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![]() INVENTIONS Here are the answers, to the best of my knowledge: PHOTOGRAPHY TRUE: Most of the pioneering work in photography happened in France, and almost no matter which process you consider to be the first true photograph, it is likely to be French. MOTION PICTURES TRUE: The anteriority (and veracity) of the claim by the French Louis Lumière is contested today - but the other contenders are all French anyway. Many spectacular developments throughout motion picture history were actually American applications of French inventions. Not quite so many as the French claim, but many. . . AVIATION The French claim to the invention of aviation goes back to the frères Mongolfier, who pioneered balloon flight. Depending on how you choose to define aviation, the claim may have some legitimacy. The French have always been important aviation pioneers, yet few specific breakthrough inventions can be attributed directly to them. Powered flight is generally attributed to the Wright Bros, though New Zealanders claim it for their own Richard Pearse. The French claim the invention of the airplane as well, however the assertion that any of Clement Ader's pre-Wright devices actually flew has been largely discredited. THE AUTOMOBILE MAYBE: There were so many inventions, of so many different types over so many years it is difficult to determine which is rightfully the precursor of today's BMW 850. Benz is often cited, but the French Cugnot a century earlier had a steam-driven machine that looks a lot like a car to me. THE BICYCLE FALSE: The French claim that their "Celerifere" from 1791 was the first bicycle - an assertion particularly difficult to entertain, when one sees Leonardo's 15th century drawings clearly depicting modem-looking bicycles. Some Egyptologists even claim there may have been bicycles in ancient Egypt - depictions are thought to be seen in some carvings. SOUND RECORDING TRUE : Charles Cros deposited a sealed letter to the French Académie des Sciences in advance of Edison's own patent, and the letter was presented in public session. Though he never built a machine, the anteriority of the invention appears without serious contention today. Despite the remarkable similarity of principles, it also appears highly unlikely that Edison had any knowledge of Charles Cros or of his invention prior to patenting and successfully building his own Phonograph. If Cros is the inventor, the "Henry Ford" of the early audio industry is unquestionably Emile Berliner, who created the first disc, the "Grammophone" (Cros and Edison were using cylinders). Berliner created the Grammophon Company in Germany (today Deutsche Grammophon). Not content with this trifling experience, he moved to the US where he founded the immensely successful Victor Talking Machine company, much later to merge with RCA to form the illustrious moniker: RCA Victor. RADIOACTIVITY (discovery of) FALSE: The word "radioactivité" comes from Marie Curie, whose pioneering work is of paramount importance, but of course it is subsequent to the breakthrough discovery of X- Rays, by the German Roentgen in 1895. IMMUNOLOGY FALSE: Jenner (English) developed the smallpox vaccine a full century before Pasteur's breakthrough work. And the ensuing century was also rife with invention and discovery in the field, much of it occurring in Germany. Since Pasteur, the French have been leaders though in immunology research, and they first isolated the AIDS virus and its antibodies in the 1980's. The Americans attempted disingenuously to usurp this research, but the French anteriority was established. This did not prevent the French nationalized blood bank from knowingly distributing AIDS tainted blood, administered to hundreds of hemophiliacs and accident victims over a two-year period, in order to avoid yielding market share to safe products and methods available from the US. BONUS QUESTION: What nationality can legitimately claim Radio broadcasting, the Internal Combustion Engine, and the Telephone? (ITALY) |
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Greg Farris wrote:
AVIATION The French claim to the invention of aviation goes back to the frères Mongolfier, who pioneered balloon flight. Depending on how you choose to define aviation, the claim may have some legitimacy. The French have always been important aviation pioneers, yet few specific breakthrough inventions can be attributed directly to them. Powered flight is generally attributed to the Wright Bros, though New Zealanders claim it for their own Richard Pearse. The French claim the invention of the airplane as well, however the assertion that any of Clement Ader's pre-Wright devices actually flew has been largely discredited. Here's the Wikipedia article on the subject: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_flying_machine |
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![]() "Greg Farris" wrote in message ... BONUS QUESTION: What nationality can legitimately claim Radio broadcasting, the Internal Combustion Engine, and the Telephone? (ITALY) Bell was a Scot. |
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Greg Farris wrote:
In article , says... Here's the Wikipedia article on the subject: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_flying_machine I guess the fact that the word "Montgolfier" is not mentioned in the otherwise well-prepared article pretty much sends them back to the books to try again . . . Seems that only heavier-than-air flight (powered and unpowered) makes their list. If gliders qualify, then manned flight first appears to have occurred over a thousand years ago - either on the Iberian Peninsula or in China, depending on ones confidence level requirements. |
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Greg Farris wrote:
BONUS QUESTION: What nationality can legitimately claim Radio broadcasting, the Internal Combustion Engine, and the Telephone? (ITALY) These inventions were in development by many people, and some may have built on ideas from others. The light bulb is a good example. Edison is credited by many, but in looking at the issue in more detail, you will find that he bought a patent from a Canadian inventor, who had the essential idea, and was perhaps 90 percent of the way to a practical product. Edison then perfected the filament and gas in the container. So who was the inventor? The one with the original idea, or the one who finally made a saleable product? What Edison excelled at, was making practical use of his inventions, and in marketing. The radio is another example. A number of people were working on various designs, and Nicola Tesla is the one who holds the first patent for a tuneable circuit, which he used to wirelessly transmit information from one place to another in expositions. Tesla was not good at marketing his inventions, unlike Edison, or Marconi, so even though he has claim to the technology, he really didn't do anything practical with it. Since the question about radio was related to "broadcasting", the credit generally goes to Reginald Fessenden, a Canadian, who did much of his experimental work near Kitty Hawk. (Had to get an oblique reference to aviation in my post) While Marconi believed code was transmitted through ether, and marketed point-to-point communication, Fessenden understood radio waves, and developed the first transmitter for voice. He made the first "broadcast", using his designs, and intended for more than one receiver, in 1906. http://www.radiocom.net/Fessenden/ |
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Greg Farris writes:
RADIOACTIVITY (discovery of) FALSE: The word "radioactivité" comes from Marie Curie, whose pioneering work is of paramount importance, but of course it is subsequent to the breakthrough discovery of X- Rays, by the German Roentgen in 1895. This is a misconception. Radioactivity is nuclear decay. The production of x-rays has nothing to do with radioactive decay. Roentgen discovered the properties of a specific range of frequencies of electromagnetic radiation, but this is completely unrelated to the phenomenon of nuclear decay, which produces radioactivity (emission of subatomic particles and certain frequencies of electromagnetic radiation associated with the spontaneous reconfiguration or mutation of atomic nuclei). -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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Well, technically ballooning is not aviation, since the word aviation
comes from the Latin avis which means bird. -- Gene Seibel Gene & Sue's Aeroplanes - http://pad39a.com/gene/planes.html Because we fly, we envy no one. Greg Farris wrote: In article , says... Greg Farris wrote: AVIATION The French claim to the invention of aviation goes back to the frères Mongolfier, who pioneered balloon flight. Depending on how you choose to define aviation, the claim may have some legitimacy. The French have always been important aviation pioneers, yet few specific breakthrough inventions can be attributed directly to them. Powered flight is generally attributed to the Wright Bros, though New Zealanders claim it for their own Richard Pearse. The French claim the invention of the airplane as well, however the assertion that any of Clement Ader's pre-Wright devices actually flew has been largely discredited. Here's the Wikipedia article on the subject: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_flying_machine I guess the fact that the word "Montgolfier" is not mentioned in the otherwise well-prepared article pretty much sends them back to the books to try again . . . |
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"Gene Seibel" wrote:
Well, technically ballooning is not aviation, since the word aviation comes from the Latin avis which means bird. How many planes flap their wings to take off and drop poop on newly washed cars? :-) |
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