In the bustling port town of Kirkcaldy, a young Adam Smith watched the ships arrive from far-off lands, their hulls heavy with spices, textiles, and stories of strange markets. This early exposure to the rhythm of trade would eventually inspire his groundbreaking work as the "father of modern economics".

One crisp morning, Smith walked into a small factory. He saw ten men huddled over a workbench. Instead of one man painstakingly crafting a single pin from start to finish, the work was divided.

Later that day, Smith sat down for his evening meal. He thought about where his dinner had come from.

But Smith wasn't just a man of numbers; he was a philosopher fascinated by the invisible threads that hold a society together. Here is a story of how his most famous ideas came to life: The Secret of the Pin Factory

: One man drew out the wire, another straightened it, a third cut it, and a fourth pointed it.