Dr. NakaMats, the Man With 3300 Patents to His Name
Meet the most famous inventor you’ve never heard of – whose greatest invention may be himself
- By Franz Lidz
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
By his count, Dr. NakaMats has clocked 3,377 patents, or three times as many as Thomas Edison (1,093 and no longer counting). “The big difference between Edison and me,” he says, matter-of-factly, “is that he died when he was 84, while I am now just in the middle of my life.”
This conviction is rooted in nutritional research that Dr. NakaMats has been conducting since he was 42, using himself as a guinea pig. “I was curious to see how I could extend my life span,” he says. “And what foods fuel the best inventions.” Which is why he meticulously photographs, catalogs and scrutinizes every meal he eats. He then analyzes samples of his blood and correlates the data. “I have concluded that we eat too much,” he says. “That is what makes life short.”
Dr. NakaMats believes that the right food and drink, moderate exercise and an unflagging love life will keep him alive until 2072. “The number of sleeping hours should be limited to six,” he advises. “Alcohol, tea, milk and tap water are bad for the brain and should be avoided. Coffee is also very dangerous. One meal a day is optimal, and that meal should be low in oil and no more than 700 calories.”
His own diet consists of a single serving of puréed seaweed, cheese, yogurt, eel, eggs, beef, dried shrimp and chicken livers. He seasons this concoction with Dr. NakaMats’ Rebody 55, a dietary supplement comprising 55 grains and several mystery ingredients. “It is ideal for sprinkling on soup or cereal,” he says.
In 2005, Dr. NakaMats’ investigation into the links between eating habits and intelligence earned him an Ig Nobel Prize. Conferred annually at Harvard by the Annals of Improbable Research, a bimonthly journal devoted to scientific humor, the Ig Nobels pay homage to achievements that make people laugh. “Ig Nobel Prize Laureate,” reads Dr. NakaMats’ silver-trimmed business card, which also trumpets his selection “by U.S. Scientific Academy as The Greatest Scientist in The History.”
As it turns out, that academy was the International Tesla Society, a Colorado-based association of inventors. The Tesla Society once issued a card set that showcased influential scientists. Dr. NakaMats made the cut, along with Nikola Tesla, Archimedes, Michael Faraday and Marie Curie. “My card describes me as ‘super inventor,’” he says. “That means I am the greatest.” Somewhere along the line, something was lost in translation.
So what does history’s greatest scientist deem history’s greatest invention? “My answer is, Do you have children?” he tells his American visitor.
Dr. NakaMats has had three. “A child can be invented four ways,” he grumbles. “Smart seed, smart field. Smart seed, stupid field. Stupid seed, smart field. Stupid seed, stupid field.”
And how did his kids turn out?
“All stupid due to stupid field.”
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Comments (7)
If Mr. Lidz’s intent was to mock Dr. Nakamatsu, he was successful. The question is: Why would Smithsonian publish such trash? The editors owe Dr. Nakamatsu and Smithsonian readers a profound apology.
Posted by Paul Forbes on December 13,2012 | 09:11 PM
Sure he could be just an eccentric, but I got a very tongue-in-cheek, "Steven Colbert" vibe from this guy.
Posted by kinkfisher on December 3,2012 | 11:52 PM
Dr. NakaMats is an amazing person! We need more people like him to inspire us to greater creativity and inquiry. A wondeful role model for life.
Posted by ludwig ostfeld on December 2,2012 | 02:33 PM
Seems to me that this article should be in your April issue --- to start the month off.
Posted by Kerry Fitzpatrick on December 2,2012 | 08:35 AM
This guy is famous for being nuts, and he is most definitely a nut case. Why is he even being covered here?
Posted by Thomas Tucker on December 1,2012 | 11:15 PM
Seems like the thing this guy is best at is sounding like an egotistical maniac. But maybe this sort of quirky portrait is what the article was shooting for. I bet the he's a nice guy in real life.
Posted by Arne Doolson on November 30,2012 | 08:07 PM
I expect better reporting. wikipedia describes Dr NakaMats properly, exposing his dubious claims. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshiro_Nakamatsu For this reason, I refuse to renew my subscription. ...and I am Sid Harth@mysistermarilynmonroe.org
Posted by Sid Harth on November 28,2012 | 06:14 PM