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Friday, September 19, 2014

Scots’ inventions are fuel for independence debate

By Jill Lawless, AP, Sep 17, 2014

EDINBURGH, Scotland (AP)—What has Scotland ever done for us? Plenty, it turns out.

The land that gave the world haggis and tartan has produced so much more, from golf and television to Dolly the Sheep and “Grand Theft Auto.”

If Scotland splits from Britain after a referendum this week, it can stake a claim to inventions that transformed modern life, from surgical anesthetic and penicillin to TV, the telephone and even the flush toilet.

No wonder pro-independence First Minister Alex Salmond has approvingly quoted the title of a book by American historian Arthur Herman: “How the Scots Invented the Modern World.”

The list of achievements is impressive for a country that today has a population of just over 5 million.

There are medical advances such as chloroform anesthetic—pioneered by 19th-century Scottish doctor James Young Simpson—the hypodermic needles created by physician Alexander Wood, and penicillin, discovered by another Scot, Alexander Fleming, while he was working at a London hospital.

Industrial inventions include the steam engine—an age-old idea developed by Scotsman James Watt into an efficient machine that helped spark the Industrial Revolution.

The telephone, patented by Alexander Graham Bell, and John Logie Baird’s television transformed communications. Scots can also lay claim to the copy machine. An early version was invented by Watt, the steam-engine pioneer, and used by customers including Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson.

A 19th-century Scottish bookseller, James Chalmers, has a strong claim to being the inventor of adhesive postage stamps. And it was a Scottish watchmaker, Alexander Cumming, who patented the first flushing toilet.

Scots can also lay claim to the bicycle—or at least the pedals, added by blacksmith Kirkpatrick Macmillan in the 1830s—and even the road to ride it on. The common surfacing material Tarmac, short for tarmacadam, was developed by a Scot.

The inventions are evidence of a rich intellectual and scientific culture spawned by the 18th-century “Scottish Enlightenment,” which produced the formative capitalist ideas of Adam Smith. (Savings banks, overdrafts and cash-dispensing machines—also Scottish innovations).

England—Scotland’s bigger neighbor and mostly friendly rival—can also claim a rich history of invention that includes the seed drill, the sewing machine, the typewriter, pencils, the sports soccer and cricket and even, arguably, the World Wide Web.

Inevitably, Scottish ingenuity has been seized on by both sides in the independence debate.

Salmond likes to remind people that Scotland is “the land of Adam Smith,” even as he hammers London’s politicians and its financial district as a drain on Scottish coffers.

He argues that Scotland’s entrepreneurial spirit and creativity will stand it in good stead when it becomes independent.

Castrillo points out that many of Scotland’s great innovations came after it united with England in 1707, opening up opportunities for Scottish scientists and manufacturers.

Whatever happens in Thursday’s referendum, the flow of ideas and inventions is unlikely to stop.

“Scotland is punching above its weight—no one is denying that,” said Castrillo.

1 Comments:

Dennis Edward said...

Famous Missionary David Livingstone was Scottish, as was Missionary to Nigeria Mary Slessor. On the dark side James Hutton, the father of the uniformitarianism interpretation of the rock levels, and his disciple Charles Lyell were mainly responsible for the acceptance of the Natural Theory of Geology which ruled out catastrophism and the Biblical Flood. Scottish Rev. Thomas Chalmers gave us the Gap-Theory trying to reconcile "millions of years" to the Bible. Scotland's Missionary James Chalmers was killed by cannibals in New Guinea. A Scottish young woman named Margaret MacDonald is often mentioned as having received the idea of the pre-tribulation rapture which was propagated by John Nelson Darby of the Plymouth Brethren and later to C.I. Scofield who included it in his Bible footnotes widely used by the Moody Bible Institute. Infamous Albert Pike of the Masonic Lodges gave us the Scottish Rite level of Masonry which may some how be linked to ancient Scottish Masonic knowledge. As we can see, Scotland was at one point in the late 1700s and early 1800s a center for great intellectual activity on both sides of the fence. Bill Cooper who researched the ancient histories of Great Britain has shown evidence that indicates the Scots are descendant from Shem like the Jews, while the English, Welsh, Irish & Denmarkians are descendant from Japheth. The fact that the Scots have often been head and shoulder above others in their intellectual abilities could be gene related. Interesting!

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