This Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time
Unintended Consequences of Historical Breakthroughs
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Jessica Jones
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Human history is filled with optimism, brilliance, invention, and confidence. It is also filled with collapse, unintended consequences, and quiet disasters that unfolded long after the celebration faded. This Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time is a documentary-style micro-history of the dangerous space between human intention and reality.
This book presents fifty true stories of innovation, industry, medicine, infrastructure, and entrepreneurship that began with good intentions and ended with consequences no one fully anticipated. These are not myths, exaggerations, or fiction. Each chapter is grounded in real historical events where progress moved forward — and the cost appeared later.
From early industrial experiments to medical breakthroughs gone wrong, from infrastructure failures to technological overconfidence, these stories trace a recurring pattern that repeats across centuries: confidence arrives early, warnings arrive quietly, and consequences arrive last. Sometimes they arrive as tragedy. Sometimes as disaster. Sometimes as a chain reaction that no one intended but everyone inherits.
The tone of this book is restrained, factual, and unsentimental. It does not preach, moralize, or assign simple villains. Instead, it documents what happened, how it happened, and what followed. The result is a collection of unsettling, sometimes astonishing true accounts that reveal how often the world we live in is shaped not by malice — but by miscalculation, speed, and belief in systems that were never fully understood.
Readers will encounter:
• Industrial projects that reshaped cities — and sometimes destroyed them
• Medical advances that healed and harmed at the same time
• Technological solutions that quietly created new dangers
• Infrastructure built on confidence rather than foresight
• Entrepreneurial ventures that looked flawless on paper and catastrophic in practice
• Systems that worked perfectly — until they suddenly didn’t
This book is written for readers who enjoy dark history, hidden disasters, industrial and medical catastrophe, bizarre true events, and documentary-style storytelling that allows the facts to speak for themselves. The stories within are often strange, sometimes disturbing, and frequently ironic — but all are true.
This Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time does not argue against progress. It simply records the less visible ledger that progress leaves behind. Because in hindsight, the warning signs are often obvious. At the time, they were not.