Does invention come from deprivation or plenty?
My post on theĀ history of the bicycleĀ spurred aĀ question on Twitter: āIs invention more common in periods of plenty when idleness inspires curiosity and tinkering, or is human resourcefulness during periods of deprivation a more productive source of creativity?ā
I havenāt thoroughly researched this, but my immediate reaction is that invention correlates with wealth (āplentyā), not with deprivation. Some brief thoughts on why:
First, note the simple correlation throughout history. The last couple centuries have been the wealthiestĀ andĀ the most inventive. The tens of thousands of years of deprivation in pre-state societies spurred very little invention during that time. (If someone objects that pre-state tribes had a ācomfortableā life and didnātĀ thinkĀ of themselves as deprived, well, thatās part of the point! They had no idea what was possible, and so they thought of their deprivation as normalāindeed, itĀ wasĀ normal for them.)
Second, look at the causation. Research & development requires surplus. If youāre struggling just to survive, you donāt have the time, energy and resources to invent, even if you see that it would really help you. Deprivation leads to short-term thinking, a scramble for crumbs; R&D requires the long-term view that is possible in times of plenty.
Further, itās not that case that invention is always (or even often?) a direct response to a strongly felt need. Many inventions (including the bicycle) were initially novelties. Glass was used for decoration before any utilitarian purpose. Many (most? all?) scientific advances were made out of curiosity before they were obviously useful.
More generally, itās impossible to predict which discoveries or inventions are going to be important, at the time they are made, or to see all of the most important applications that will come. When NewcomenĀ invented the steam engine, I donāt think he had any idea that over a century later a descendant of his machine would power railroads and steamboats. Edison invented the phonograph but didnāt predict the recorded music industry. Rockefeller established the oil industry to produce kerosene, then decades later pivoted to gasoline for automobiles. And when DARPA wrote the first grant to invent the Internet, they had no idea how much bandwidth would one day be consumed by cat pictures. So even if peopleĀ wereĀ motivated purely by utility, or wanted to be, we wouldnāt know which directions to pursue. We make progress only through a wandering, unpredictable process of exploration.
To be sure, there are some inventions that came directly in response to a strong need, and were obviously a big deal from the start. TheĀ cotton gin. Bakelite (the first plastic). The transistor. TheĀ Haber-Bosch process. ItĀ doesĀ work that way sometimes. But not always. And note that all of those inventions came from plenty: Whitney was an idle guest of a wealthy plantation owner when he invented the cotton gin, Baekeland invented his plastic after becoming independently wealthy from selling photographic technology to Kodak, researchers at Bell Labs developed the transistor thanks to a large R&D budget owing to AT&Tās telephone monopoly, and Haber-Bosch depended both on Fritz Haberās university funding and BASFās enormous investment in industrializing his process.
What about war? Doesnāt that incentivize innovation? WW2 gave us radar and nuclear technology. But wars have been fought for millennia. They didnāt start giving us inventions until we had modern science and R&D labs. War gets people to work a lot harder, both on the front and back home. But it also changes priorities, and itās not clear to me whether it gets us more innovation or just different innovation. Yes, radar was invented for WW2, but also, the efforts to create the transistor were put on hold for five years. If we hadnāt had the war, would we have gotten the transistor five years earlier? What would that have meant for the economy and the world?
So thatās what surplus gets you on the supply side. But it also helps on the demand side. Until the rise of the middle class, there was little to no market for new inventions. Master craftsmen focused on making luxury products for the elite, rather than affordable staples for the mass marketāsilk vs. wool. Those with mechanical skill made clockwork toys for the aristocracy for centuries before we got the spinning jenny or the cotton gin.
Bottom line, without having specifically researched this question, all the evidence Iāve seen so far points to āplentyā as necessary for invention, and ādeprivationā as neither necessary nor sufficient.
Original post: https://rootsofprogress.org/does-invention-come-from-deprivation-or-plenty