Inventions That Changed Everything: History's Breakthroughs
Published by epubli
English
2026
ISBN 9783565249176
eBook
Buy at Crisol Ebooks
🇨🇴
Available at 5 bookshops
About this book
Technological breakthroughs reshape civilization by altering how people work, communicate, fight, and organize society. This comprehensive examination traces the inventions that fundamentally changed human existence—from the plow and wheel through printing and gunpowder to steam engines and telegraph systems—analyzing not just their technical mechanisms but their social, economic, and political consequences.
Drawing on archaeological evidence, patent records, workshop manuals, and contemporary accounts, this book reveals how innovations emerged from specific historical contexts, spread across cultures, and triggered unexpected transformations. It explores the gap between invention and widespread adoption, the resistance innovations faced from established interests, and how technological change disrupted existing power structures while creating new ones.
The narrative examines who benefited from breakthrough technologies, who lost status or livelihood, and how societies adapted institutions to accommodate radical change. It analyzes the relationship between warfare and innovation, how trade networks spread technical knowledge, and why some civilizations embraced new technologies while others rejected them. Without technological determinism, this work provides rigorous analysis of how human ingenuity and material conditions interact to transform the possibilities of social organization and economic production.
Genres
- Language
- English
Share
You might also like
Koryŏsa
Nazis a pie de calle
Casquete, Jesús
Entre dos octubres
Veiga, Francisco, Martín, Pablo, Sánchez Monroe, Juan
Blades and Crowns: Women Warriors Who Rewrote History
Carmichael, Adrian
Runway Bites: The Hidden Food Havens and Secret Corners of the World's Airports
Collinsworth, Mae
Beyond Castles and Cathedrals: The Ordinary Rhythms Medieval History Forgets
Collinsworth, Mae