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Description
By bending a simple piece of glass, medieval craftsmen essentially cured intellectual aging and silently ignited the Renaissance. For thousands of years, a human's intellectual and economic value came with a strict biological expiration date. The moment a scholar, artisan, or merchant hit their late forties, presbyopia-the natural loss of near vision-rendered them effectively useless. The wisdom of a lifetime was locked away the second the eyes failed.Lenses of Glass uncovers the quiet, monumental revolution triggered by the invention of spectacles in the 13th century. This simple manipulation of curved glass shattered the biological ceiling of human productivity. The book explores how this invisible optical technology doubled the working lifespan of Europe's brightest minds, directly igniting the Renaissance by ensuring that master craftsmen and aging scholars could actually read, write, and invent for decades longer.The narrative dives into the secretive guilds of Venetian glassmakers and the profound psychological shift of a society that suddenly realized biology could be corrected by engineering.Readers will discover how the most transformative technologies are rarely the loudest. This history offers a profound perspective on innovation, proving that removing a single, quiet bottleneck in human capability can exponentially accelerate the progress of an entire civilization.



