, among other things, seems to have first been exposed to innovation by reading various books on science, including the works of Benjamin Franklin. John Harrison, the clockmaker who created a timepiece so advanced that it allowed sailors to find their longitude even at sea, was allegedly given a copy of the scientific lectures of Nicholas Saunderson by a visiting clergyman when he was just a boy. There are a handful of cases where reading about inventors may have played a role in inspiring some people to invent. Contrary to “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it”, the inventor is the person who can’t help but see the extra potential to improve things, and can’t resist applying their fixes too.ĭuring the Industrial Revolution, most exposure to invention seems to have been face-to-face. So I’ve been thinking a lot lately about what I call upstream policies : things that expose people to the idea of invention, increasing the chances that they themselves will be inspired with an improving mentality - a mindset of seeing problems where others do not, and then developing solutions to them. As I mentioned last time, increasing the supply of people becoming inventors is possibly one of the most significant, world-changing things that anyone can do. ![]()
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