Serendipity; a fortunate accident in which the development and occurrence of an event happens entirely by chance in a happy or beneficial way. Perhaps a more familiar definition would be the unexpected moment in time when the man of your dreams accidently bumps into you and drops your library books. You both kneel down, the magnetic energy between you draws your eyes together and you see your future of a family of 4 and a dog named Duke. For the lucky ones, this idea of fate is a reality. As for the rest of us, we have to pick up our library books on our own.
70 years ago, an American engineer and inventor named Percy Spencer was standing nearby a magnetron, a vacuum tube which generates microwaves to boost the sensitivity of radar, when he
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If you are searching for something, you can find it online, and quickly. However, when the internet was new, its early enthusiasts hoped it would emulate the greatest serendipity machine ever invented. However, a side-effect of this incredible efficiency may be a shrinking our horizons rather than expanding them. To some degree, the hopes of the internet’s pioneers have been fulfilled. You type “School” into a search engine, you are directed to the Wikipedia page about School, and in no time you are reading about a never ending series of unfortunate events that adolescents have to suffer. Unfortunately the sad truth with this is that we are far less likely to come across things we are not in quest …show more content…
Google’s aim is to systematise the world’s information and democratise access to it, but when everyone can get the same information in more or less the same way, it becomes harder to be original. Innovation thrives on the serendipitous collision of ideas. The internet has become so good at meeting our desires that we spend more time researching philosophies we already know and less time discovering new ones. To escape it, we must leave our screens, pick up our library books and walk