SELF-TAUGHT tinkerers once drove American innovation, and could do so again, Alec Foege argues. I just wish he had made a better case.
Benjamin Franklin was a well-known experimentalist; George Washington tinkered with crops and designed a novel plough; Thomas Jefferson invented the swivel chair. Foege finds similar promise in modern tinkerers like Dean Kamen, who built projectors for rock bands in high school, then invented a string of medical devices before turning to the elegant but overhyped Segway. He also points to Australian-born MIT-trained polymath Saul Griffith, who uses new materials to solve environmental problems, and biochemical engineer Jay Keasling, who devised a novel way to produce the anti-malarial compound artemisinin.
But often Foege veers off target. His chapters on mistakes wander from Thomas Edison’s business failures to the RAND corporation’s ill-fated attempts to use systems analysis to win the cold war.
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Most disconcertingly, he omits two groups that should be at the heart of any book on tinkering – the open-source software community, and the “maker” subculture riding technologies such as 3D printing and robotics. They are the tinkerers changing today’s world.
The Tinkerers
Basic Books