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 4 of 4)
In 1953, three years after his floppy breakthrough, he invented a wristwatch with a digital display. It would be another two decades before the Hamilton Watch Company marketed the Pulsar, widely touted as the first digital timepiece.
After five years as a marketer at global trading giant Mitsui, he left to launch the Dr. NakaMats Hi-Tech Innovation Corporation, which, at its height, had more than 100 employees in Tokyo, Osaka and New York. “Most of my staff had been rejected by other Japanese businesses,” he says. “In my country, the most creative people are rejects.” Dr. NakaMats was once a reject, too. He says his floppy disk got brushed off by six major electronics outfits. “Inventions are best developed on your own,” he allows. “When you work for other people or borrow money from them, maintaining freedom of intellect is difficult.”
Dr. NakaMats keeps his intellect free by following a strict daily routine. Every night in his NakaPenthouse, he retires to the Calm Room, which is actually a bathroom tiled in 24-karat gold. “The gold blocks out radio waves and television signals that are harmful to imagination,” he says. The Calm Room was built without nails because “nails reflect thinking.”
After sitting calmly on the toilet for a spell, surrounded by running water, he moves to the Dynamic Room—actually, an elevator—in which Beethoven serenades him.
Dr. NakaMats’ greatest notions tend to surface on long underwater swims. “If you have too much oxygen in your brain, inspiration will not strike,” he cautions. “To starve the brain of oxygen, you must dive deep and allow the water pressure to fill the brain with blood.” He holds his breath as long as he can. “Zero-point-five seconds before death, I visualize an invention,” Dr. NakaMats says. Eureka! He jots the thought on a proprietary waterproof notepad and floats upward.
On a warm evening last spring, Dr. NakaMats once again tempted death by plunging into the private pool at Tokyo’s Okura Hotel. He sank to the bottom and swam back and forth, like a farmer following the plow. A half-minute into his submersion, Dr. NakaMats scribbled frantically on his pad and—literally—came up with a new idea.
Holding the pad aloft, he pointed to a squiggle that, to the untrained eye, resembled a map of the Ginza Line on the Tokyo Metro. “The most terrifying problem facing Japan is how to dispose of radioactive waste from nuclear reactors,” he said. His lips curved into a thin smile. “This is a solution. This is progress.”
His creative juices tapped, Dr. NakaMats returned home, where he unwound in the arms of the Cerebrex Human Performance Enhancing Robot, a hooded lounge chair that cools its user’s head and transmits sound frequencies through his feet. By his calculations, the machine’s pulsating alpha rays improve eyesight by 120 percent, heighten mathematical skills by 129 percent and cram the equivalent of eight hours of quality sleep into one hour of relaxation.
It’s said that 82.7 percent of all statistics are made up on the spot. Which accounts for possibly 93.4 percent of Dr. NakaMats’ scientific calculations. He confides that his Love Jet is “55 times more powerful than Viagra and makes sex 300 percent more fun.” Among the other seemingly magical properties of this liquid lust are memory improvement and skin rejuvenation. “I have tested Love Jet on 10,000 women,” Dr. NakaMats said solemnly as he drifted off to the NakaBedroom. “I do not do the sex. I just check the meters.”
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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