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Accidental inventions
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Scout, I think there's already a thread for that. :-)
Seriously though, wouldn't an invention need to be tangible and not simply policy or law?
I wonder, how many people were almost there and quit that line of research, which someone else then built upon to invent something of value. I am sure the person who figured out how to make glass out of sand never envisioned today's uses from phone screens to medical equipment. Considering the internal combustion engine was patented in 1794, I am pretty sure no one pictured today's automobiles.
For all the ones that succeed in turning a concept into practical plans, there are so many more that fail or run out of funding.

Penicillin, on the other hand, was a total accident.

https://www.todayifoundout.com/index....

I suspect many inventions follow this line, where you are trying to do something and fail, but the failure does something different. "Failure" can also be relative. My most common one is to invent something that works, but not well enough to be marketable, or there is too small a market to be bothered. This last one may be more restricted to the chemical field where you need something for one "right now" purpose, so when you have it you start looking form other uses, particularly whether it has biological activity. My one invention that is currently in the market was started mainly as an accidental byproduct, but since I had a lot of it I put it in a bag and kept it. Then someone approached me and asked for something to do a specific use and I tried this stuff, and it worked. Accident? Or keeping eyes open and taking advantage of what you have?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles...
Unless, of course, you can dream creatively: https://www.famousscientists.org/7-gr...


"Some of the most influential and successful creative ideas of all time were inspired by the subconscious while dreaming. A field of cows inspired Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity, which, according to a survey by meditation and sleep specialists calm.com, is one of the most important ideas that ever came out of sleep. In his dream, Einstein was telling a farmer about cows being surrounded by an electric fence, but the farmer saw something different. Einstein awakened with the realisation that the same event could vary from different perspectives, and the theory of relativity began to take shape. "
https://www.readersdigest.com.au/true...
Lots of cool stuff in this article, including the dream origin of McCartney's song "Yesterday."

http://www.businessinsider.com/accide...
I guess in science and research too, luck or happy coincidence may sometimes be more important than effort and persistence.
Can side effect be often more important than an effect? Is doing/trying something is still a pre-requisite for an intentional or unintentional success?