St. Andrew’s Day and Scottish Inventors
Philosophy

St. Andrew’s Day and Scottish Inventors



"Nov. 30: A St. Andrew’s Day Salute to Scottish Inventors"


by

Lewis Wallace

November 30th, 2009

Wired

Nov. 30: It’s St. Andrew’s Day, the national day of Scotland. So we offer a toast to the great inventors who have applied Scottish ingenuity to their work over the years, helping craft the modern world in the process.

Some, like Alexander Graham Bell and James Watt, are well-known.

Others, like Arthur James Arnot — a Scot who moved to Australia, where he patented the electric drill — are less so.

In the wake of the Scottish Enlightenment, an 18th-century period during which the country achieved great intellectual and scientific accomplishments, emigrants such as Arnot spread what writer Arthur Herman calls the “Scottish mentality” well beyond the United Kingdom.

“When we gaze out on a contemporary world shaped by technology, capitalism and modern democracy, and struggle to find our own place in it, we are in effect viewing the world through the same lens as the Scots did,” writes Herman in his 2001 book, How the Scots Invented the Modern World.

Here are some of the great Scottish inventors who helped change the world:



How the Scots Invented the Modern World: The True Story of How Western Europe's Poorest Nation Created Our World and Everything in It

by

Arthur Herman

ISBN-10: 0609606352
ISBN-13: 978-0609606353




- Sir James Dewar And The Thermos
"How the Thermos corporation cheated the inventor of the thermos" by Esther Inglis-Arkell Spetember 29th, 2013 io9 For all you aspiring inventors out there, here's a reason to keep up on your patent law. Have you heard of thermoses? They're...

- Arthur Kennelly Or Karl Jansky...first Radio Telescope
"That Time Thomas Edison Almost Invented the Radio Telescope" by Ron Miller September 23rd, 2013 io9 In 1890, Arthur Kennelly, an electrical engineer working for Thomas Edison, wrote a letter to the director of the Lick Observatory. He described an interesting...

- Shocking...robert Van De Graaff
The three founders of HVEC stand by the company's Emperor tandem test facility. L-R: Robert Van de Graaff; Denis Robinson; John Trump. Robert Van de Graaff December 20th, 1901 to January 16th, 1967 An "American physicist and inventor of the Van...

- 3,000+ Patents...sorry Edison, Yoshiro Nakamatsu Is #1
Yoshiro Nakamatsu [Dr. NakaMats] June 26th, 1928 Japanese inventor who holds over 3,000 patents, making him the world's most prolific inventor. (Thomas Alva Edison is a distant second with 1,093). NakaMats invented the floppy disk in 1950 at the...

- Deceased--alvin M. Marks
Alvin M. Marks October 28th, 1910 to May [?], 2008 Quite an inventor...from the practical [optics] to the fantastic ["space train"]. "Alvin M. Marks, Inventor With 122 Patents, Dies at 97" by Bruce Weber May 31st, 2008 The New York Times Alvin M. Marks,...



Philosophy








.