Authors: Richard Holmes
Tags: #History, #Modern, #19th Century, #Biography & Autobiography, #Science & Technology, #Science, #Philosophy & Social Aspects, #Fiction
ALESSANDRO VOLTA, 1745-1827. FRS and Professor of Experimental Physics, Como, Italy, 1775. He disproved Luigi Galvani’s theory of animal electricity in 1792, and went on to produce a historic paper on the first chemical pile or battery, which Banks was quick to publish in the Royal Society journal
Philosophical Transactions,
1800. This was the basis for future pioneering work by Davy (London), Berzelius (Stockholm) and Gay-Lussac (Paris). He gave his name to the volt, a measure of the force of an electrical current. He was visited by Davy in 1814.
ADAM WALKER, 1731-1821. Inspirational science teacher at Eton College, who taught the use of the telescope and microscope, and believed in a plurality of worlds (‘30 thousand suns!’). His science primer,
Familiar Philosophy
(1779), was an early best-seller in the popular science field. During a long and eccentric career he invented the patent empyreal air-stove, the Celestine harpsichord and the eidouranion or transparent orrery, a portable device for projecting an illuminated model of the solar system and the main constellations. His
Course of Lectures on Natural and Experimental Philosophy
(1805) was eagerly read by the young Shelley, and covered the basics of Romantic science including astronomy, chemistry, electricity, geology and meteorology.
JAMES WATT, 1736-1819. Engineer and member of the Lunar Society. In partnership with Matthew Boulton he developed new forms of steam engine, for use in mines and textile manufacture. The international unit of electricity, the watt (a measure of the overall power of an electrical current), was named after him. Helped Davy construct his gas-breathing devices at Bristol. His ailing son Gregory Watt junior was a gifted geologist, and an early friend of Davy’s at Bristol until his premature death in 1804.
THOMAS WEDGWOOD, 1771-1805. Chemist and inventor of early photographic method, using glass plates painted with silver salts in a camera obscura. Fragile youngest son of the pottery king and philanthropist Josiah Wedgwood, he was ill for most of his short life and was supplied with opiates by Banks and Coleridge.
WILLIAM WHEWELL, 1794-1866. Geologist and natural historian. The son of a Lancashire carpenter, he eventually became Master of Trinity College, Cambridge. His
Philosophy of Inductive Science
(1859) became the standard Victorian work on the methodology of inductive science, and included an imaginative notion of the ‘trial hypothesis’. At Trinity he was celebrated for his less imaginative strictures: no dogs, no cigars, and no women.
GILBERT WHITE, 1720-93. Naturalist and Hampshire clergyman, author of the famous botanical and natural history
Journal
which he kept for over thirty years, and which was published as
The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne
(1788). Among a myriad other things - swallows, tortoises, snowflakes, birdsong - he was fascinated by balloons, and compared them with bird flight and migration. Widely read by other writers, such as Coleridge and Charles Darwin, he gently championed the notion of precise, patient and exquisite observation of the natural world for its own sake.
WILLIAM HYDE WOLLASTON, 1766-1828. FRS. A chemist and metallurgist, he quietly made his fortune from patenting various forms of malleable platinum. Famous for his patience and precision in the laboratory, and his good nature in society, he refused to become involved in various controversies at the Royal Society stirred up by Davy. John Herschel wrote a revealing sketch of the two men as contrasted scientific personalities. (See Chapter 10)
JOSEPH WRIGHT OF DERBY, 1734-97. Dramatic painter of experimental and industrial scenes, who reinterpreted late-eighteenth-century Enlightenment science as a mysterious, romantic adventure into the unknown. Close friend of Erasmus Darwin and the Lunar men. His most influential pictures were
The Orrery
(1767, frontispiece of this book),
The Air Pump
(1768, National Gallery, London) and
The Alchemist
(Derby, 1770). He also produced some striking, almost apocalyptic industrial scenes of factories and forges (especially at night), and many fine individual portraits.
EDWARD YOUNG, 1683-1765. Poet and clergyman. His major work,
Night Thoughts on Life, Death and Immortality
(1742), a poem in twelve books, was a traditional Christian meditation on the way the universe demonstrated God’s design and divine creativity. He announced, ‘An undevout astronomer is mad,’ though he had some doubts about the size and complication of the cosmos as revealed by Newton’s mathematics: ‘Perhaps a
seraph’s
computation fails!’ (Book IX, lines 1, 226-35). A later edition of the poem was superbly illustrated with William Blake’s watercolour engravings, a consolation for those terrified by the new cosmology.
The Bigger Picture
(In chronological order of publication)
Thomas Kuhn,
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions,
Chicago UP, 1962-70
Albert Bettex,
The Discovery of Nature
(with 482 illustrations), Thames & Hudson, 1965
James D. Watson,
The Double Helix: A Personal Account of the Discovery of the Structure of DNA,
1968/2001
Arthur Koestler,
The Act of Creation,
Danube edition, 1969
Jacob Bronowski,
The Ascent of Man,
1973
Adrian Desmond and James Moore,
Darwin,
Penguin, 1992
Lewis Wolpert,
The Unnatural Nature of Science,
Faber, 1992
James Gleick,
Richard Feynman and Modern Physics,
Pantheon Books, 1992
Michael J. Crowe,
Modern Theories of the Universe from Herschel to Hubble,
Chicago UP, 1994
Gale Christianson,
Edwin Hubble: Mariner of the Nebulae,
Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1995
Peter Whitfield,
The Mapping of the Heavens,
The British Library, 1995
John Carey (editor),
The Faber Book of Science,
Faber, 1995
Janet Browne,
Charles Darwin: Volume I: Voyaging,
and
Volume 2: The Power of Place,
Pimlico, 1995 and 2000
Michael Shortland and Richard Yeo,
Telling Lives in Science: Essays in Scientific Biography,
CUP, 1996
Dava Sobel,
Longitude,
Fourth Estate, 1996
Roy Porter,
The Greatest Benefit to Mankind: A Medical History of Humanity from Antiquity to the Present,
HarperCollins, 1997
John Gascoigne,
Science in the Service of Empire,
CUP, 1998
Richard Dawkins,
Unweaving the Rainbow: Science, Delusion and the Appetite for Wonder,
Allen Lane, Penguin Press, 1998
Lisa Jardine,
Ingenious Pursuits: Building the Scientific Revolution,
Little, Brown, 1999
Jonathan Bate,
The Song of the Earth,
Picador, 2000
Ludmilla Jordanova,
Defining Features: Scientific and Medical Portraits 1660-2000,
National Portrait Gallery, London, 2000
Patricia Fara,
Newton: The Making of Genius,
Macmillan, 2000
Mary Midgley,
Science and Poetry,
Routledge, 2001
Thomas Crump,
A Brief History of Science as Seen Through the Development of Scientific Instruments,
Constable, 2001
Oliver Sacks,
Uncle Tungsten: Memories of a Chemical Boyhood,
Picador, 2001
Carl Djerassi and Roald Hoffmann,
Oxygen
(a play in 2 acts), Wiley, New York, 2001
Anne Thwaite,
Glimpses of the Wonderful: The Life of P.H. Gosse,
Faber, 2002
Brenda Maddox,
Rosalind Franklin: The Dark Lady of DNA,
HarperCollins, 2002 Peter Harman and Simon Mitton (editors),
Cambridge Scientific Minds,
CUP, 2002
Arnold Wesker,
Longitude
(a play in 2 acts), Amber Lane Press, 2006
Natalie Angier,
The Canon: The Beautiful Basics of Science,
Faber, 2007
Walter Isaacson,
Einstein: His Life and Universe,
Simon & Schuster, 2007
George Steiner,
My Unwritten Books,
Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2008
The Scientific and Intellectual Background 1760-1830
Peter Ackroyd,
Newton,
Chatto & Windus, 2006
Madison Smartt Bell,
Lavoisier in the Year One: The Birth of a New Science in the Age of Revolution,
Atlas Books, Norton, 2005
Michael J. Crowe,
The Extraterrestrial Life Debate, 1750-1900,
CUP, 1986
Andrew Cunningham and Nicholas Jardine,
Romanticism and the Sciences,
CUP, 1990
Erasmus Darwin,
The Botanic Garden, A Philosophical Poem with Notes,
1791
Hermione de Almeida,
Romantic Medicine and John Keats,
OUP, 1991
Adrian Desmond,
The Politics of Evolution: Morphology, Medicine and Reform in Radical London,
Chicago UP, 1989
Patricia Fara,
Pandora’s Breeches: Women, Science and Power in the Age of Enlightenment,
Pimlico, 2004
Penelope Fitzgerald,
The Blue Flower
(a novel), HarperCollins, 1995
Tim Fulford (editor),
Romanticism and Science, 1773-1833,
a 5-vol anthology, Pickering, 2002
Tim Fulford and Peter Kitson (editors),
Romanticism and Colonialism: Writing and Empire, 1780-1830,
CUP, 1998
Tim Fulford, Debbie Lee and Peter Kitson,
Literature, Science and Exploration in the Romantic Era,
CUP, 2004
John Gascoigne,
Joseph Banks and the English Enlightenment,
CUP, 1994
James Gleick,
Isaac Newton,
Pantheon Books, 2003
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe,
Scientific Studies
(edited by Douglas Miller), Suhrkamp edition of Goethe’s
Works,
vol 12, New York, 1988
Jan Golinski,
Science as Public Culture: Chemistry and Enlightenment in Britain 1760-1820,
CUP, 1992
Richard Hamblyn,
The Invention of Clouds,
Picador, 2001
Peter Harman and Simon Mitron,
Cambridge Scientific Minds,
CUP, 2002
John Herschel,
On the Study of Natural Philosophy,
1832
J.E. Hodgson,
History of Aeronautics in Great Britain,
OUP, 1924
Penelope Hughes-Hallett,
The Immortal Dinner,
Penguin, 2001
Desmond King-Hele,
Erasmus Darwin and the Romantic Poets,
Macmillan, 1986
David Knight,
Science in the Romantic Era
(essays), Ashgate, 1998
David Knight,
Science and Spirituality,
Routledge, 2003
Trevor H. Levere,
Poetry Realized in Nature: Coleridge and Early Nineteenth-Century Science,
CUP, 1981
Alan Moorehead,
The Fatal Impact: An Account of the Invasion of the South Pacific, 1767-1840,
Hamish Hamilton, 1966, 1987
Alfred Noyes,
The Torchbearers: An Epic Poem,
1937
William St Clair,
The Reading Nation in the Romantic Period,
OUP, 2004
James A. Secord,
Victorian Sensation: The Extraordinary Publication of Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation,
Chicago UP, 2000
Jenny Uglow,
The Lunar Men: The Friends who Made the Future, 1730-1810,
Faber, 2002
Jenny Uglow and Francis Spufford,
Cultural Babbage: Technology, Time and Invention,
Faber, 1996
Joseph Banks
Joseph Banks,
The Endeavour Ms Journal 1768-77,
University of New South Wales, Australia, internet copy
The Endeavour Journal of Sir Joseph Banks,
edited by J.C. Beaglehole, Public Library of New South Wales, 1962
The Selected Letters of Sir Joseph Banks 1768-1820,
edited by Neil Chambers, Imperial College Press, Natural History Museum and Royal Society, The Banks Project, 2000
The Scientific Correspondence of Sir Joseph Banks 1765-1820,
edited by Neil Chambers, 6 vols, Pickering & Chatto Ltd, 2007
Hector Cameron,
Sir Joseph Banks,
1952
Sir Harold Carter,
Sir Joseph Banks 1743-1820,
British Museum, Natural History, 1988
Vanessa Collingridge,
Captain Cook,
Ebury, 2003
Journals of Captain Cook,
edited by J.C. Beaglehole, 3 vols, CUP, 1955-74; Penguin Classics, edited by Philip Edwards, 1999
William Cowper,
The Task,
Book One, 1785
Patricia Fara,
Joseph Banks: Sex, Botany and Empire,
Pimlico, 2004
John Gascoigne,
Joseph Banks and the English Enlightenment,
CUP, 1994
Jocelyn Hackforth-Jones, ‘Mai’, illustrated essay in
Between Two Worlds,
National Portrait Galley catalogue, 2007
John Hawkesworth,
Voyages Undertaken in the Southern Hemisphere,
1773
Eva Lack,
Die Abenteuers des Sir Joseph Banks
(with rare illustrations of fish, plants and Harriet Blosset), Vienna and Cologne, 1985
James Lee,
Introduction to Botany,
with a Preface by Robert Thornton MD, 1785, 1810
E.H. McCormick,
Omai,
OUP, 1978
Richard Mabey,
Gilbert White,
Century, 1986
Alan Moorehead,
The Fatal Impact,
1966, 1987
Patrick O’Brian,
Joseph Banks,
Harvill Press, 1987
Sydney Parkinson,
A Journal of a Voyage in the South Seas,
1773
Roy Porter, ‘The Exotic as Erotic’, in
Exoticism in the Enlightenment,
edited by G.S. Rousseau and Roy Porter, Manchester UP, 1989
Edward Smith,
Sir Joseph Banks,
1911
Daniel Solander,
Collected Correspondence,
edited by Edward Duyker and Per Tingbrand, Scandinavia UP, 1995
William and Caroline Herschel
Angus Armitage,
Sir William Herschel,
Nelson, 1962
Helen Ashton,
I Had a Sister,
L. Dickson, 1937
John Bonnycastle,
Introduction to Astronomy in Letters to his Pupil,
1786 (expanded editions 1788, 1811, 1822)
Claire Brock,
The Comet Sweeper: Caroline Herschel’s Astronomical Ambition,
Icon Books, Cambridge, 2007
Lord Byron,
Selected Poems,
edited by A.S.B. Glover, Penguin, 1974
Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
Collected Letters,
6 vols, edited by E.L. Griggs, OUP, 1956-71
Michael J. Crowe,
Modern Theories of the Universe,
Dover, 1994
Erasmus Darwin,
The Botanic Garden, A Philosophical Poem with Notes,
1791
James Ferguson,
Astronomy Explained,
with a Preface by David Brewster, 1811
The Herschel Chronicle,
edited by Constance A. Lubbock (his granddaughter), 1933
Caroline Herschel,
Memoir and Correspondence of Caroline Herschel,
edited by Mrs John Herschel, Murray, 1876; Cambridge UP, 1935
Caroline Herschel,
Caroline Herschel’s Autobiographies,
edited by Michael Hoskin, Science History Publications Ltd, Cambridge, 2003
William Herschel,
Scientific Papers,
2 vols, edited by J.E. Dreyer, Royal Society and Royal Astronomical Society, 1912
Michael Hoskin,
William Herschel and the Construction of the Heavens,
Osbourne, 1963
Michael Hoskin,
Stellar Astronomy,
Science History Publications, 1982
Michael Hoskin,
The Herschel Partnership as Viewed by Caroline,
Science History Publications, Cambridge, 2003
Derek Howse,
Nevil Maskelyne,
CUP, 1989
Edwin Hubble,
The Realm of the Nebulae,
Constable, 1933
John Keats,
Complete Poems,
edited by John Barnard, Penguin, 1973
Henry Mayhew,
James Ferguson,
1817
Percy Bysshe Shelley,
Shelley’s Prose,
edited by David Lee Clark, Fourth Estate, 1988
Peter Sime,
William Herschel,
1890
Adam Smith,
The Principles of Philosophical Enquiries, Illustrated by the History of Astronomy,
Edinburgh, 1795
Frances Wilson,
The Ballad of Dorothy Wordsworth,
Faber, 2008
Edward Young,
Night Thoughts
(poem), 1744-45
S
PECIALIST
A
RTICLES
J.A. Bennett, ‘The Telescopes of William Herschel’ (with illustrations),
Journal for the History of Astronomy
7, 1976
Michael Hoskin, ‘On Writing the History of Modern Astronomy’,
Journal for the History of Astronomy
11, 1980
Michael Hoskin, ‘Caroline Herschel’s Comet Sweepers’,
Journal for the History of Astronomy
12, 1981
Simon Schaffer, ‘Herschel on Matter Theory and Planetary Life’,
Journal for the History of Astronomy
11, 1980
Simon Schaffer, ‘Uranus and Herschel’s Astronomy’,
Journal for the History of Astronomy
12, 1981
Simon Schaffer, ‘Herschel in Bedlam: Natural History and Stellar Astronomy’,
British Journal for the History of Science
13, 1986
Simon Schaffer, ‘On the Nebular Hypothesis’, in
History, Humanity and Evolution,
edited by J.R. Moore, CUP, 1988
The Balloonists
Thomas Baldwin,
Airopaidia,
1786 (the narrative of a solo voyage in Lunardi’s balloon, including the first aerial sketches made from a balloon basket)
Henry Beaufoy,
Account of an Ascent with James Sadler, from Hackney,
1811, British Library catalogue B.507 (I)
Henry Beaufoy,
Two Balloon Scrapbooks of Henry Beaufoy, 1783-1843
(Item 57 in the McCormack Collection), Princeton University, USA
David Bourgeois,
L’Art de Voler,
Paris, 1784
Catalogue of Well-Known Balloon Prints and Drawings,
Sotheby’s, 1962
Tiberius Cavallo FRS,
The History and Practice of Aerostation,
1785
William Cowper,
The Task
(poem), in
Letters and Poems,
1785