15 Most Advanced Countries in Europe

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In this piece, we will take a look at the fifteen most advanced countries in Europe. For more top countries, head on over to 5 Most Advanced Countries in Europe.

Over the course of recent human history, Europe has proven to be the bedrock of innovation. It is responsible for some of the most important advancements in history - ones that have shaped the modern world as it is today. For instance, the first patent for an industrially applicable internal combustion engine was filed by the British inventor Samuel Brown in 1823. This was a rather simple design, which involved filling up a chamber with flame and then putting the flame out to create a vacuum which ended up driving a piston and creating force. This simple design has spurred the automotive revolution, as all cars, trucks, and other engines use a piston to create force. Of course, the steam engine itself is a European design, courtesy of efforts from Thomas Newcomen and James Watt.

Today's Europe is no different and has some of best universities all over the globe. It is also host to some of the most complex industries out there such as space exploration and aerospace. For instance, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) flew its Artemis 1 mission in mid November and early December around the Moon. The mission used the Orion spacecraft, and this ship was propelled by the European service module. This module powered the entire journey and was responsible for managing the ship's electrical systems and generating solar electricity as well. Another remarkable European space achievement earlier this year came when NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) saw two cube satellites belonging to the Italian Space Agency snap back remarkable visuals of Earth from millions of miles away and the DART spacecraft itself crashing into the asteroid to change its path.

Another advanced industry that is present in Europe is the biotechnology industry. This sector involves using biological materials to treat a variety of diseases such as cancer. European firms such as Laboratoires Pierre Fabre are developing treatments for cancer, and this company announced in December 2022 that the European Commission had approved its treatment for the Epstein Barr virus-positive posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorder (EBV+ PTLD). Another European biotechnology firm, which is at the forefront of genetic engineering - the process of changing the biological makeup of the human body - is CRISPR Therapeutics AG (NASDAQ:CRSP). Headquartered in Switzerland, the company's Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR) platform enables making changes to DNA to treat diseases such as cancer.