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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsWhat invention had the greatest impact on humanity and why?
I'm sure there are a lot of answers but IMO, the plow is the answer.
Early human agriculture was labor intensive where people would use their hands and fingers to plant seeds. When someone began dragging a stick creating a furrow planting required less people. The stick was replace but a bigger stick free more people from farming. Eventually, the design of the plow was discovered and when people used animals to pull the plow it allowed one or two people to do the work of many.
The plow gave people more time to do things like weaving, pottery, baking, etc.. With more free time, people began studying the stars, developing math not only to determine how much they had but how it could be used for building. In short, the plow allowed the beginnings of astronomy, math, science, building, etc., which furthered the growth of human society. It is from the humble beginnings of the plow we owe to everything we use today.

AllaN01Bear
(25,598 posts)AllaN01Bear
(25,598 posts)Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu once said 'give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach him how to fish and you feed him for a lifetime'. Over the centuries, many have hailed this proverb and we see its message mirrored in the humanitarian aid sector, in an attempt to ensure long-lasting impact on communities.
Midnight Writer
(24,177 posts)Irish_Dem
(70,871 posts)The Wizard
(13,196 posts)led to the assembly line and fostered the industrial revolution.
Henry203
(600 posts)sinkingfeeling
(55,511 posts)malthaussen
(18,117 posts)An invention would be something humans created from their own intelligence and effort.
-- Mal
It allowed ancient humans to think during the night and start developing their brains instead of just trying to stay alive.
k_buddy762
(638 posts)but only because someone else posted "language"
Clothing. It allowed is to live in and travel to more places and protect against injury. It allowed us to keep more calories and spend less time staying warm or cool so we could pursue other inventions. In other words, we could regulate our body heat better and be less at the mercy of nature.
justaprogressive
(4,068 posts)The Spread of Steam Power
Steam engines found many uses in a variety of industries, most notably mining and transportation, but its popularization shaped nearly every aspect of the industrial society, including where people could live, labor, and travel; how goods were produced, marketed, and sold; and what technological innovations followed.
kacekwl
(8,348 posts)I'm sure you can figure out why.
lastlib
(26,108 posts)Allowing for more efficient verbal communication. Without it, we're still trying to communicate complex ideas with pictures.
Earl_from_PA
(265 posts)I don't think it can be just one.
The plow certainly. The wheel. The sail. The atlatl. Writing. Brewing. There have been many with huge impact.
Norrrm
(1,911 posts)My suggestions are steam engine, printing press, communications, computer.
One failure might be more advanced weapons of killing.
Thought to be so horrendous in more efficient mass killing that it might discourage war.
It turns out that mankind doesn't really mind more horrendous mass killings.
Mosby
(18,625 posts)All the other stuff is obvious, plow, wheel, fire, all would have been discovered at some point in early human history. The transistor was a real development.
Also the microscope and telescope.
All three changed the world.
nuxvomica
(13,373 posts)Not so much an invention as a concept that dogs taught humans when they first domesticated us.
Norrrm
(1,911 posts)1. Some ancient Egyptian looking at a cat... 7500 BC
2. Some ancient cat looking at an Egyptian... 7500 BC
Which one picks up the other one's poop?
Intractable
(1,071 posts)
Response to LogDog75 (Original post)
wyn borkins This message was self-deleted by its author.
malthaussen
(18,117 posts)malthaussen
(18,117 posts)Prior to the invention of the rigid horse collar, your garden-variety horse could do about four times the work of a human. But since they ate about five times the food, they were not economical. Hence, slavery flourished just about everywhere. After the rigid horse collar was invented, the beast could do ten times the work of a human, while still eating only five times as much. This is clearly much better productivity, and universal slavery began to decline at this point except in specific fields where the horse was of no use in production.
A great impact, but I don't know that I'd call it the "largest."
-- Mal