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They Laughed at Galileo

How the Great Inventors Proved Their Critics Wrong

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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
A humorous account of great inventors and their critics who predicted failure.
They Laughed at Galileo takes a humorous and reflective look at one thousand years of the development of humankind: those who dreamt, those who taught, those who opposed, and those who, ultimately, did.
At some point in modern history, each and every one of our inventions and discoveries was first envisioned and then developed by a single person, or a handful of people, who dreamt of the seemingly impossible. For them, the future was clear and obvious, but for the vast majority, including the acknowledged experts of their days, such belief was sheer folly.
For just about everything that has improved our modern lifestyles in a way that our ancestors could not possibly imagine, there was once a lone dreamer proclaiming, “It can be done." That dreamer was nearly always opposed by a team of “enlightened" contemporaries publicly declaring, “It cannot be done." Well, yes it could.
Marconi's wireless radio transmissions were initially deemed pointless. Edward L. Drake's eventual success on August 27, 1859, was called the day “the crazy man first struck oil." Louis Pasteur's theory of germs was considered a “ridiculous fiction." Each of these inventions has had a profound effect on the course of human history, and each one was rejected, resisted, and ridiculed in its day. Ultimately, the innovators who brought these into existence provided invaluable contributions to science and the culture of humankind.
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    • Library Journal

      July 1, 2015

      Jack's (Red Herrings and White Elephants) latest promises to deliver an amusing history of the success of great inventors in the face of opposition. Instead, the author presents a dense collection of anecdotes that devotes only a quarter of its content to humorous controversy. Most of the narrative is spent on baffling subjects arranged in no discernible order; famous actors who almost weren't famous; pop culture fads; and food that was neither invented nor laughed at (potatoes?). A chapter on inventors killed by their creations gives equal billing to a bizarre legend about a man who attempted to fly to the moon using fireworks attached to a chair and multiple Nobel Prize recipient Marie Curie, who died as a result of her work with radioactivity. VERDICT Jack provides excellent conversation starters for your next cocktail party. A lack of references or analysis makes this an occasionally amusing read with little substance; it is worth noting that a book almost exclusively covering only male innovators should stir up controversy.--Sara Fiore, Westhampton Free Lib., NY

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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