Today on Far Future Horizons we present the BBC
Documentary Mechanical Marvels: Clockwork Dreams hosted by Professor Simon Schaffer which charts the amazing and untold story of automata - extraordinary
clockwork machines designed hundreds of years ago to mimic and recreate life.
Merlin the Silver Swan |
This documentary
film brings the past to life in vivid detail as we see how and why these
masterpieces were built. Travelling around Europe ,
Simon uncovers the history of these machines and shows us some of the most
spectacular examples, from an entire working automaton city to a small boy who
can be programmed to write and even a device that can play chess. All the
machines Simon visits show a level of technical sophistication and ambition
that still amazes today.
Simon Schaffer with Merlin |
As well as the
automata, Simon explains in great detail the world in which they were made -
the hardship of the workers who built them, their role in global trade and the
industrial revolution and the eccentric designers who dreamt them up. Finally,
Simon reveals that to us that these long-forgotten marriages of art and
engineering are actually the ancestors of many of our most loved modern
technologies, from recorded music to the cinema and much of the digital world.
After watching this documentary I encourage our readers to read Gaby Woods’s wonderfully written history of mechanical automata “Living Dolls: A Magical History
of the Quest for Mechanical Life” which is available from Amazon Books in
the United States and the United Kingdom .
Living Dolls looks at humanity's age-old obsession with moving dolls and speaking
robots, intelligent machines and bionic men. It tells the remarkable story of
men who wanted to play God - of the inventors and magicians who labored for
centuries to simulate life mechanically.
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