About This Book
The author traces humanity's persistent effort to escape subsistence drudgery, showing how curiosity and practical inquiry moved from alchemical speculation to chemistry and mechanical invention. Machines are presented as artificial extensions of human strength and skill that convert wonder into productive power, radically reshaping labor and production. The essays explain how systematic scientific knowledge and the deliberate harnessing of mechanical energy created the possibility of material plenty and a new standard of living. They emphasize the slow, cumulative nature of these transformations and consider their economic, social, and moral implications for how people organize work and expectations.
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