Just thinking
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2004
- Messages
- 5,169
No matter how advanced we become, I'll bet that somewhere there will always be wheels spinning.
Yes, but he also said HAS DONE more. Past tense. Wheels.
Wrong. Both. Which is precisely why I think it's a dumb question. Your asking to compare two completely different technologies whose time frame and application are completely different.Correct.
Has done = wheel
Will do = computer
Wrong. Both. Which is precisely why I think it's a dumb question. Your asking to compare two completely different technologies whose time frame and application are completely different.
Wrong. Both. Which is precisely why I think it's a dumb question. Your asking to compare two completely different technologies whose time frame and application are completely different.
Correct.
Has done = wheel
Will do = computer
Not at all. As far as I see it, there is no real application at which a computer can bring any significant benefit.
Any new cutting edge knowledge are on papers that are widely distributed around the world.How about the ability to share that sentence with thousands, or potentially millions, of people easily?
The wheel. Until we have hovercars, at which point the wheel will become completely obsolete and we will instead worship ionflux-fusion thrusters. Where's my hovercar, dammit?!?
In the last 1500 years, I'd put printing and gunpowder as the most important inventions, as one allowed an intellectual debate to be fostered, and the other removed the military, and consequentlal social, economic and political dominance that armoured, trained, well-fed warriors had over even rich peasants, and burghers.
These were the two most important technologies for ending the feudal system and ending the middle ages.
In the last 500,000 years: fire*, clothes*, baskets, belts and pockets (free hands, can carry babies), pottery, agriculature,
*maybe these are earlier?
Before that, the knife and spear, as they moved humans up the food chain
You are just being silly.Any new cutting edge knowledge are on papers that are widely distributed around the world.
Zygar is indeed correct. While the proto-wheel (i.e. rolling things on a bunch of heavy logs, then picking up the logs and put them ahead of the big thing again) had its uses* it was the wheel axle that made a real difference. And it was also pretty damn impressive because the wheel axle is one design you just don't find in nature. I'm not sure how many steps it took from the protowheel until the first axle as we know it, but those must have been some clever bastards to figure that one out.The wheel is nothing. The axle was the real invention.
Not really. Going from an fulcrum to axle isn't really all that impressive in a leap of faith. They are both pivot points. Now having someone figure out that you could lift something 5 times your own weight using a combination of wheels,levers, and gears is more impressive.And it was also pretty damn impressive because the wheel axle is one design you just don't find in nature. I'm not sure how many steps it took from the protowheel until the first axle as we know it, but those must have been some clever bastards to figure that one out.
There is a reason though to. The wheel for all intents and purposes is considered one of the basic building blocks for all mechanical devices. It's pretty much a given to anyone with basic mechanical background that you are going to be working with it if you are going to build something that moves. In order to create a valid comparison you have to compare the wheel to something more electrically basic. Something more like a building block.Well, again, let’s not get too hung up on the differences between the wheel and computing devices.
Not really. Going from an fulcrum to axle isn't really all that impressive in a leap of faith. They are both pivot points. Now having someone figure out that you could lift something 5 times your own weight using a combination of wheels,levers, and gears is more impressive.
There is a reason though to. The wheel for all intents and purposes is considered one of the basic building blocks for all mechanical devices. It's pretty much a given to anyone with basic mechanical background that you are going to be working with it if you are going to build something that moves. In order to create a valid comparison you have to compare the wheel to something more electrically basic. Something more like a building block.
Any new cutting edge knowledge are on papers that are widely distributed around the world.
That's a circular argument though. The way computers are made nowadays you need a computer.Today, computers are made by wheels, and wheels are made by computers. It's a tossup.