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	<title>Caledon Citizen</title>
	<link>https://caledoncitizen.com</link>
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	<pubDate>Mon Jun 1 11:50:34 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>The mother of invention</title>
			<link>https://caledoncitizen.com/?p=36554</link>
			<pubDate>Mon Jun 1 11:50:34 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://caledoncitizen.com/?p=36554</guid>
			<content-encoded><![CDATA[<!-- wp:paragraph -->
<p>If “necessity is the mother of invention,” then maybe innovation is the child of invention.</p>
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<p>Or something like that.</p>
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<p>It has long been considered that most, if not all, inventions have been thought of, created, and produced, based on a need for that product or tool.</p>
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<p>Somewhere, at some time, someone realized if they had a tool or device to make a job easier, or an implement that they knew someone else would buy and use, then they could create that tool to make life easier.</p>
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<p>Although many modern inventions have a tendency to stray from “need” to “would like to have” for no other particular reason.</p>
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<p>Movies weren't really created for a need. They were created for entertainment. Someone figured out if you took a series of photographs and flashed them at 24 frames-per-second, it would give the illusion of movement and live action. Pretty smart.</p>
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<p>Video games are another example of something you may want, but don't need. No one really needs a video game and playing Minecraft won't make your life any easier. It was the innovative process derived from the invention electronics that makes it possible for you to sink a battleship with a cruise missile or pilot a 747 on your computer from the comfort of your easy chair.</p>
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<p>That's pretty clever – and a lot of people have made a lot of money designing games for no other reason than someone will buy them for their entertainment value.</p>
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<p>Necessity has of course, spawned most of the great inventions in society.</p>
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<p>“If only there was a way...” must have been a thought in the minds of a lot of people over the eons.</p>
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<p>Someone figured out you catch more fish with a net than you do dangling a single worm from a hook.</p>
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<p>Someone figured out that attaching a sail to a boat will propel you through the water a lot easier than hanging over the side with a paddle.</p>
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<p>And someone realized that if you took tiny little kernels of wheat, ground them down, added water, and baked, you could make bread and feed your family.</p>
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<p>The curious thing is not all societies figured out all the answers on their own – except for maybe one.</p>
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<p>There are societies that had advanced writing systems and mathematics, yet never figured out the wheel.</p>
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<p>In some places, the people came up with some very good solutions to raise crops and feed their people, and yet the concept of metals was non-existent.</p>
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<p>There is one concept that seems to be almost universal and even the most primitive societies managed to figure it out: the bow and arrow.</p>
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<p>From North America to Europe, Africa, Asia, South America, and even isolated island communities, they all managed to figure it out.&nbsp;</p>
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<p>Many inventions have been shared between different societies. If one group came up with a new idea, sooner or later a visitor from a nearby region would see it and take the idea home with them.</p>
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<p>And yet the bow and arrow was created in places where there was no shared information.</p>
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<p>The weapon is incredibly complicated when you think about it.</p>
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<p>First someone has to come up with the idea of propelling a pointed shaft at a target. An arrow head must be designed to slice through whatever you are shooting at.</p>
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<p>A bow must be designed to have the right amount of curve, flexibility, and spring, to shoot the arrow with force.</p>
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<p>And someone had to put enough thought into the project to realize that attaching a stabilizer to the rear of the shaft, in the form of feathers or something similar, will help guide the arrow through the air in a straight line.</p>
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<p>I've done quite a bit of research trying to find out how a society that never invented the wheel, or never came up with the concept of a written language or mathematics, still managed to figure out the aerodynamics needed to send an arrow through the air in a stable fashion – and did it independently with no outside influence.</p>
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<p>There seems to be no answer to that.</p>
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<p>I guess if you really need something, someone will figure it out.</p>
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			<excerpt-encoded><![CDATA[]]></excerpt-encoded>
			<wp-post_id>36554</wp-post_id>
			<wp-post_date>2022-03-24 11:19:31</wp-post_date>
			<wp-post_date_gmt>2022-03-24 15:19:31</wp-post_date_gmt>
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