What invention do you think made the biggest impact on human civilization?

ummm, maybe gunpowder, or the maxim machine gun, the printing press or the light bulb (or some other original electric invention).
 
As I said in that other thread, birth control pills. Giving WOMEN the power to control conception is an enormous social change with far more day-to-day impact on our social structure than, well, pretty much anything. And it's a pretty entertaining little idea, too :D
 
The English philosopher, Francis Bacon, once said the three most important inventions in human history are the magnetic compass, gunpowder and paper. These are all invented by the Chinese. :)

Of course he lived in the past few centuries and thus didn't have the benefits of knowing the next few centuries.
 
Fire, agriculture, cities, paper, electricity, the wheel...

Take your pick.
 
In the last 50 years or so...

Nucleur technology/weapons and computers

Over the course of civilization

literacy and mathematics
 
Originally posted by Pillager
Fire, agriculture, cities, paper, electricity, the wheel...

Take your pick.

I'm not sure fire qualifies as an invention. Controling fire, on the other hand, does.
 
Learning how to create fire was surely an invention.
 
God invented fire. Technically it still fits as the thread title isn't human inventions.

Paper is a good one too.
 
Learning how to create fire is similar to learning how to create electricity, surely. It involved realising how one can control the creation of a natural product.
 
I can't say there is one KEY invention that made mankind what it is. But here are some favorites:

The printing press--the invention that made possible the mass disemmination (sp?) of information and knowledge. Before it existed, hand-written books were very expensive and thus only accessible to the elite. After its invention, literacy could increase and Mr. Everyman could contribute more and more to solving various problems man faced: he could give more knowledgeable input, or he could dedicate himself to the study of various sciences that become more and more collaborative with their complexity.

Agriculture--this made possible man's advance from a precarious position not always at the top of the food chain, to masters of the entire planet. Continued innovations in this field ensured more efficient food production that made cities and civilizations possible.

Use of fire--the first advance in chemistry! Man controlling natural phenomena, rather than being controlled by them all the time--this was the first step.

Rule of law--advanced man from an animal into a more responsible, sentient being with a sense of higher purpose. "Might makes right" still rears its ugly head from time to time when we forget this concept, but the concept would evolve into a sense of man's natural rights, and equality of all in a moral framework.

Space flight--our key to expansion beyond our crowded planet. I would say interstellar flight will be a more significant invention, but we haven't invented that yet....
 
Originally posted by ainwood
Except that for most of human history, invention has not been driven by capital. :)

...although I feel compelled to note that most of human invention has been driven, it has been driven either by war or by capital, and I prefer we try more of the latter than more of the former...

R.III
 
Flint chipping for tool making
and fire creation. (you can use
rod & bow or push stick if yer
a real bugger for punishment)
 
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