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Bronson Tweed Publishing

Inventors at Work (Illustrated)

Inventors at Work (Illustrated)

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This edition is illustrated, and has been formatted for your NOOK.

Inventors and discoverers are justly among the most honored of men. It is they who add to knowledge, who bring matter under subjection both in form and substance, who teach us how to perform an old task, as lighting, with new economy, or hand us gifts wholly new, as the spectroscope and the wireless telegraph. It is they who tell us how to shape an oar into a rudder, and direct a task with our brains instead of tugging at it with our muscles. They enable us to replace loss with gain, waste with thrift, weariness with comfort, hazard with safety. And, chief service of all, they bring us to understand more and more of that involved drama of which this planet is by turns the stage and the spectator’s gallery. The main difference between humanity to-day and its lowly ancestry of the tree-top and the cave has been worked out by the inventors and discoverers who have steadily lifted the plane of life, made it broader and better with every passing year.

On a theme so vast as the labors of these men a threshold book can offer but a few glances at principles of moment, to which the reader may add as he pleases from observations and experiments of his own. At the outset Form will engage our regard: first, as bestowed so as to be retained by girders, trusses and bridges; next, as embodied in structures which minimize friction, such as well designed ships; or as conducing to the efficiency of tools and machines; or deciding how best heat may be radiated or light diffused. A word will follow as to modes of conferring form, the influence on form of the materials employed, and the undue vitality of old forms that should long ago have bidden us good-by. Structures alike in shape may differ in size. Bigness has its economies, and so has smallness. Both will have brief attention, with a rapid survey of new materials which enable a builder to rear towers or engines bolder in dimensions than were hitherto possible.

Substance, as important as form, will next receive a glance. First a word will be said about the properties of food, raiment, shelter, weapons and tools. Then, the properties of fuels and light-givers will be considered, as steadily improved in their effectiveness. How properties are modified by heat and electricity will be remarked, with illustrations from steels of new and astonishing qualities, and from notable varieties of glass produced at Jena. A few pages will recount some of the striking phenomena of radio-activity displayed by radium, thorium and kindred substances, phenomena which are remolding the fundamental conceptions of physics and chemistry.
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