18
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
📍 Noticed
The Most Powerful Idea in the World: A Story of Steam, Industry, and Invention
by William Rosen
Sponsored
Synopsis
Hardly a week passes without some high-profile court case that features intellectual property at its center. But how did the belief that one could own an idea come about? And how did that belief change the way humankind lives and works?William Rosen, author of Justinian's Flea , seeks to ...
Hardly a week passes without some high-profile court case that features intellectual property at its center. But how did the belief that one could own an idea come about? And how did that belief change the way humankind lives and works?
William Rosen, author of Justinian's Flea , seeks to answer these questions and more with The Most Powerful Idea in the World . A lively and passionate study of the engineering and scientific breakthroughs that led to the steam engine, this book argues that the very notion of intellectual property drove not only the invention of the steam engine but also the entire Industrial Revolution: history’s first sustained era of economic improvement. To do so, Rosen conjures up an eccentric cast of characters, including the legal philosophers who enabled most the inventive society in millennia, and the scientists and inventors―Thomas Newcomen, Robert Boyle, and James Watt―who helped to create and perfect the steam engine over the centuries. With wit and wide-ranging curiosity, Rosen explores the power of creativity, capital, and collaboration in the brilliant engineering of the steam engine and how this power source, which fueled factories, ships, and railroads, changed human history.
Deeply informative and never dull, Rosen's account of one of the most important inventions made by humans is a rollicking ride through history, with careful scholarship and fast-paced prose in equal measure.
William Rosen, author of Justinian's Flea , seeks to answer these questions and more with The Most Powerful Idea in the World . A lively and passionate study of the engineering and scientific breakthroughs that led to the steam engine, this book argues that the very notion of intellectual property drove not only the invention of the steam engine but also the entire Industrial Revolution: history’s first sustained era of economic improvement. To do so, Rosen conjures up an eccentric cast of characters, including the legal philosophers who enabled most the inventive society in millennia, and the scientists and inventors―Thomas Newcomen, Robert Boyle, and James Watt―who helped to create and perfect the steam engine over the centuries. With wit and wide-ranging curiosity, Rosen explores the power of creativity, capital, and collaboration in the brilliant engineering of the steam engine and how this power source, which fueled factories, ships, and railroads, changed human history.
Deeply informative and never dull, Rosen's account of one of the most important inventions made by humans is a rollicking ride through history, with careful scholarship and fast-paced prose in equal measure.
You May Also Like
I Want to Die But I Want to Eat Tteokbokki
Baek Se-hee
The Friends-to-Lovers Project
Paula Ottoni
Solve for Happy: Engineer Your Path to Joy
Mo Gawdat
Raising NLD Superstars: What Families with Nonverbal Learning Disabilities Need to Know about Nurturing Confident, Competent Kids
Marcia Brown Rubinstien
An Unwanted Guest
Shari Lapena
Hallowed Games
C.N. Crawford
Classics Picks
View All
The Personal Librarian
Marie Benedict
The Outsiders
S.E. Hinton
Autocracy Inc.
Anne Applebaum
Daughters of the Bamboo Grove: From China to America, a True Story of Abduction, Adoption, and Separated Twins
Barbara Demick
Wuthering Heights
Emily Brontë
The Great Resistance: The 400-Year Fight to End Slavery in the Americas
Carrie Gibson