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Coincidence? The 9 craziest cases of simultaneous invention
Throughout history, major scientific breakthroughs and notable inventions have occurred simultaneously and independently among different thinkers and inventors, who, more often than not, had no direct contact with each other. The phenomenon is known as "multiple discovery." The only problem? Who gets credit? In the case of "the first flight," the argument continues.
- Flight (1901-1903): Orville and Wilbur Wright (pictured) soared into history books on Dec. 17, 1903, following their historic, 852-foot, 59-second flight at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina -- an achievement for which the duo are widely described as the first in flight. But the first flight may have happened two years before that, when German immigrant Gustav Whitehead, born Weisskopf -- flew a winged, bird-like plane called #21 on the morning of Aug. 14, 1901.read more
- Higgs Boson (1964): The "God Particle," as it's sometimes known (to the chagrin of scientists everywhere), was developed into a full relativistic model in 1964 independently and almost simultaneously by three groups of physicists: François Englert and Robert Brout; Peter Higgs; and Gerald Guralnik, C. R. Hagen, and Tom Kibble.read moreCERNShare
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Coincidence? The 9 craziest cases of simultaneous invention
Throughout history, major scientific breakthroughs and notable inventions have occurred simultaneously and independently among different thinkers and inventors, who, more often than not, had no direct contact with each other. The phenomenon is known as "multiple discovery." The only problem? Who gets credit? In the case of "the first flight," the argument continues.
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- Coincidence? The 9 craziest cases of simultaneous invention
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