Discoveries and Inventions: A lecture by Abraham Lincoln delivered in 1860
Explore more books like this:
About This Book
A lecture that frames humanity as miners extracting progress from nature, arguing that discoveries and inventions distinguish humans from other animals and enable improvement of tools, clothing, and industry. The speaker traces technological advances through biblical and historical references—early clothing and textile arts, the discovery and use of iron, and the role of tools—in order to show how inventions expand material comfort and moral and intellectual capacities. He emphasizes gradual accumulation of improvements, links specific crafts and machinery to social development, and presents invention as essential to human destiny and civilization's ongoing transformation.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks
A Legacy of Fun
by Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln's First Inaugural Address
by Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln's Lost Speech, May 29, 1856 / A Souvenir of the Eleventh Annual Lincoln Dinner of the Republican Club of the City of New York, at the Waldorf, February 12, 1897
by Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address
by Abraham Lincoln
Lincoln Letters
by Abraham Lincoln
Lincoln's Gettysburg Address / Given November 19, 1863 on the battlefield near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, USA
by Abraham Lincoln
You May Also Like
6 picks
"'Tis Sixty Years Since" / Address of Charles Francis Adams; Founders' Day, January 16, 1913
by Charles Francis Adams
"... és a felelősségtől való rettegés"
by Émile Faguet
"A Most Unholy Trade," Being Letters on the Drama by Henry James
by Henry James
"About My Father's Business": Work Amidst the Sick, the Sad, and the Sorrowing
by Thomas Archer
"America for Americans!" / The Typical American, Thanksgiving Sermon
by John Philip Newman
"Bethink Yourselves!"
by graf Leo Tolstoy