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Forks, Phonographs, and Hot Air Balloons: A Field Guide to Inventive Thinking
 
 
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Forks, Phonographs, and Hot Air Balloons: A Field Guide to Inventive Thinking [Hardcover]

Robert J. Weber (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

February 4, 1993
How do inventions take shape? How did the inventors of the sewing needle, the hammer, or the wheel find their ideas? Are these creations the result of random events, or are hidden principles at work? Using everyday objects most of us take for granted--from forks and Velcro to safety pins and doorknobs--noted cognitive psychologist Robert Weber takes a fascinating look at how our world of inventions came into being, and how the mind's problem-solving abilities gave them the forms they have.
As an archaeologist studies shards of pottery for clues about an ancient culture, Weber examines the many forms of inventions, from stone knives to genetically engineered mice, and finds a rich record of the work of many minds over time--a record of human creativity and problem-solving handed down through the centuries. He offers various methods for analyzing what mental paths might have been taken by these inventive minds. In the test for design, for example, he ponders how an item would work if various components were shuffled or constructed differently, revealing how the optimal shape of the invention was discovered. He challenges the reader to engage in thought experiments to explore how the horse-drawn cart, the waterscrew, or the fork might have taken shape over many years, through the efforts of successive inventors and adapters. In stripping these simple artifacts to the bone, Weber finds a hidden intelligence at work in everyday objects as well as recurrent heuristics (basic principles or rules of thumb) that are common among many of our most successful inventions--heuristics powerful enough to generate endless new ideas. Weber ranges across the work of Archimedes, Leonardo da Vinci, the Wright brothers, as well as grade-school children who have won national awards for their inventions, revealing that the same principles are at work in the discoveries of all of them. Basic principles of invention, he writes, govern how we think, solve, and manipulate ideas, whether mechanical or mental, real or mythological.
Weber's playful, original, and insightful look at the inventions around us reveals a hidden intelligence in everything from screws to tea bags to synthesizers--an intelligence based on principles of creativity and problem-solving. His fascinating account sheds light on how the mind hones its most original thoughts and products, and provides a field guide for how we can tap into our own creativity.

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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Weber (psychology, Oklahoma State Univ.) examines a wide range of inventions to determine whether hidden principles guided their creation. He develops a taxonomy for classifying inventions and ties it to recurrent heuristics to establish a common thread among many of our more successful inventions. It is difficult to evaluate how well Weber's ideas would work as predictors of future developments, but as explanations of past events, his arguments have a sense of logic and insight. Even if his hindsight is better than his foresight, this is an interesting and entertaining work.
- Hilary D. Burton, Lawrence Livermore National Lab, Livermore, Cal.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

"This book opens numerous Pandora's boxes of ideas for exhibitions and programs. It is a terrific addition to the library." --The Informal Science Review

"An interesting and entertaining work."--Library Journal

"Instead of studying the workings of the individual mind, Weber analyzes the mental principles involved in solving problems in the physical world, whether it's jerry-rigging a curtain rod or designing a computer. He's enthralled by the 'hidden intelligence' reflected in all human inventions and wants other people to appreciate this intelligence, too....Weber addresses himself to hardware store habitues, to Sears catalogue devotees, to the person who goes gaga over gadgets."--Publishers Weekly

"Inventive thinking arguably is the hallmark of the human organism. In this lovely volume, Robert Weber takes us inside invention to reveal logic and systematicity alongside inspiration." OR "Robert Weber's fascinating volume demonstrates that invention is not only an art but a craft. It has a logic that one can survey and set forth--with ample room for inspiration too." OR "We live in an invented world--shoes, streets, satellites, and all the rest. Robert Weber takes us on a compelling journey through the world of the mind behind this world of invented things, revealing the hidden logic of human ingenuity."--David Perkins, Harvard University

"Weber's excellent book breaks new ground in the psychological study of creativity. Noteworthy are the brilliant treatment of children's innovation and the process by which the Wright brothers came to invent the airplane. The connection of psychological process to patentable products is at once a contribution to theory and practice."--Michael Posner, University of Oregon

"The major advantage of this book is its use of language. Weber examines discoveries from the layman's point of view, which makes for easy reading. The discussion is also relatively free of technical jargon and complicated discussions of how devices work....Weber's text is both accessible to technophobes and excellent for anyone interested in creative and critical thinking." --Educational Leadership

"Grippingly written book....Weber...offers example inventions to make his arguments; this analysis is at times compelling, and because of its specificity, is likely amenable to future experimental testing....Weber demystifies the subject, giving researchers a way to conceptualize and to investigate cognitive mechanisms of creativity, but he does not remove the creativity itself because the research approach retains a role for subjective judgment in recognizing creativity." --Psychological Science

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 296 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (February 4, 1993)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 019506402X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195064025
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,540,945 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Practical and Delightful, January 22, 2006
By 
Bill Bazik (Fairview Park, OH) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Forks, Phonographs, and Hot Air Balloons: A Field Guide to Inventive Thinking (Hardcover)
In most fields of endeavor, the people who understand how their tools work have an advantage over those who do not. The inventor's mind is obviously his or her most important tool and also the least understood tool. This author has spent years studying and analyzing inventing thinking. The author, Robert J. Weber, is Professor of Psychology at Oklahoma State University, but please note this book is free from the psychobabble some popular magazine articles use when claiming to analyze the invention process.

He points out that while designing, engineering, and science also solve problems it is often the inventor who finds "the one good idea." He presents the classic example of the Wright brothers. By hands-on experimenting these two bicycle shop owners succeeded where Samuel Langley failed. Langley had vast resources at his disposal, but he fixed upon automatic control and a powerful motor as the solution. The Wright brothers believed in manual control (bicycles work, they are not stabilized automatically), wind tunnel testing to optimize wing and propeller shapes, and they built their own motor to fit their needs. In the author's words: "Langley represents big science at its worst." "The Wrights represent small science at its best."

In analyzing Leonardo da Vinci's helicopter design the author notes how far ahead of its time it was. 400 years! He lacked a motor and some modern light weight materials.

In contrast, looking at Edison's phonograph (l878) Weber notes that while it is often cited as totally unanticipated, it can be also be argued it could have been invented 20 years earlier. He gives a sketch of a similar device--Leo Scott's phonautograph of l857 which used a smoked drum to record sound waves.

An interesting sidelight is the Montgolfier brothers who, in l783, achieved the first human flight by means of a hot air balloon. They "thought that burning straw would produce hydrogen."

Not all of his examples are of famous inventors. An eight-grade Weekly Reader contest winner, James R. Wollin, produced a means for getting all the peanut butter out of the jar. He added a second lid to the bottom of the jar!

He points out that Albert Einstein, Max Planck, and Jacob Rabinow (Post Office machine readers) all have commented that the creative process, at least in the early stages, is not a logical process.

Throughout the book the author cites basic concepts that he has run across in analyzing inventions. For example, "parallelism." A one-tooth saw would be ridiculous. "Spatial transformation." Rotate an arch to generate a dome or repeat it to generate a corridor.

Don't think of this book as 'old stuff.' He also takes us up to the present day with discussions of genetic engineering and "smart materials." (Materials that change properties in changing environments.)

After reading this book you may never again look at a fork, safety pin, or knife as simple devices. Their evolution is fascinating and the concepts and principles of their evolution can be applied today and tomorrow.

The book is not only useful to the individual, but it should be read by those in research labs and industry. Too often, today, departments work in isolation and fail to share information. The highly successful Walkman resulted from the habit of Sony's retired chairman "wandering" from lab to lab. One lab had developed light headphones which the other labs were not aware of. These headphones were used to replace the proposed speakers and product history was made.

Besides "wandering," the author advocates "sconcing" as practiced at the Cambridge University in England. It brings people of different disciplines together. One result, at Cambridge, was the development of tissue scanning by ultrasound.

All in all, it is a practical and delightful "field guide to inventing thinking." While it has a 1992 copyright, this reviewer suspects it will be around for a long time.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
novice invention, bonded join, inverse heuristic, expert invention, notched needle, invention path, procedural inventions, plain hanger, joined tool, hanger system, invention family, hidden intelligence, invention heuristics, olive fork, existing invention, water screw, tab handle, invention families, eating fork, snap lead, variance control, given invention, describing inventions, precision grip, rounded blade
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Common Invention Themes, The Heuristics of Invention, Multiple-Invention Heuristics, The Art of Containment, The Hidden Intelligence of Invention, Swiss Army Knife, Applying Heuristics, Discovering Heuristics, Procedure's Way, The Interface's Form, Single-Invention Heuristics, Transgenic Mouse, Transgenic Myth, Understanding the Created World, Post-it Note, Transformational Heuristics, Material World, Weekly Reader, Problem-Based Diary, Stone Age, Middle East, Engine of Variation, Katie Harding, New-Purpose Heuristic
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Surprise Me!
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