Quote:
The advances in aeronautical engineering over 66 years may be unmatched in any other field of endeavor.
Interesting point.
What about atomic energy?
Electrical energy?
And could the advances in aeronautical engineering be tied directly to the advances in engines using petrochemical fuels?
It was definitely an era of technological advances that the world had never before seen. My grandfather grew up in Wallis, TX, before 1900 plowing cotton fields with a mule. There was no paved road in or out of Wallis, no electricity, no cars, and no gasoline. His life was not that much different than that of farmers at any time previous in history.
By the time my granddad died in the 1980s, he had seen not only the advent of universal paved roads, universal electricity, universal ownership of cars, and diesel tractors, but had also been alive from the Wright Brothers to the moon landings, from biplanes in WW 1 to supersonic jet fighters, from no radio to color TVs in every home, from crude typewriters to computers and fax machines. Those are only a tiny portion of the incredible technological changes that occurred during the first 3/4, and mainly first half, of the 20th century.