Born in 1890, my great-grandfather had great-uncles who fought in the Civil War. He saw the invention of the automobile, the airplane, two world wars, and saw the Apollo 11 moon landing a month before he died.

I was born in the 80s, I have been trying to take stock of how much life has changed since then. Cable television? Satellite television? Cell phones to smartphones? The internet? Life hasn’t seemed to have made much progress. When we get down to it life isn’t radically different now than it was in 80s. Just hoping there is more that I’m simply not noticing

  • HappySkullsplitter@lemmy.worldOP
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    4 days ago

    Not the definition I am referring to

    • introducing new ideas; original and creative in thinking.

    Conceptually, improving upon something isn’t entirely original

    It can be hard to grasp. We can’t imagine what life and the mindset of people were before a concept existed because we have always had it.

    Yes, we can imagine the difficulty of travel before the invention of aircraft

    But it’s hard for us to understand the profound difference to life and everyone’s worldview at the time

    People fantasized about human flight for what seemed like forever to them, so long that it became a fantasy that many believed would never be realized

    Then suddenly it was

    What have we experienced collectively since the 80s that is like that?

    • Bademantel@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      I disagree. Improving an existing concept and changing it to make it more practical or easier to produce for example is innovation.

      The examples you gave in the introduction are examples of that: The parts that make an automobile existed when it was invented and you could argue again that it wasn’t a completely novel idea but an improvement of the steam engine and horse-drawn vehicles.

      The airplane massively relied on improvements in engine and material design.

      Your assessment that innovations used to be completely original in their design and are not any more is a fallacy.

      • HappySkullsplitter@lemmy.worldOP
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        4 days ago

        I also disagree

        Your reply in of itself is a fallacy

        An airplane relying upon improvements engine and material design does not negate the very real revelation of human flight to the world

        Nor does your oversimplified and ultimately incorrect explanation steam engines and evolution of horse drawn vehicles

        Especially considering the first automobiles were steam powered

        It completely misses the point

        The horseless carriage itself was the innovation

        I apologize for not explaining the question more thoroughly

        I am talking about innovation in a fully realized concept

        I always thought that flying cars would be the next major leap in innovation, but it’s still in its fledgling stages