thumb|Carpentry tools recovered from the wreck of the Mary Rose, a 16th-century [[sailing ship—from the top: a mallet, brace, and plane, the handles of a T-auger and gimlet, possibly the handle of a hammer, and a rule.]] A tool is an object that can extend an individual's ability to modify features of the surrounding environment or help them accomplish a particular task, and proto-typically refers to solid hand-operated non-biological objects with a single broad purpose that lack multiple functions, unlike machines or computers. Although human beings are proportionally most active in using and
A physical tool is a solid, hand-operated object designed to extend a person's ability to modify their environment or accomplish specific tasks, like the carpentry implements shown from a historic shipwreck. Tools differ from machines and computers in that they typically have a single broad purpose and lack multiple functions, making them fundamental to how humans interact with and shape the world around them.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
thumb|Carpentry tools recovered from the wreck of the Mary Rose, a 16th-century [[sailing ship—from the top: a mallet, brace, and plane, the handles of a T-auger and gimlet, possibly the handle of a hammer, and a rule.]] A tool is an object that can extend an individual's ability to modify features of the surrounding environment or help them accomplish a particular task, and proto-typically refers to solid hand-operated non-biological objects with a single broad purpose that lack multiple functions, unlike machines or computers. Although human beings are proportionally most active in using and making tools in the animal kingdom, as use of stone tools dates back hundreds of millennia, and also in using tools to make other tools, many animals have demonstrated tool use in both instances.
Early human tools, made of such materials as stone, bone, and wood, were used for the preparation of food, hunting, the manufacture of weapons, and the working of materials to produce clothing and useful artifacts and crafts such as pottery, along with the construction of housing, businesses, infrastructure, and transportation. The development of metalworking made additional types of tools possible. Harnessing energy sources, such as animal power, wind, or steam, allowed increasingly complex tools to produce an even larger range of items, with the Industrial Revolution marking an inflection point in the use of tools. The introduction of widespread automation in the 19th and 20th centuries allowed tools to operate with minimal human supervision, further increasing the productivity of human labor. By extension, concepts that support systematic or investigative thought are often referred to as "tools" or "toolkits".
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).