Invention
In music, an invention is a short composition with two or three part counterpoint. See Invention (music)An
invention is an object, process, or technique which displays an element of
novelty. An invention may sometimes be based on earlier breakthroughs,
collaborations or
ideas, and the process of invention requires at least the awareness that an existing concept or method can be modified or transformed into a new invention. However, some inventions also represent a "quantum leap" in science or technology which extends the boundaries of human knowledge. Legal protection can sometimes be granted to an invention by way of a
patent.
Over time,
humanity has invented objects and methods for accomplishing tasks which fulfill some purpose in a new or different manner, usually with the objective of realising that purpose in a faster, more efficient, easier or cheaper way.
Although it is evident that people
do invent, the circumstances which facilitate or optimise the development of inventions is less clear. One school of thought, popularized in the phrase "
necessity is the mother of invention", argues that in essence, lack of resources leads to invention, while the opposing school of thought argues that it is only an excess of resources which has this result. However, the actual position may not be understood simply by reference to one or the other of these many perspectives.
Although a new or useful object or method may be developed to fulfill a specific purpose, the original
idea may never be fully realised as a working invention, perhaps because the concept is in some way unrealistic or impractical.
A "castle in the air" or a "pie in the sky" (or "castles in
Spain") may refer to a
creative idea which does not reach fruition due to practical considerations. The history of invention is full of such castles, as inventions are not necessarily invented in the order that is most useful; for example, the design of the
parachute was worked out before the invention of powered
flight. Other inventions simply solve problems for which there is no economic incentive to provide a solution.
On the other hand, any barriers to implementation may simply be an issue of
engineering or
technology which can be overcome in time with scientific advances. History is also replete with examples of ideas which have taken some time to reach physical reality, as demonstrated by various ideas originally attributed to
Leonardo da Vinci which are now expressed in everyday physical form.
Inventors may be inspired to invent through a desire to create something new or better, simple
altruism, or for competitive or commercial reasons. An invention may also result from a combination of these motivating factors. Although many inventors may have in mind the
commercialization of their product, very few will secure the funding and support often needed to develop and launch a product in the marketplace, and fewer still will experience lasting commercial success or the economic reward they may have expected. However, inventor associations and clubs and
business incubators can be used to provide the mentoring, commercial skills and economic resources which private inventors may often lack.
Entrepreneurship and an awareness of the demands of a changing marketplace are typical characteristics of successful inventors.
Most
great inventors developed countless prototypes, changing their designs innumerable times. Today much emphasis is placed on
research and development, prototyping and finding solutions.
Inventions are one of the chief examples of "
positive externalities" (an economist's name for a beneficial side-effect that falls on those outside a transaction or activity). One of the central concepts of economics is that externalities should be internalized: unless some of the benefits of this positive externality can be captured by the parties, the parties will be under-rewarded for their inventions, and systematic under-rewarding will lead to under-investment in activities that lead to inventions. One important economic effect of the
patent system is to capture those
positive externalities for the inventor (or the party that hired the inventor), so that the economy as a whole will invest a more-closely-optimum amount of resources in the process of invention.
Following the terminology of
political economist Joseph Schumpeter, an invention differs from an
innovation. While an invention is merely theoretical (even though the legal protection of a patent may have been sought), an innovation is an invention that has been put into practice. However, these conflicts with the theory of social anthropologists and other social sciences researchers. In social sciences, an innovation is anything new to a culture. The innovation does not need to have been adopted. The theory for adoption (or non-adoption) of an innovation is called
diffusion of innovations. This theory, first put forth by
Everett Rogers, considers the likelihood that an innovation will ever be adopted and the taxonomy of persons likely to adopt it or spur its adoption.
Gabriel Tarde also dealt with the adoption of innovations in his
Laws of Imitation.
*
Creativity*
Bayh-Dole Act*
ChindÅgu*
Cultural invention*
Diffusion of innovations*
EU Directive on the patentability of biotechnological inventions*
EU Directive on the patentability of computer-implemented inventions (proposed, then rejected)*
Discovery*
Edisonian approach*
Fritz Zwicky*
Inventive step and non-obviousness (
patentability requirements)
*
Inventor*
Inventor's Day*
List of inventions named after people*
List of inventors*
Kranzberg's laws of technology*
Lemelson-MIT Prize*
Mad scientist*
National Inventors Hall of Fame*
Patent*
Everett Rogers*
Gabriel Tarde*
Technology*
Timeline of invention, for a detailed list of inventions, listed by date of invention
*
TRIZ approach
*
Step-by-step guide to using Invention Promoters: Do you think you have a great idea for a new product or service? You are not alone (on the
UK Patent Office web site)
*
List of PCT (Patent Cooperation Treaty)
*[http://www.submityourarticle.com/articles/Dee-Reavis-1159/Invention-Submission-6751.php Will Riches Come From Your Invention Submission Notable Inventions] (on the
WIPO web site)