James Watt — "He says that he got the idea from a lobster's tail."
He says that he got the idea from a lobster's tail.
He says that he got the idea from a lobster's tail.
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"Nature can be conquered if we can but find her weak side."
"one of the most ingenious, simple pieces of mechanism I have contrived."
"About 6 or 8 years ago My Ingenious friend Mr John Robinson having [contrived] conceived that a fire engine might be made without a Lever—by Inverting the Cylinder & placing it above the mouth of the …"
"groped in the dark, misled by many an ignis fatuus, but nature has a weak side, if we can only find it out."
"When once the idea of the separate condensation was started, all these improvements followed as corollaries in quick succession, so that in the course of one or two days the invention was thus far com…"
Referring to his inspiration for the articulated water main
Date: Post-1800 (after his retirement)
GeneralFound in 1 providers: gemini
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The quote records an inventor's claim that a lobster's segmented, articulated tail sparked a mechanical idea. It captures the Enlightenment habit of reading engineering solutions out of living organisms — nature as design teacher. Observe how a creature moves, then translate that structure into metal and wood. It is a moment of biomimicry before the word existed: practical invention beginning with careful watching.
Watt was a meticulous observer who found inspiration everywhere; his separate-condenser breakthrough reportedly crystallized on a Sunday walk. He corresponded widely, recording colleagues' insights with care. Reporting another inventor's nature-derived idea fits his habit of cataloguing useful observations and reflects his core belief that disciplined attention to how things actually work — whether a steam toy or a crustacean — is the root of all useful invention.
In the late 18th century, natural philosophy and mechanical invention were the same discipline. Erasmus Darwin catalogued nature's 'machines'; the Lunar Society — of which Watt was a member — blended botany, chemistry, and engineering in the same breath. Borrowing structural principles from shells, bones, and joints was standard practice. Artisans and philosophers alike believed close study of living things was the fastest path to workable mechanisms.
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