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Connections Tapa blanda – Ilustrado, 3 Julio 2007
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How did the waterwheel evolve into the computer?
How did the arrival of the cannon lead eventually to the development of movies?
In this highly acclaimed and bestselling book, James Burke brilliantly examines the ideas, inventions, and coincidences that have culminated in the major technological advances of today. With dazzling insight, he untangles the pattern of interconnecting events: the accidents of time, circumstance, and place that gave rise to the major inventions of the world.
Says Burke, "My purpose is to acquaint the reader with some of the forces that have caused change in the past, looking in particular at eight innovations -- the computer, the production line, telecommunications, the airplane, the atomic bomb, plastics, the guided rocket, and television -- which may be most influential in structuring our own futures....Each one of these is part of a family of similar devices, and is the result of a sequence of closely connected events extending from the ancient world until the present day. Each has enormous potential for humankind's benefit -- or destruction."
Based on a popular TV documentary series, Connections is a fascinating scientific detective story of the inventions that changed history -- and the surprising links that connect them.
- Edad de lecturaA partir de 1 año
- Número de páginas320 páginas
- IdiomaInglés
- Dimensiones7.25 x 0.8 x 10 pulgadas
- EditorialSimon & Schuster
- Fecha de publicación3 Julio 2007
- ISBN-100743299558
- ISBN-13978-0743299558
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Opiniones editoriales
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-- The Washington Post
"Lively and important."
-- Library Journal
Biografía del autor
Detalles del producto
- Editorial : Simon & Schuster
- Fecha de publicación : 3 Julio 2007
- Edición : Ilustrado.
- Idioma : Inglés
- Número de páginas : 320 páginas
- ISBN-10 : 0743299558
- ISBN-13 : 978-0743299558
- Edad de lectura : A partir de 1 año
- Dimensiones : 7.25 x 0.8 x 10 pulgadas
- Clasificación en los más vendidos de Amazon: nº397,919 en Libros (Ver el Top 100 en Libros)
- nº38 en Patentes e Inventos de Ingeniería
- nº113 en Historia de la Tecnología
- nº156 en Historia de Ingenería y Tecnología
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Calificado en Estados Unidos el 18 de marzo de 2014A Fun and Quirky Trip from Then to Now
History has the tendency of being seen as static and frozen when we view it from a a later time. What happened is what happened, and nothing else could have happened because, again, at that point, it is set in stone. Once upon a time, however, history could have gone any number of ways, and much of the time, it’s the act of change and transition that help drive history through various eras.
James Burke is one of my favorite historical authors, and I am a big fan of his ideas behind “Connected thought and events”, which makes the case that history is not a series of isolated events, but that events and discoveries coming from previous generations (an even eras) can give rise to new ideas and modes of thinking. In other words, change doesn’t happen in a vacuum, or in the mind of a single solitary genius. Instead it’s the actions and follow-on achievements by a variety of people throughout history that make certain changes in our world possible (from the weaving of silk to the personal computer, or the stirrup to the atomic bomb).
“Connections" is the companion book to the classic BBC series first filmed in the late 70s, with additional series being created up into the 1990s. If you haven’t already seen the Connections series of programs, please do, they are highly entertaining and engaging. The original print edition of the book had been out of print for some time, but I was overjoyed to discover that there is a paperback version as well as a Kindle edition of this book. The kindle version is the one I am basing the review on.
The subtitle of the book and series is "an Alternative View of Change”. rather than serendipitous forces coming together and “eureka” moments of discovery happening, Burke makes the case that, just as today, invention happens often as a market force determines the benefit and necessity of that invention, with adoption and use stemming from the both the practical and cultural needs of the community. from there, refinements and other markets often determine how ideas from one area can impact development of other areas. Disparate examples like finance, accounting, cartography, metallurgy, mechanics, water power and automation are not separate disciplines, but rely heavily on each other and the inter-connectedness of these disciplines over time.
The book starts with an explanation of the Northeastern Blackout of 1965, as a away to draw attention to the fact that we live in a remarkably interdependent world today. We are not only the beneficiaries of technologies gifts, but in many ways, we are also at the mercy of them. Technology is wonderful, until it breaks down. At that point, many of the systems that we rely heavily on, when they stop working, can make our lives not just sub-optimal, but dangerous.
Connections uses examples stretching all the way back to Roman Times and the ensuing “Dark Ages”. Burke contends that they were never “really dark”, and makes the case of communication being enabled through Bishop to Bishop Post to show that many of the institutions defined in Roman times continued on unabated. Life did became much more local when the over-seeing and overarching power of a huge government state had ended. The pace of change and the needs of change were not so paramount on this local scale, and thus, many of the engineering marvels of the Roman Empire were not so much “lost” (aqueducts and large scale paved roads) but that they just weren’t needed on the scale that the Romans used them. Still, even in the localized world of the early Middle Ages, change happened, and changes from one area often led to changes in other areas.
Bottom Line:
This program changed the way I look at the world, and taught me to look at the causal movers as more than just single moments, or single people, but as a continuum that allows ideas to be connected to other ideas. Is Burke’s premise a certainty? No, but he make a very compelling case, and the connections from one era to another are certainly both credible and reasonable. There is a lot of detail thrown at the reader, and many o those details may seem tangential, but he always manages to come back and show how some arcane development in an isolated location, perhaps centuries ago, came to be a key component in out technologically advanced lives, and how it played a part in our current subordination to technology today. Regardless of the facts, figure and pictures (and there are indeed a lot of them), Connections is a wonderful ride. If you are as much of a fan of history as I am, then pretty much anything James Burke has written will prove to be worthwhile. Connections is his grand thesis, and it’s the concept that is most directly tied to him. This book shows very clearly why that is.
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Calificado en Estados Unidos el 23 de julio de 2020Many years ago, I watched and was completely fascinated by a PBS series - Connections (and later Connections 2 and Connections 3). The Connections set was going to be among the first purchases once I started buying DVD's for personal use although it was eventually years before I ever found a set for sale and it was restricted to educational institutions and quite pricey.
So when I saw the book, it was like a flashback and I knew I had to get a copy. And it is just as good as I remember. This 2007 edition has a new preface, updating a view that was originally started in 1978 and even updated in 1995. Remarkable how much some things have changed and how some have not.
Anyway, the book. There are only 10 chapters and they are independent of each other.
To give you an idea, I broke down the pattern of Chapter 7: The Long Chain. Starting with jet aircraft and their consequences on travel today.
Back to 16th and 17th century trade in the Baltic and the Dutch monopoly. Dutch trading vessels were built different from their warships, more focused on how much cargo could be stuffed on board and with a lower center of gravity, were far more stable during ocean voyages.
Side trip to Edward Lloyd who created 'insurance' for investors since many ships unfortunately disappeared - yes, the beginning of Lloyd's of London.
Anyway, back to the ships. Russia wanted a warm-water port and attempted to elbow their way into the Baltic Sea which caused a war. Surprise there. England had another source - the American colonies - at least until they declared independence.
English forested land was restricted for Naval use so glass and iron workers needed another fuel for their furnaces which was found in coal and coke.
Coal could provide a tar-like substance under certain circumstances when it was being turned into coke - replacement tar for shipping which changed over to copper lined hulls. So coal-tar was distilled into a multitude of substances - salts used in soaps and a vapor that burned bright and without any odor.
While working on the steam engine, James Watt and partner Matthew Murdock were told of the vapor which could be ignited - the first gas burning lamps. Gaslight spread across the country and changed society. Streets were safer. Factories could work longer hours which means production rose. Evenings were available, even for classes and so literacy spread.
Another coal tar waste was naphtha, which could clean cloth-dying machinery as well as dissolve rubber. Dissolved rubber could be applied to cloth making it waterproof. Making just about anything cloth based waterproof - tents, mattresses, gloves, hoses, printing rollers, and even raincoats.
Supply of rubber couldn't keep up with demand so authorities were encouraged to either grow rubber in the Kew Gardens or get seedlings from South America and create plantations in the Far East. But Kew Gardens was more interested in the cinchona tree in which the bark contained quinine - the only treatment for malaria.
More compounds were being discovered in the sludge-like tar - like coal tar or aniline dyes. Colors previously unavailable or unstable were now vibrant, didn't fade or change color in gaslight. BASF kept the stream of different colors flowing even as other German companies created aspirin, diagnostic tissue stain and other medical discoveries.
A food crisis caused by large increases in population. Grain from the Americas was undercutting the German Junkers rye growers. Rye was exported and the ground was too exhausted to grow wheat without fertilizer which had been coming from Chile whose deposits were nearly exhausted.
Which brings back the last of the coal-tar discoveries dealt with the so-called 'SOHO stink' or the stench coming off the Thames which was the dumping ground for everything. The ammonia was turned into a salt. BASF took the salts, some hydrogen and liquid nitrogen in a pressure vessel to obtain ammonia which mixed with air and passed through a platinum mesh and mixed again with soda, became the same vital fertilizer. Problem solved!
Not quite.
Calcium carbide and water gave off a gas known as acetylene, a competitive source of bright lighting. Unfortunately, electricity had become cheaper so all the calcium carbide was laying about when BASF (yes, them again) used to create an even more potent fertilizer.
Because of a lack of markets for their fertilizers, Germany had to have colonies which means a bigger Navy. That arms race contributed to war breaking out in 1914. Still with the fertilizer, it needed one more chemical step to become gun cotton which was an explosive.
Out of the acetylene debacle came one more development (besides fertilizer and war). Created as a protective coating for aircraft wings and discarded as 'not useful' until a variant was produced called polyvinyl chloride or PVC.
And that's just one chapter. So much information and so intertwined. And that was just the basic as I could make it leaving out names and lots more side trips.
A quote from Isaac Newton "If I have seen further than Others, it is by standing upon the shoulders of giants." Perhaps not all these inventions were the actions of giants and their names and discovery is only known by a select few but they laid groundwork and provided direction for those who came after. For every aspect of our lives, dozens of men and women advanced humanity's knowledge. So a tip of the proverbial cap and a thank you for their dedication and their innovations.
Note: This review is identical to that posted on GoodReads.com
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Calificado en Estados Unidos el 12 de mayo de 2014My uncle, who subsequently died in a plane crash, loaned me an audio version of this book (on cassette!) when I was a kid, so I bought the book out of fond memories as well as nostalgia value. It took me a bit longer to get through it than I imagined. For a book premised on how the thread of technological innovation, tugged and prodded by environmental influences, pulled civilization through its advancement, I anticipated a quicker read as I was likewise pulled along. Perhaps the various illustrations and captions slowed my progress through the fairly meaty text. As we know, technology has improved exponentially in the decades since the book was written, so unless an updated version is available, this book only tells about 2/3 of the story. All that having been said, I recommend this book to those interested in technology, engineering, history and/or culture, etc. The cool thing about the book is its holistic perspective on human progress. Going through it reminds me of the Tech tree in the Civilization games: one advancement leads to another, which leads to another, all of which are influenced by the local circumstances at each given point in time.
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Calificado en Estados Unidos el 23 de septiembre de 2024A very interesting history of major advances in human engineering and what precipitated and followed them.
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Calificado en Estados Unidos el 9 de febrero de 2025Another brilliant read!
Opiniones más destacadas de otros países
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Bulldog the Gunfighter (BTG)Calificado en Reino Unido el 21 de noviembre de 20145.0 de 5 estrellas this is a terrific read and worthwhile addition to your library
An updated edition of the book based on the highly successful BBC TV series. Although some aspects are now a little dated, the basic premise remains fascinating and offers genuine insight into world history. Connections is readable and accessible yet still offers a narrative that links technology and events across hundreds if not thousands of years of human history. Written by James Burke, who presented the original TV series on which it is based, and whose knowledge and enthusiasm for the subject is only matched by his insight into the growth in its importance to society. Whether a history or technology buff, this is a terrific read and worthwhile addition to your library.
LuciaCalificado en España el 2 de octubre de 20195.0 de 5 estrellas Ok
Llegó en perfecto estado, fue para un regalo.
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Kindle CustomerCalificado en Canadá el 14 de agosto de 20245.0 de 5 estrellas Must read if you liked the shows
Such a refreshing look at history, I wish I had in my education but only had through his tv shows. Brilliant stuff, can't recommend enough!
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S. HirschCalificado en Alemania el 20 de noviembre de 20145.0 de 5 estrellas Great Book
A great book with an unconventional view on the history of inventions and our culture in general - both entertaining and educating. Check out the video series too if you can still find it somewhere (possibly even on youtube)
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CaglarCalificado en Turquía el 17 de junio de 20242.0 de 5 estrellas Biraz eski bir basım
Kitabın ciltlemesi pek iyi değil. Dikkatli olunmazsa hızlıca cildinden ayrılacak gibi duruyor. Verdiğim para karşılığı çok daha kaliteli bir ciltleme beklemiştim.

