Quantcast
Channel: Whewell's Ghost
Viewing all 200 articles
Browse latest View live

Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #07

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #07

Monday 31 August 2015

EDITORIAL:

Like the proverbial bad penny Whewell’s Gazette the weekly #histSTM links list keeps turning up and we’re back again with another week of the best of the histories of science, technology and medicine gathered up over the last seven days from the Internet.

In my youth I had a polymathic interest in all things scientific and there was no way that I could take up a serious study of all the areas that interested me. I could however, like many, many others, at least teach myself the basic of the various sciences by reading popular science magazines. One of the main ones that I read almost religiously for many years was Scientific American. My memories of Scientific American is of a modern journal bringing me understandable synopsises of the latest developments in the sciences and also of the history of science. From time to time I get reminded that Scientific America is in the meantime a part of the history of science itself.

The first edition of Scientific American appeared 170 years ago on 28 August 1845, as the journal has reminded us this week.

From Volume 1, Number 1 of Scientific American, August 28, 1845.

From Volume 1, Number 1 of Scientific American, August 28, 1845.

Scientific American: On Scientific American’s 170th Anniversary, a Nod to Founder Rufus Porter

Scientific American: Celebrating 170 Years of Scientific American

I no longer read Scientific American but I do hope that other young science fans are still getting a view of the larger picture of the sciences from America’s oldest continuously published magazine.

Quotes of the week:

“Heaven and hell seem out of proportion to me: the actions of men do not deserve so much.” – Jorge Luis Borges

“Academics: is there a verb for “struggling to pull research notes and thoughts into article form”?” – Katrina Gulliver (@katrinagulliver)

“I ain’t afraid of no ghost, but people who vehemently believe in the paranormal scare me a little”. – Brian Switek (@Laelaps)

“Fortunately there is no encouragement of beatnik behaviour by ordinary people in Britain” – The People, 1960.     h/t @matthewcobb

“The task is to understand how reliable knowledge and scientific progress can and do result from a flawed, profoundly contingent, culturally relative, all-too-human process.” – David Wootton h/t @philipcball & @matthewcobb

“A mission statement is no substitute for a mission”. – John D. Cook (@JohnDCook)

“Every time someone gets made a peer in the House of Lords a democracy fairy dies”. – Lily Bailey (@LilyBaileyUK)

Me: What did the professor call the reading list that got out of control?

Library college: I don’t care

Me: Godzyllabus.

Her: Groan. – @librarianshipwreck

“How to write a book pitch: Step 1, order a coffee. Step 2, open blank page and hold pen. Step 3, write tweet about Steps 1 and 2. Ok, done”. – Mike McRae (@tribalscientist)

“The role of the historian is to move the debate forward, no more, no less”. – Frank McDonough (@FMXC1957)

CNYD-OIU8AAKDfW

Birthday of the Week:

 Antoine Laurent de Lavoisier born 26 August 1743

Portrait of Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier and his wife and assistant Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze by Jacques-Louis David, ca. 1788

Portrait of Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier and his wife and assistant Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze by Jacques-Louis David, ca. 1788

Yovisto: Modern Chemistry started with Lavoisier

Lavoisier 2

Science Notes: Today in Science History – August 26 – Antoine Lavoisier

The Renaissance Mathematicus: The father of…

Madame Lavoisier while assisting her husband on his scientific research of human respiration; she is visible at the table on the far right.

Madame Lavoisier while assisting her husband on his scientific research of human respiration; she is visible at the table on the far right.

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Science Notes: Today in Science History – August 24 – Louis Essen

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Alexander Langsdorf’s Interview

Yovisto: The Exploration of Saturn

Scientific American: Was Einstein the First to Invent E=mc2?

Corpus Newtonicum: All was light – but was it?

Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathemica, Titlepage and frontispiece of the third edition, London, 1726 (John Rylands Library)

Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathemica, Titlepage and frontispiece of the third edition, London, 1726 (John Rylands Library)

Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage: Follow the Information: Comets, Communicative Practices and Swedish Amateur Astronomers in the Twentieth Century (pdf)

Trinity College Library, Cambridge: Navigating Newton’s Novels: Exhibiting the Value of Personal Libraries

Irish Philosophy: Truth above all things: G.G: Stokes

Science Notes: Today in Science History – August 27 – Ernest Lawrence

Sydney Morning Herald: From Betelguese to Vega, who named the stars?

Harvard Magazine: William Cranch Bond: Brief life of Harvard’s first astronomer 1789–1859

Ptak Science Books: The Preliminary Tower at Trinity, 1945

Trinity Tower Source: Grove Archive

Trinity Tower
Source: Grove Archive

The National: Look at the stars, there’s still a lot of wisdom there

Atlas Obscura: See Fascinating Relics from the Secret Soviet Space Program

AHF: Francis Birch

Science Notes: Today in Science History – August 30 – Ernest Rutherford

AIP: Rutherford’s Nuclear World

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

The Conversation: Here’s why the Greenwich Prime Meridian is actually in the wrong place

The Hakluyt Society Blog: Matthew Flinders and the Circumnavigation of Australia, 1801–1803

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Yovisto: James Weddell and the Southern Ocean

James Weddell´s second expedition, depicting the brig

James Weddell´s second expedition, depicting the brig “Jane” and the cutter “Beaufoy”.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Advances in the History of Psychology: Hermann Helmholtz’s Graphical Recordings of the Speed of Nervous Stimulations

Our Roots: White Caps and Red Roses: History of the Galt School of Nursing, Lethbridge, Alberta 1910–1979

Duke University Libraries: The Devil’s Tale: Promising Cures for Hearing Loss in Early 20th Century America

DeafnessCure_Header-300x196

Motherboard: How Viking 1 Won the Martian Space Race

Migraine Histories: On Elizabeth Garrett Anderson

John Singer Sargent, Portrait of Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (c.1900) via Wikipedia

John Singer Sargent, Portrait of Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (c.1900) via Wikipedia

Advances in the History of Psychology: The Role of Heredity in George Combe’s Phrenology Work

BuzzFeed: How Oliver Sacks Helped Introduce the World to Autism

Yovisto: Charles Richet and Anaphylaxis

From the Hands of Quacks: Actina: A Wonder of the 19th Century

NYAM: Dr. William Edmund Aughinbaugh, Medical Adventurer

Embryo Project: The Marine Biology Laboratory

The Wall Street Journal: The Man Who Invented Psychopathy

academia.edu: A Museum of Wonders or a Cemetery of Corpses? The Commercial Exchange of Anatomical Collections in Early Modern Collections (pdf)

Science Notes: Today in Science History ­ August 29 – Werner Forssmann

Brumpic: ‘Birmingham Innovations: The Steam Engine, Electroplating… and the Airbag’ by Jonathan Reinarz

First Southern Birmingham 3

First Southern Birmingham 3

Diseases of Modern Life: ‘Sweet oblivious antidotes’? Lady perfume drinkers of the late 19th century

TECHNOLOGY:

The Guardian: Technology has created more jobs than it has destroyed, says 140 years of data

Atlas Obscura: The Weird History of Hand Dryers Will Blow You Away

Atlas Obscura: Take a Ride with the Country’s Most Dedicated Elevator Tourist

Thick Objects: Chakhotin’s Microsurgery Device (1912)

Tchahotine-Microsurgery-Devoce-885x1024

Ptak Science Books: A Map of Fordlandia: the “Drama of Transportation”, 1932

io9: No, Da Vinci Wasn’t the First to Dream About Human Flight

Yovisto: Lee De Forest and the Audion

Conciatore: Lime

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Printing mistakes

Johannes Gutenberg in a 16th century copper engraving Source: Wikimedia Commons

Johannes Gutenberg in a 16th century copper engraving
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Viewpoints: Innovators Assemble: Ada Lovelace, Walter Isaacson, and the Superheroines of Computing

academia.edu: Antipocras. A Medieval Treatise on Magical Medicine. By Brother Nicholas of the Preacing Friars (c. 1270) Translated by William Eamon (pdf)

Yovisto: The Hyperbolic World of Vladimir Shukhov

Capitalism’s Cradle: Not-so-Anonymous Tinkerers and the Industrial Revolution

Capitalism’s Cradle: Who will watch the Watch-Men? – Celebrating the Watch-Makers of the British Industrial Revolution

AIP: John Mauchly

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

The New York Times: How a Volcanic Eruption in 1815 Darkened the World but Colored the Arts

The deep volcanic crater, top, was produced by the eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia in April 1815 - the most powerful volcanic blast in recorded history. Credit Iwan Setiyawan/KOMPAS, via Associated Press

The deep volcanic crater, top, was produced by the eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia in April 1815 – the most powerful volcanic blast in recorded history. Credit Iwan Setiyawan/KOMPAS, via Associated Press

TrowellBlazers: Gertrude Caton Thompson

Partners of convenience: The Met Office and the BBC

The Genealogical World of Phylogenetic Networks: Spinach and iron fallacy

Ptak Science Books: Early Map of Elevations of Plants and Trees, 1873

“Chart of Principal Vegetable Growths and Chief Staples” from Matthew Fontaine Maury’s Physical Geography,

Twilight Beasts: The last squawk of the dodo

New York Times: Eric Betzig’s Life Over the Microscope

Archaeology: Rethinking the Form and Structure of Hominid Fossils

CHEMISTRY:

Conciatore: Saltpeter

Conciatore: Sulfur

Chemistry World: Agatha Christie, the queen of crime chemistry 

As a young woman, Christie worked in a hospital dispensary and gained a first-hand knowledge of drugs of poisons © Bettmann/Corbis

As a young woman, Christie worked in a hospital dispensary and gained a first-hand knowledge of drugs of poisons © Bettmann/Corbis

The Vaults of Erowid: The Subjective Effects of Nitrous Oxide by William James

Yovisto: Carl Bosch and the IG Farben

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Scientific American: Cross Check: Why There Will Never Be Another Einstein

“I am no Einstein,” Einstein once said. On top of all his other qualities, the man was modest. Photo by Oren Jack Turner courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

“I am no Einstein,” Einstein once said. On top of all his other qualities, the man was modest. Photo by Oren Jack Turner courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

the many-headed monster: VoxPop2015: The People’s Conclusion

G.C. Gosling: In Memoriam; or, Getting Personal

Peddling and Scaling God and Darwin: The Church of England and Creationism

RBSC Manuscripts Division News: Expanded Digitization of Islamic Manuscripts

Harvard University: Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments

Crova registering actinometer

Crova registering actinometer

The New York Times: The Case for Teaching Scientific Ignorance

Science Insider: How the Franco dictatorship destroyed Spanish science

The Last Word on Nothing: Story, History, Story

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Misusing Galileo to criticise the Galileo Gambit

Galileo demonstrating his astronomical theories. Climate contrarians have virtually nothing in common with Galileo. Photograph: Tarker/Tarker/Corbis

Galileo demonstrating his astronomical theories. Climate contrarians have virtually nothing in common with Galileo. Photograph: Tarker/Tarker/Corbis

The Ordered Universe Project: AHRC Funding: Ordered Universe

Anzamems Inc: Free Online Courses on the History of the Book

The Recipes Project: Exploring CPP 10a214: Anne Layfield Reading Bishop Andrewes

Roots of Unity: Gauss and Germain on Pleasure and Passion

Marie-Sophie Germain

Marie-Sophie Germain

Making Science Public: Snapshots of the unknown – some holiday souvenirs

University of Oxford: Research: The randomness of archives

Medieval Sicily: Islamic Education and the Transmission of Knowledge in Muslim Society (pdf)

The New Yorker: What is Elegance in Science

AEON: Future Perfect: Social progress, high-speed transport and electricity everywhere – how the Victorians invented the future

ESOTERIC:

MIT Library Special Collections: Faraday and Table-Talk

J. Prichard. A Few Sober Words of Table-Talk About Table-Spirits, and the Rev. N.S. Godfrey’s Incantations. 2nd ed., 1853

J. Prichard. A Few Sober Words of Table-Talk About Table-Spirits, and the Rev. N.S. Godfrey’s Incantations. 2nd ed., 1853

alphr: Parapsychology: The rise and fall of paranormal experimentation

Chemistry World: A shared secret?

academia.edu: Transmuting Sericon: Alchemy as “practical Exegesis” in Early Modern England (pdf)

BOOK REVIEWS:

The Guardian: Heroes, monsters and people: When it comes to moral choices, outstanding physicists are very ordinary

THE: Temptations in the Archives: Essays in Golden Age Dutch Culture, by Lisa Jardine

The Atlantic: Before Autism Had a Name

Refinary 29: What You Need to Know About The Hidden History of Autism

PLOS Blogs: NeuroTribes: Steve Silberman on a haunting history and new hopes for autistic people

SFARI: “Neurotribes” recovers lost history of autism

Maclean’s: Steve Siberman on autism and ‘neurodiversity’

San Francisco Chronicle: ‘NeuroTribes’ by Steve Silberman

Boston Globe: NeuroTribes: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity

Financial Review: From wild to domesticated: a history of garden evolution

A rare 18th century book containing nature prints. Getty Images

A rare 18th century book containing nature prints.
Getty Images

Big Think: Scientific Revolutions in Optics Made Vermeer a Revolutionary Painter

Science Book a Day: The Hidden Landscape: A Journey into the Geological Past

Inside Higher Ed: An End of Era?

SomeBeans: Stargazers – Copernicus, Galileo, the Telescope and the Church by Allan Chapman

Forbes: Recalling The History of Time and Navigation In The Age of GPS

The Guardian: The Meaning of Science by Tim Lewens review – can scientific knowledge be objective

Popular Science: How Not To Be Wrong – Jordan Ellenberg

Science Book a Day: Magnificent Principia: Exploring Isaac Newton’s Masterpiece

H-Environment: Drake, ‘Loving Nature, Fearing the State,’ Roundtable Review

big think: The Science of Why Nature is Beautiful to Us

Open Letters Monthly: After Nature

Financial Times: ‘The Invention of Science: A New History of the Scientific Revolution’, by David Wootton

The Guardian: Brief Candle in the Dark: My Life in Science by Richard Dawkins

The Dispersal of Darwin: Book Review, Guest Post & Giveaway: Ancient Earth Journal: The Early Cretaceous

9781633220331

The New York Times: ‘The Butterflies of North America; Titian Peale’s Lost Manuscript’

NEW BOOKS:

Royal Society: Winton Prize for Science Books

University of Chicago Press: Islam and Travel in the Middle Ages

9780226808772

OUP: The Oxford Handbook of the Bible in Early Modern England, c. 1530–1700

ART & EXHIBITIONS

University of Oklahoma: Galileo’s World: An exhibition without walls

dna india: A cartographer’s horde

Prashant Lahoti with a pilgrimage route map of Shatrunjaya, a holy site for Jains located in Palitana, Gujarat; c. 1750. The map is on display at the National Museum in Delhi Manit Balmiki dna

Prashant Lahoti with a pilgrimage route map of Shatrunjaya, a holy site for Jains located in Palitana, Gujarat; c. 1750. The map is on display at the National Museum in Delhi Manit Balmiki dna

Science Museum: Revelations: Experiments in Photography Closing Soon!

Herschel Museum of Astronomy: Waterloo and the March of Science 18 June–13 December 2015

THEATRE AND OPERA:

broadwayworld.com: Linda Purl, Brett Rickaby and Peter van Norden to lead Rubicon Theatre’s COPENHAGEN; Sets Sept Opening

Putney Theatre Company: The Effect

The Place: Touch Wood 2015: Programme 1: Goethe’s Faust from a contemporary female perspective

Noël Coward Theatre: Photograph 51

Show_Photograph51

FILMS AND EVENTS:

CHF & Lantern Theatre Company: Women in Science – Science on Stage 19 September 2015

The Ordered Universe Project: Ordered Universe at the Royal Society Public Lectures: Open House 19 September 2015

Walking Tour: Robert Hooke’s 17th Century City of London 17 September 2015

The Monument depicted in a picture by Sutton Nicholls, c. 1753. Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Monument depicted in a picture by Sutton Nicholls, c. 1753.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Science Museum: Time Travelling Operating Theatre 13 September

Discover Medical London: Walking Tour: Homes for Healing

Wellcome Collection: STT Talk: Infectious Diseases 3 September 2015

Bethlem Museum of the Mind: A Diseased Cerebellum, or a Wildness in the Face 5 September 2015

Florence Nightingale Museum: ‘Design for Living’: Life Inside the Tuberculosis Sanatorium 10 September 2015

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Carl Spitzweg – The Geologist 1860

TELEVISION:

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

George Boole 200: The Genius of Georg Boole

George Boole Source: Wikimedia Commons

George Boole
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Vimeo: Countway Objects: Dominic Hall

Ed TED: Quantum mechanics 101: Demystifying tough physics in 4 easy lessons

RADIO:

BBC Radio 4: Forty History of Ideas Animations

ARD Mediathek: Alfred Russel Wallace – Pionier in Darwins Schatten

PODCASTS:

Modern Notion: What Computers Taught Us about Genetics

Ben Franklin’s World: Adam D. Shprintzen, The Vegetarian Crusade: The Rise of the American Reform Movement

Science Friday: Writing Women Back Into Science History

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

Notches: CfP: Histories of Sexuality and Religion

University of Pennsylvania: Literary Histories of Science: Race, Gender, and Class 12–15 November 2015

Université Paris Diderot: CfP: Becoming Animal with the Victorians SFEVE Annual Conference 4–5 February 2016

sfeve-annual-conference-2016v7

BSHS: CfP: BSHS Postgraduate Conference 6–8 January 2016

University of Notre Dame: CfP: Beyond Tradition: Rethinking Early Modern Europe

The History of Emotions Blog: Conference: ‘Tears and Smiles: Medieval to Early Modern’ 7 October 2015

Medical History Workshop: Workshop: Images and Texts in Medical History National Institutes of Health campus in Bethesda Maryland April 11–13 2016

University of Sussex: International Workshop for ECRs: Call for Participants: Science, Technology and Innovation in Neglected Diseases: Policies, Funding and Knowledge Creation 17–20 November 2015

h-madness: CfP: History 6 Philosophy of Psychology Section & UK Critical Psychiatry Network Joint Conference Leeds Trinity University 22–23 March 2016

Wellcome Library: CfP: Religion and medicine Birkbeck University of London 15–16 July 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

Academic Jobs Wiki: History of Science, Technology, and Medicine 2015–2016

University of Toronto: Assistant Professor – History of Technology

BSHS: Special Project Grants



Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #08

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #08

Monday 07 September 2015

EDITORIAL:

We’re back again, one day late, but as the old cliché goes, better late than never. So here you have the latest edition of Whewell’s Gazette you weekly links list for all things #histSTM, bringing all we could scrape together from the outer reaches of cyberspace of the histories of science, technology and medicine.

Our rubric Birthday of the Week, of course, features big name scholars when there is some sort of major anniversary, which generates much Internet activity. However there are always several scholars who have birthdays in any given week and not all of them get featured in this rubric but we try to pick out ones who might not be household names but who we think deserve more public awareness.

This week’s birthday boy, John Dalton, is a perfect example of this. If one were to ask the proverbial average person on the street who Dalton was they would probably come up with something like, “didn’t he used to play for Manchester United?” Dalton was one of the founders of the modern atomic theory of matter but he also made significant contributions to a wide range of other scientific disciplines, including founding the scientific investigation of colour blindness from which he suffered himself.

Dalton remains largely unknown to the public at large but we are of the opinion that he deserves to be up there with Newton and Darwin in public awareness, as a great British scientist.

Quotes of the week:

 

Don't poo on science Caption courtesy of Jack Stilgoe (@Jackstilgoe)

Don’t poo on science
Caption courtesy of Jack Stilgoe (@Jackstilgoe)

“BoreVore: A predatory creature that paralyzes its prey by going on and on about its specialized diet. Mostly found in Industrialized West”. – @wetbinkt

“Why didn’t you eat your greens? Tell me. Why? Why?”

“Calm down. I wasn’t expecting the spinach inquisition” – Peter Broks (@peterbroks)

“You can’t go against the grain of the universe and not expect to get splinters.” – C. S. Lewis

Archive quote of the day: “…may the Lord deliver me from the Teutonic cult of pedestrian technocracy.” @librarycongress – Patrick McCray (@LeapingRobot)

“The imperfection of all our records of the past is too well known to geologists.” – A R Wallace (1879) h/t @Jamie_Woodward

Schiller Quote

Birthday of the Week:

Dalton by Charles Turner after James Lonsdale (1834, mezzotint) Source: Wikimedia Commons

Dalton by Charles Turner
after James Lonsdale
(1834, mezzotint)
Source: Wikimedia Commons

John Dalton born 6 September 1766

 Yovisto: John Dalton and the Atomic Theory

CHF: John Dalton

From Alchemy to Chemistry: Five Hundred Years of Rare and Interesting Books: Dalton, John (1766–1844) A New System of Chemical Philosophy

In the Dark: The Day of Daltonism

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

io9: Every Place We Used to Think Was a Planet (until We Knew Better)

Yovisto: Sir Bernard Lovell and the Radioastronomy

Yovisto: Hermann von Helmholtz and his Theory of Vision

Mental Floss: Meet the Woman Who Discovered the Composition of the Stars

Cecelia Payne Image Credit: Smithsonian Institution, Wikimedia Commons

Cecelia Payne
Image Credit: Smithsonian Institution, Wikimedia Commons

Physics Today: Information: From Maxwell’s demon to Landauer’s eraser

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 2 – Franz Xaver von Zach

History Physics: Carrington Event 1859

The Telegraph: The man who proved Stephen Hawking wrong

Leaping Robot: Astronomy’s History Trap

The Mountain Mystery: Newton and the Speed of Sound

Newton’s speed of sound experiment re-enacted at Trinity College, Cambridge

Newton’s speed of sound experiment re-enacted at Trinity College, Cambridge

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 3 – Carl David Anderson

Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog: Did Lawrence doubt the bomb?

AHF: Richard Tolman

AIP: Edoardo Amaldi

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

Georgian Gentleman: Let’s hear it for Louis-Antoine, Comte de Bougainville, who died on 31 August 1811

Louis-Antoine, Comte de Bougainville

Louis-Antoine, Comte de Bougainville

io9: Archaeologists Tracked Lewis and Clark by Following Their Trail of Laxatives

British Library: Maps and views blog: A Rare View of the Siege of Boston (1775–1776)

The Hakluyt Society Blog: Essay Prize Series Part 2: The Manuscript Circulation of Sir Henry Mainwaring’s ‘A Brief Extract’

Vox: All those, confusing geography terms, explained in a gorgeous antique map

pictoralchartofgeographicaldefinitions

Jstor: Livingstone’s Zambezi Expedition

Halley’s Log: Instructions for Halley’s third voyage

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Science Notes: Today in Science History – August 31 – Hermann von Helmholtz

William Savage: Pen and Pension: Eighteenth-Century Paten Medicines: Kill or Cure?

daily-advertiser-5081735

Discover: A Weapon in the Soil

Cardhouse.com: Vintage condom package design

io9: Strychnine: A Brief History of the World’s Least Subtle Poison

Thomas Morris: Worms on the pillow

The Daily Telegraph: Bubonic plague Sydney: How a city survived the black death in 1900

Rat catchers with a pile of dead vermin in Sydney in 1900. Rats were fetching up to six pence a head during the outbreak. Picture: State Library of NSW

Rat catchers with a pile of dead vermin in Sydney in 1900. Rats were fetching up to six pence a head during the outbreak.
Picture: State Library of NSW

Surgeons’ Hall Museums: Key Object Page

Royal College of Physicians: ‘My case’: Sir Augusts Frederick D’Esté

The New York Times: Endre A. Balazs, Doctor Who Found a Lubricant for Arthritic Knees, Dies at 95

John Rylands Library Special Collections Blog: Manchester Medical Manuscripts Collection

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 6 – John James Richard Macleod

TECHNOLOGY:

Conciatore: Glass Salt

Teyler’s Museum: Electric lighter with lamp

The Atlantic: The $1 Pocket Microscope

The Conversation: LOL in the age of the telegraph

An 1809 drawing of the electric telegraph. Source: Wikimedia Commons

An 1809 drawing of the electric telegraph.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Ptak Science Books: A Lot of Computer Data on One Sheet of Paper (1956)

Capitalism’s Cradle: The Great British (Industrial) Bake-Off

Yovisto: Ferdinand Porsche – Innovation as a Principle

Capitalism’s Cradle: How Norway Conquered Leviathan

Abraham Staghold, a blacksmith, won a £20 premium from the Society of Arts in 1772 for a whale harpoon to be fired from a swivel gun

Abraham Staghold, a blacksmith, won a £20 premium from the Society of Arts in 1772 for a whale harpoon to be fired from a swivel gun

The Recipes Project: Cooking (Over an Open Fire) In Class

Yovisto: John McCarthy and the Raise of Artificial Intelligence

itv News: Oldest chain bridge in the world’ to re-open in Llangollen

Capitalism’s Cradle: What have Asylum Seekers invented for Us?

Technology’s Stories: Speed!

Early Visual Media: The Stereoscope, Stereo-photography & 3D-Film

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Letters from Gondwana: “Kunstformen der Natur” (Art Forms of Nature)

Yovisto: Sergei Winogradsky and the Science of Bacteriology

Notches: Her Virginal Members: Chastity and Sexual Desire in the Middle Ages

Aelred of Rievaulx Source: Wikimedia Commons

Aelred of Rievaulx
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Atlas Obscura: Object of Intrigue: Martha, the Last Passenger Pigeon

Historian of Biology William Provine has passed away

NCSE: William B. Provine dies

Natural History Apostilles: The first source for the spinach-iron myth

UCL Museums & Collections Blog: Behind the Mask – Research in the Noel Collection

Public Domain Review: Tribal Life in Old Lyme: Canada’s Colorblind Chronicler and his Connecticut Exile

Science League of America: Huxley’s Paley, Part 1

Yovisto: Max Delbrück and the Genes

Notches: Race, Class, and Sex Education in Early Twentieth-Century South Africa

Royal Historical Society: Joanne Baily ‘Manly bodies in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century England’

Forbes: What Archaeologists Really Think About Ancient Aliens, Lost Colonies, and Fingerprints of God

Native American pictograph (painted rock art) from a panel of images found in Horseshoe/Barrier Canyon, Canyonlands National Park, Utah. (Image via wikimedia commons user Scott Catron, used under a CC BY-SA 3.0 license.)

Native American pictograph (painted rock art) from a panel of images found in Horseshoe/Barrier Canyon, Canyonlands National Park, Utah. (Image via wikimedia commons user Scott Catron, used under a CC BY-SA 3.0 license.)

NCSE: Eric Davidson dies

Bodleian: Marks of Genius: Micrographia

Latintos: Connecting with Alfred Russel Wallace

Mammoth Tales: Mammoths in the News

Making Science Public: Climate wars

Medievalist.net: Pets in the Middle Ages: Evidence from Encyclopedias and Dictionaries

Skulls in the Stars: Spiders and the electric light (1887)

Embryo Project: “The Origin and Behavior of Mutable Loci in Maize” (1950), By Barbara McClintock

CHEMISTRY:

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 1 – Carl Auer von Welsbach

The University of Glasgow Story: Frederick Soddy

Yovisto: Wilhelm Ostwald and Modern Physical Chemistry

The Guardian: Toxic Shock: Agatha Christie’s poisons

Christie's toxic tally tops 30 killer compounds, which she uses in a staggering array of creative methods for murder. Photograph: Alamy

Christie’s toxic tally tops 30 killer compounds, which she uses in a staggering array of creative methods for murder. Photograph: Alamy

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

JHI Blog: Is There a Philosophy of History Today?

The Recipes Project: Teaching Recipes: A September Series (Vol. II)

Londonis.com: The Geek Goddess of London

Dr Sue Black (photo shared via creative commons).

Dr Sue Black (photo shared via creative commons).

Scientific American: Cross-Check: Copernicus, Darwin and Freud: A Tale of Science and Narcissism

John Rylands Library Special Collections Blog: Manchester Medical Manuscripts Collection

the many-headed monster: The job market for historians: some data, 1995–2014

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Aristocrats and paupers, farmers and tradesmen –

Where do the scientists come from?

The Atlantic: Introducing the Archive Corps

Countway Library of Medicine: The Archives for Women in Science

first_class_small_caption2

University of Leiden: Free Academic Images

MPIHOS: Records of Reception: Framing Knowledge on Asian Art in Early Modern Inventories

MPIHOS: Cabinetizing Art and Knowledge in Early Modern Northern Europe

The #EnvHist Weekly

Medieval Books: Medieval Posters

The H-Word: Britain’s most important historic laboratory is under threat

An early photograph of James Clerk Maxwell’s original Cavendish Laboratory (built 1874). A large archway is due to be knocked through the ground floor of the right-hand wing. From: A History of the Cavendish Laboratory (1910). Photograph: A History of the Cavendish Laboratory (1910)

An early photograph of James Clerk Maxwell’s original Cavendish Laboratory (built 1874). A large archway is due to be knocked through the ground floor of the right-hand wing. From: A History of the Cavendish Laboratory (1910). Photograph: A History of the Cavendish Laboratory (1910)

The Renaissance Mathematicus: The Internet and the history of science community

NYAM: Do You Recognize These Men? Help Us Identify 19th-century Carte de Visite Photographs

Doc Searls Weblog: Everything we know is provisional

ESOTERIC:

Conciatore: The Dregs

Conciatore: Alchemy in the Kitchen

Tesoro del Mondo,

Tesoro del Mondo, “Ars Preparatio Animalium”
Antonio Neri 1598-1600, f. 10r (MS Ferguson 67).

BOOK REVIEWS:

Forbes: God as Ultimate Artist: Frank Wilczek’s Beautiful Question

Bryn Mawr Classical Review: Emily Albu, The Medieval Peutinger Map: Imperial Roman Revival in a German Empire

Tabula Peutingeriana (section)—top to bottom: Dalmatian coast, Adriatic Sea, southern Italy, Sicily, African Mediterranean coast Source: Wikimedia Commons

Tabula Peutingeriana (section)—top to bottom: Dalmatian coast, Adriatic Sea, southern Italy, Sicily, African Mediterranean coast
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Financial Times: ‘The Invention of Science: A New History of the Scientific Revolution’, by David Wootton

Phys Org: What has science ever done for us?

Biographile: Interconnected Worldview Traced to Source in The Invention of Nature

New Scientist: The Invention of Nature find’s science’s lost hero

Humboldt’s trip to South America inspired Darwin to join the Beagle (Image: BPK/SPSG, Berlin-Brandenburg/Hermann Buresch)

Humboldt’s trip to South America inspired Darwin to join the Beagle (Image: BPK/SPSG, Berlin-Brandenburg/Hermann Buresch)

Kirkus: The Hunt for Vulcan …And How Albert Einstein Destroyed a Planet, Discovered Relativity, and Deciphered the Universe

9780812998986

Kirkus: The Planet Remade: How Geoengineering Could Change the World

homunculus: Nature: the biography

NEW BOOKS:

University of Chicago Press: The Territories of Science and Religion

Harvard University Press: The Global Transformation of Time

9780674286146

M Libraries: Digital Conservancy: ‘Many paths to partial truth:’ archives, anthropology, and the power of representation

Armand Colin: Paul Bert… L’inventeur de l’école laïque

Springer: Theory and Practice in the Bioarchaeology of Care

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Royal College of Physicians: Exhibition: Scholar, courtier, magician: the lost library of John Dee January–July 2016

The British Museum: A Walk on the Wild Side Tunbridge Wells Museum 12 June–20 September 2015 Last Chance!

walk_on_the_wild_side_304x431

Dundee Science Centre: Nature’s Equations: D’Arcy Thompson and the Beauty of Mathematics

Museum of the Mind: The Maudsley at War: The Story of the Hospital During the Great War Closes 24 September!

THEATRE AND OPERA:

Wallifaction: Alchemy and Avarice: Scientific and Religious Fraud in Ben Jonson’s “The Alchemist” (1610)

Stephen Ouimette at Subtle, the pseudo-alchemist, in the 2015 production at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival.

Stephen Ouimette at Subtle, the pseudo-alchemist, in the 2015 production at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival.

Stratford Festival: The Alchemist 1 August–3 October

The Guardian: Nicole Kidman: ‘You’re still fighting for your voice in a world that can be male-dominated’

Noël Coward Theatre: Photo 51 Bookings to 21 November 2015

National Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time 7 September 2015–13 February 2016

FILMS AND EVENTS:

The Genius of George Boole

Public Domain Review: Jacob Sarnoff and the Strange World of Anatomical Filmmaking

A still from the film showing the day old infant’s veins mounted on a board.

A still from the film showing the day old infant’s veins mounted on a board.

Discover Medical London: Walking Tours: London’s Plagues

The Royal Society: Event: Dating species divergence using rocks and clocks 9–10 November 2015

The Royal Society: Where were the women boffins? 20 September 2015

APS Museum: Event: The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt’s New World 17 September 2015

British Photographic History: Symposium: Beyond Vision: Art, Photography and Science 12 September 2015

British Science Festival: How chemistry saved the Caribbean after WWII 10 September 2015

University of Bradford: Love and War: The Mathematical Way 10 September 2015

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

L0007159 Dispensing of medical electricity. Oil painting by Edmund Br Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images images@wellcome.ac.uk http://wellcomeimages.org Dispensing of medical electricity. Oil painting by Edmund Bristow, 1824. Oil 1824 By: Edmund BristowPublished: - Copyrighted work available under Creative Commons Attribution only licence CC BY 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

L0007159 Dispensing of medical electricity. Oil painting by Edmund Br
Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images
images@wellcome.ac.uk
http://wellcomeimages.org
Dispensing of medical electricity. Oil painting by Edmund Bristow, 1824.
Oil
1824 By: Edmund BristowPublished: –
Copyrighted work available under Creative Commons Attribution only licence CC BY 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

 TELEVISION:

BBC Four: Calculating Ada: The Countess of Computing

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Museo Galileo: Galileo’s trial

Vimeo: Genius of George Boole – Graphics Reel

Youtube: Durham University: The Importance of our own Past: Research at Durham University

Youtube: Royal Society: Objectivity #34 – Pearl of Wisdom

Center for the History of Medicine: Voices from the Archives

Synthtopia: An Introduction to the Mellotron (1965)

RADIO:

Radio New Zealand: National: Cracking the Genetic Code

PODCASTS:

History of Alchemy: First 3 minutes of History of Alchemy E01

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

History of Emotions: CfP: Emotions: Movement, Cultural Contact and Exchange, 1100­1800 Freie Universität Berlin 30 June–2 July 2016

Medical History Workshop: Images and Texts in Medical History National Institutes of Health campus in Bethesda Maryland 11–13 April 2016

University of Glasgow Dissecting the Page: Medical Paratexts Schedule 11 September 2015

History of Medicine in Ireland: CHOMI Seminar Series Semester One 2015–2016

St Anne’s College Oxford: CfP: Scientiae Oxford 2016 Disciplines of knowing in the early modern world (roughly 1400-1800) 5–7 July 2016

British Library: Lecture: A 17th Century Revolution 2 November 2015

University of London, Birkbeck: CfP: Religion and Medicine: Healing the Body and Soul from the Middle Ages to the Modern Day 15–16 July 2016

American Association for the History of Medicine: CfP: AAHM Annual Meeting Minneapolis, Minnesota 28 April–1 May 2016

University of London: Institute of Historical Research: Trade, Discovery and Influences in the History of Herbal Medicine 14 October 2015

The British Society for Literature and Science: CfP: BLSL Winter Symposium: Science in the Archives Museum of English Rural Life and University of Reading’s Special Collections, 14 November 2015

University of Plymouth: CfP: 3-day Conference: Gender, Power, and Materiality in Early Modern Europe, 1500–1800 7–9 April 2016

Notches: CfP: Histories of Asian/Asian American Sexualities

the daily: How has midwifery, child birth changed throughout history? Find out at Dittrick Museum of Medical History event 24 September 2015

Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci, Milan: Scientific Heritage at World Exhibitions and Beyond. The Long XXth Century 20-22 September 2015

Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis: CfP: The History of Science and Contemporary Scientific Realism 19-21 February 2016

British Library: Lecture: The Mapping of Cyprus 1485–1885 25 September 2015

cyprus-1566-parijs-sebastian-25-sep

SocPhilSciPract: CfP Metasciences: New Trends in Metaphysics of Science Paris 16–18 December 2015

SHARP 2016 Panel: CfP: The Languages of the Medical Book Paris 18-21 July

University of Cambridge: CRASSH: The Matter of Mimesis 17–18 December 2015

Notches: CfP: Histories of Sexuality and Religion

Leopoldina: Die Ordnungen der Dinge 5–7 October 2015

Canadian Journal of History Special Issue: CfP: The Early Modern Military-Medical Complex

Historiens de la santé: CfP: Medicine and Manuscripts 900–1150 Kalamazoo 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

Aarhus University: Postdoc position (2 years): Histories of thought experiments

HSS: NSF-Funded Travel Grants for 2015 HSS Meeting Deadline 30 September!

University of Edinburgh: European Research Council PhD Studentship: Philosophy of Science

Natual Reserve System: University of California: ISEECI Postdoctoral Fellowship in California Ecological and/or Environmental History

Danish Council for Independent Research: Intuitions in Science and Philosophy 2 Postdocs and I PhD Student

Yale University: Senior Tenured Appointment History of Science

Washington University: Assistant Professor History of Medicine

Purdue University: R. Mark Lubbers Chair in the History of Science

Society for Renaissance Studies: Conference Grants

SocPhilSciPract: University of Geneva: PhD Position in Philosophy of Physics or Philosophy of Science

AHF: Fall 2015 Intern

University of Pittsburgh: Associate/Full Professor of History and Philosophy of Science


Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #09

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #09

Monday 14 September 2015

EDITORIAL:

It seems that we have just finished posting one edition of Whewell’s Gazette your weekly #histSTM links list when another one comes steaming full tilt around the corner carrying with it the best of the histories of science, technology and medicine that it could pick up in the last seven days in the Internet.

In recent times there has been much news in the science journals about the reproducibility of experimental results or rather the failure to reproduce them. A lot of these reports seem to think that this is a modern phenomenon caused by whatever bogey man that the writer has chosen to hang the blame on. However if these science writers had a better grounding in the history of science they would realise that this problem has been around since people have been doing science.

There have been both cases of genuine discoveries that contemporaries failed to confirm in their attempts to repeat the experiments and cases of discoveries that weren’t discoveries at all.

Just to take a couple of cases from the seventeenth century. Newton was attacked from all sides when he first announced his discovery that white light was actually a mixture of the whole colour spectrum. Much of that criticism was based on theoretical grounds but some of it was that others failed to obtain his results when repeating his prism experiments. In this case the blame lay on the poor quality of the glass prisms available but it did delay the acceptance of his theory considerably.

Earlier in the century many ‘discoveries’ were made and published with the new telescope that other observers were completely unable to confirm. This missing confirmation was because the discoveries weren’t discoveries at all but optical illusions caused by various factors. Francesco Fontana, a noted constructor of telescopes, even published a whole book of such discoveries, his Novae coelestium terrestriumq[ue] rerum observationes, et fortasse hactenus non vulgatae from 1645.

The progress of science is never smooth but proceeds by fits and starts.

Quotes of the week:

“In other words, don’t continually re-invent the wheel, use the tools that are already out there…” – Sophia Collins (@sophiacol)

I do not wish them [women] to have power over men; but over themselves.” – Mary Wollstonecraft

“Striking that in her 1953 Nature article, Franklin thanks Crick, Wilkins and Stokes “for discussion”, but *not* Watson”. – Matthew Cobb (@matthewcobb)

“’I’ve been a very bad girl,’ she said, biting her lip. ‘I need to be punished.’

‘Very well,’ he said and installed Windows 10 on her laptop”. – @50NerdsofGrey

“The duty we owe to history is to rewrite it.” – Oscar Wilde

“Writing is nature’s way of letting you know how sloppy your thinking is.” – Guindon

“Math is nature’s way of letting you know how sloppy your writing is.” – Leslie Lamport

“Formal math is nature’s way of letting you know how sloppy your math is.” – Leslie Lamport h/t @JohnDCook

“Algebra is the offer made by the devil to the mathematician. The devil says: I will give you this powerful machine, it will answer any question you like. All you need to do is give me your soul: give up geometry and you will have this marvellous machine”. —Sir Michael Atiyah, 2002 h/t @divbyzero

“Let me never fall into the vulgar mistake of dreaming that I am persecuted whenever I am contradicted”. – Ralph Waldo Emerson h/@Fayway

Birthdays of the Week:

Jacque Boucher de Crèvecoeur de Parthes born 10 September 1788

Boucher de Perthes Source: Wikimedia Commons

Boucher de Perthes
Source: Wikimedia Commons

 

Yovisto: Jacques de Perthes and European Archaeology

Encyclopaedia Britannica: Jacque Boucher de Perthes

August Kekulé born 7 September 1829

KK Stamp 

Science Notes: Today in Science Histoy –September 7 – August Kekulé

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Yovisto: James van Allen and the Weather in Space

Yovisto: Edward Appleton and the Ionosphere

The Washington Post: Richard G. Hewlett

Verso: Women Computing the Stars

Unidentified women and men standing outside the Mount Wilson Observatory’s Pasadena office, where women computers made the calculations necessary to answer some of the most profound questions in the field of astronomy during the early part of the 20th century. Detail from a photo taken on April 14, 1917, by an unknown photographer. The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens.

Unidentified women and men standing outside the Mount Wilson Observatory’s Pasadena office, where women computers made the calculations necessary to answer some of the most profound questions in the field of astronomy during the early part of the 20th century. Detail from a photo taken on April 14, 1917, by an unknown photographer. The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens.

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Leroy Jackson and Ernest Wende’s Interview

Astronomical Society of the Pacific: Women in Astronomy: An Introductory Resource Guide

Voices of the Manhattan Project: David Hall’s Interview

ABC News: The old Perth observatory: From isolated weather station to centre of history

AIP: Arthur Holly Compton 1892–1962

AIP: Betty Compton – Session I

Corpus Newtonicum: Newton, the Man or: of valuable lists and juicy quotes

about education: J.J. Thomson Biography

Voices of the Manhattan Project: John W. Healy’s Interview

History NASA: Emblems of Exploration (pdf)

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 11 – Harvey Fletcher

Yovisto: Irène Joliot-Curie and Artificial Radioactivity

Irène and Marie Curie Source: Wikimedia Commons

Irène and Marie Curie
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Highbrow: Leó Szilárd

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 12 – Moon

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

Royal Museums Greenwich: Looking across the Atlantic in 18th-century maps

in propria persona: On the legal basis for English possession of North America

Halley’s Log: Halley writes from Dartmouth

Halley’s Log: Paramore pink at Spithead

Chart of Spithead by William Heather, 1797; Spithead is the channel north-east of the Isle of Wight (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Chart of Spithead by William Heather, 1797; Spithead is the channel north-east of the Isle of Wight (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

Yovisto: Henry Hudson’s Voyages in North America

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Public Health: Worldly approaches to global health: 1851 to the present

Remedia: Showing the Instruments: Vesalius and the Tools of Surgery and Anatomy

Andreas Vesalius, De humani corporis fabrica, Instruments (© National Library of Medicine).

Andreas Vesalius, De humani corporis fabrica, Instruments (© National Library of Medicine).

University of Glasgow Library: Pox, pustules and pestilence ­ A history of syphilis treatment

BBC: Silicon Valley’s 91-year-old designer

Thomas Morris: A 19th-century doctor’s guide to etiquette

Thomas Morris: Do no harm – unless it’s a criminal

Center for the History of Medicine: On View: Post-mortem set in wooden case, 1860–1880

Yovisto: Marthe Louise Vogt and the Neurotransmitters

Marthe Louise Vogt

Marthe Louise Vogt

Yovisto: Bernard Siegfried Albinus and his Anatomic Works

Slate: Phineas Gage, Neuroscience’s Most Famous Patient

Yovisto: Thomas Sydenham – the English Hippocrates

Thomas Morris: The self-inflicted lithotomy

Academia: When foods became remedies in ancient Greece: The curious case of garlic and other substances

Center for the History of Medicine: Oral History: Carola Eisenberg

Center for the History of Medicine: Anne Pappenheimer Forbes

Photograph of Anne Pappenheimer Forbes, M.D. 1962

Photograph of Anne Pappenheimer Forbes, M.D.
1962

io9: Early Forensics Helped Solve England’s Gruesome “Jigsaw Murders” Case

A Covent Garden Gilflurt’s Guide to Life: A Gruesome Tale of Self-Surgery

Yovisto: Phineas Gage’s Accident and the Science of the Mind and the Brain

TECHNOLOGY:

Science & Society: Picture Library: Johnson the First Rider on the Pedestrian Hobbyhorse, 1819

Visualising Late Antiquity: Going Down the Drain in Late Antiquity

Trans Newcomen Soc: Humphrey Gainsborough (1718–1776) Cleric Engineer and Inventor (pdf)

Medium: Close at Hand: A Pocket History of Technology

Georgian Gentleman: When cotton was king… a visit to Quarry Bank Mill

4-yarn-1024x768

Conciatore: A Very Good Run

James S. Huggins’ Refrigerator Door: First Computer Bug

Science Notes: September 9 – Today in Science History – First Computer Bug

Dark Roasted Blend: Antique Digital Calculators & Other Steampunk Gear

Yovisto: Émile Baudot and his Telegraph

Yovisto:Harvey Fletcher – the Father of Stereophonic Sound

Zen Pencils: Robert Goddard

Jalopnik: That Victorian-Living Couple is Just Playing Dress-up Until They Get A Real Victorian Car

1426322138171749005

Nautilus: This Used To Be the Future

Science Notes: Storm Glass Barometer Pendant Instructions

The Guardian: Battle to save historic rail line that heralded the age of science

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Yovisto: Comte de Buffon and his Histoire Naturelle

Notches: Women’s Experiences in Fornication and Paternity Suits in Massachusetts, 1740–1800

Archaeodeath: The Dead at the Hunterian

Medievalist.net: Ten Strange Medieval Ideas about Animals

University of Cambridge: Research: What is a monster?

150810-6.-monster-of-cracow

Smithsonian: NMNH: Unassuming Octocoral Collected over 55 Years Ago Found to be New Genus and Species

The Plate: Contrary to Popular Belief, the Modern Pig has Many Parents

ars technica uk: Scientific Method/Science & Exploration: Humans aren’t so special after all: The Fuzzy evolutionary boundaries of Homo Sapiens

Ellen Hutchins: Ireland’s First Female Botanist

AMNH: Green Frogs Mating & Frog Dissection

Penn Biographies: Joseph Leidy (1823–1891)

Letters from Gondwana: The Legacy of Ulisse Aldrovani

Yovisto: Luigi Galvani’s Discoveries in Bioelectricity

Mirror: Charles Darwin confessed his atheism in a private letter which has gone up for auction

NMNH: Human Family Tree

Trowelblazers: Rising Star Trowelblazers

Powered by Osteons: Who needs an osteologist? (Installment 29)

Embryo Project: Stephen Jay Gould (1941–2002)

Audubon: Sketch: The Oilbird: Is This Thing Even a Bird

AMNH: Wonderful World of Wasp Nests

Smithsonian.com: Four Species of Homo You’ve Never Heard Of

The Atlantic: 6 Tiny Cavers, 15 Odd Skeletons, and 1 Amazing New Species of Ancient Human

Hyperallergic: A 17th-Century Woman Artist’s Butterfly Journey

Maria Sibylla Merian, Plate 49 from ‘Metamorphosis Insectorum Surinamensium’ (1705) (courtesy Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg, Frankfurt)

Maria Sibylla Merian, Plate 49 from ‘Metamorphosis Insectorum Surinamensium’ (1705) (courtesy Universitätsbibliothek Johann Christian Senckenberg, Frankfurt)

Anita Guerrini: History, animals, science, food: The biologist in the ashram (with a walk-on by Harpo Marx)

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 13 – Hans Christian Joachim Gram

CHEMISTRY:

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 8 – Willard Frank Libby

CHF: Prototype for the Perkin-Elmer Model 12 Infrared Spectrophotometer

Science Notes: September 10 – Today in Science History – Waldo Semon

Waldo Semon – Discovered plasticized PVC or vinyl. Credit: Washington University Chemical Engineering Department

Waldo Semon – Discovered plasticized PVC or vinyl. Credit: Washington University Chemical Engineering Department

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Communication of the ACM: Innovators Assemble: Ada Lovelace, Walter Isaacson, and the Superheroines of Computing

Double Refraction: Histories of science as murder mysteries, or: Steven Weinberg as Henning Mankell

Inside the Science Museum: From Moscow to the Museum

The Recipes Project: First Monday Library Chat: National Library of Scotland

The #EnvHist Weekly

The Recipes Project: Giving Welsh Pupils a Flavour of Antiquity

Technologies of Daily Life: Schools Day. Image courtesy of Evelien Bracke.

Technologies of Daily Life: Schools Day. Image courtesy of Evelien Bracke.

Springer Link: History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences: Special Issue: Experimentation in Twentieth-Century Agricultural Science Contents Page

Niche: Cultivation

William Savage: Pen and Pension: Censoring History

Prospect: Science is fallible, just like us

JHI Blog: Global Microhistory: One or Two Things That I Know About It

CHoM News: Follow us on Twitter and Instagram @HarvardHistMed

Fiction Reboot: Daily Dose: The Act of Becoming: History and Process

The Newsstand: Clemson professor delving into the foundation of scientific philosophy

Stanford News: After 20 years, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy thrives on the web

The Recipes Project: History Bound Up in Every Bite: Food, Environment, and Recipes in the Western Civ Survey

Double Refraction: Lorraine Daston on history as fiction – critical thoughts

Nautilus: Why Futurism Has a Cultural Blindspot

Concocting History: A perfume of Syria

Second century Roman glass. Some of these bottles may have contained perfume. Source: Wikipedia.

Second century Roman glass. Some of these bottles may have contained perfume. Source: Wikipedia.

Six Degrees of Francis Bacon: Reassembling the early modern social network

Early Modern Experimental Philosophy: Leibniz’s early reflections on natural history and experiment

ESOTERIC:

Conciatore: Don Giovanni

Don Giovanni di Cosimo I de' Medici

Don Giovanni di Cosimo I de’ Medici

Academia: Court Astrologers and Historical Writing in Early Abbasid Baghdad: An Appraisal (pdf)

Enchanted History: New Blog on Witchcraft in Early Modern England and Beyond

UCL: Museums & Collections Blog: Robert Noel and the ‘Science’ of Phrenology

Conciatore: Stonework

BOOK REVIEWS:

The New Rambler: Sleight of Hand

Nature: Genetics: Dawkins, redux

The History of Emotions Blog: History in British Tears

Popular Science: A is for Arsenic – Kathryn Harkup

THE: The Invention of Science: A New History of the Scientific Revolution, by David Wootton

New Books008

Review 31: Against Nature Sex Addiction: A Critical History

The Spectator: Did Hans Asperger save children from the Nazis – or sell them out?

homunculus: Nature: the biography

Forbes: Ancient Guides, Ancient Science, And A Virtual Academy For Idlers

NEW BOOKS:

Historiens de la santé: Mental health nursing: The working lives of paid carers, 1800s–1900s

Colossal: New Japanese Paper Notebooks Featuring Vintage Science Illustrations Merged with Hand-embroidery

notebooks-3

University of Chicago Press: Making “Nature” The History of a Scientific Journal

Historiens de la santé: A History of Male Psychological Disorders in Britain, 1945–1980

Historiens de la santé: Cultural Politics of Hygiene in India, 1890–1940: Contagions of Feeling

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Mystic Seaport – The Museum of America and the Sea: Ships Clocks & Stars 19 September 2015–28 March 2016

Captain James Cook (1728-1779), by William Hodges. Cook relied on chronometers in his later voyages. Image courtesy National Maritime Museum.

Captain James Cook (1728-1779), by William Hodges. Cook relied on chronometers in his later voyages. Image courtesy National Maritime Museum.

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age Opens 18 September 2015

Royal Society: Seeing Closer: 350 years of microscopy 29 June–23 November 2015

Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War 4 Weeks Till Exhibition Closes!

THEATRE AND OPERA:

The Guardian: Nicole Kidman admits to nerves before stage return in Photograph 51

Buxton Opera House: The Trials of Galileo 21 September – International Tour: March 2014–December 2017

galileo

FILMS AND EVENTS:

ICCESS: The Time Travelling Operating Theatre

L0001839 A surgical operation being performed, circa 1900. Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images images@wellcome.ac.uk http://wellcomeimages.org A surgical operation being performed by W.G. Spencer and others at the Westminster Hospital, London. Photograph circa 1900 Broadway Published: 1900

L0001839 A surgical operation being performed, circa 1900.
Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images
images@wellcome.ac.uk
http://wellcomeimages.org
A surgical operation being performed by W.G. Spencer and others at the Westminster Hospital, London.
Photograph
circa 1900 Broadway
Published: 1900

Royal Asiatic Society: Brian Houghton Hodgson Study Day 26 September 2015

Philly Voice: Games & debate abound at Women in Science event 19 September 2015

BBC: Steve Wozniak: Shocked and amazed by Steve Jobs movie

Royal Society: Open House Weekend 2015 19–20 September

Oxford Playhouse: Charles Simonyi Lecture: Putting the Higgs Boson in its Place

Westminster Arts Library: London Plague: Sick City 24 September 2015

The Heritage Alliance: The H word: ‘heritage’ revisited

Royal Society: Hooke’s microscopic world 19 September 2015

Royal Society: Scientific conflict through the ages 20 September 2015

Royal Society: Darwin and the evolution of emotion 19 September 2015

Royal Society: A 13th century theory of everything 19 September 2015

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Galileo before the Holy Office, by Joseph-Nicolas Robert-Fleury

Galileo before the Holy Office, by Joseph-Nicolas Robert-Fleury

TELEVISION:

pbs: NOVA: Dawn of Humanity

AHF: Manhattan: Season One Recaps

SLIDE SHOW:

Scientific American: Good and Bad Inventions from 1865

Diving Mask An inventor in Braddock's Field, Penn, added a simple valve to the mouthpiece for exhaling and inhaling air.

Diving Mask An inventor in Braddock’s Field, Penn, added a simple valve to the mouthpiece for exhaling and inhaling air.

VIDEOS:

History of Alchemy Podcast Presents: Rudolf Two Trippin Cam

Youtube: Podcastnik: History of Alchemy Episode 1: Introduction

CHF: Making and Knowing (fake) Coral

Wikimedia Commons: How to edit Wikipedia – RSC series – Andy Mabbett

Youtube: BSHS Plenary Lecture: Iwan Morus Wales, science and Welsh science

Youtube: Anna Ziegler talks about writing Rosalind Franklin for ‘Photograph 51’

Vimeo: Train Journeys in to Manchester in 1850

Youtube: Berkeley Lab Founder Ernest O. Lawrence Demonstrates the Cyclotron Concept

RADIO:

BBC World Service: Discovery: Death of a Physicist

BBC Radio 4: An Eye for Pattern: The Letters of Dorothy Hodgkin

Molecular model of penicillin by Dorothy Hodgkin, c. 1945 Source: Wikimedia Commons

Molecular model of penicillin by Dorothy Hodgkin, c. 1945
Source: Wikimedia Commons

BBC Radio 4: Computing Britain

PODCASTS:

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

University of Warwick: CfP: Shaping the Shelf: Print culture and the construction of collective identity (1460–1660) 5 March 2016

Royal Society: Open House: #histsci lectures 19-20 September 2015

University of Durham: Where Science and Society Meet 23–24 September 2015

CHF: Brown Bag Lectures Fall 2015

Image: Wikimedia Commons

Image: Wikimedia Commons

Werkgroep 18e eeuw: CfP: Flavours of the Eighteenth Century Brussels 10-11 March 2016

SSHM: CfP: Religion and Medicine: Healing the Body and Soul from the Middle Ages to the Modern Day Birckbeck College 15-16 July 2016

St John’s College Oxford: Architecture and Experience in the Nineteenth Century 17–18 March 2016

Spinoza Research Newtwork: CfP: Life and Death in Early Modern Philosophy Birckbeck College 14–16 April 2016

Edmonton, Alberta, Canada: CfP: Eighth Joint Meeting BSHS, CSHPS, and HSS 22–25 June 2016

Durham University: CN-CS: CfP: One day Conference: Victorian Culture and the Origin of Disciplines 12 March 2016

International Cartographical Association: Announcement of the 1st International Workshop on the Origin and Evolution of Portolan Lisbon, Portugal Charts 5-6 June 2016

Wellcome Library Blog: History of Pre-Modern Medicine seminar series 2015–2016

National Maritime Museum Greenwich: CfP: From Sea to Sky: the Evolution of Air Navigation from the Ocean and Beyond 10 June 2016

Institute of Welsh Maritime Historical Studies: 7th Annual Conference of MOROL 31 October 2015

National Maritime Museum: Maritime History and Culture Seminars 2015–16

Leipzig & Hannover: Leibniz Summer School 7–16 July 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

University of Uppsala: 1-2 Ph.D. positions in History of Science and Ideas linked to the research programme “Medicine at the Borders of Life: Foetal Research and the Emergence of Ethical Controversy in Sweden”

University of Uppsala: 1-2 Postdoctoral positions in History of Science and Ideas linked to the research programme “Medicine at the Borders of Life: Foetal Research and the Emergence of Ethical Controversy in Sweden”

HSS: Dependent Care Grant Application – 2015 Meeting

Norwegian University of Science and Technology: PhD Positions at the NTNU, Faculty of Humanities

University of Vienna: 1 Doctoral Student Position & 6 Associate Positions The Sciences in Historical, Philosophical and Cultural Contexts

South East DTC: ESRC Postgraduate Funding


Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #10

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #10

Monday 21 September 2015

EDITORIAL:

Another seven days have slipped by and once again it’s time for Whewell’s Gazette the weekly #histSTM links list bringing its eager readers the best from the last seven days of the histories of science, technology and medicine swept up from the distance corners of cyberspace for their perusal and delectation.

The history of science theatre event of the year is without any doubt Nicole Kidman making a rare appearance on the London stage as Rosalind Franklin in “Photograph 51”. Unfortunately the play, which is not new, perpetuates a major history of science myth in its very title. The myth says that Maurice Wilkins showed Franklin’s x-ray crystallography photograph 51 of DNA to James Watson without her permission and he was able to solve the structure of DNA upon seeing it.

As Matthew Cobb has clearly shown in his new book Life’s Great Secret nearly everything in this story is false. Photograph 51 was not made by Franklin but by Raymond Gosling who had been Wilkins’ doctoral student, was then transferred to Franklin and then back to Wilkins’ as Franklin decided to leave the King’s College laboratory. At the time Wilkins showed the photo to Watson he was Gosling’s doctoral supervisor and so was perfectly entitled to do so, although whether he was wise to do so is another question. More important despite the claims he made in his book, The Double Helix, Watson would not have been able to determine the structure of DNA from this photo.

More interestingly it was Crick who actually derived the structure of DNA using, amongst other things, data from Franklin’s work that she herself had made public in a lecture that Crick attended.

It is interesting to see how the critics reacted to this new historical information. In her review in the Telegraph Kate Mulcahy claims that “The debate rages on” whilst at the same time linking to Cobb’s earlier Guardian article laying out the true facts; in my opinion more than somewhat disingenuous. In his excellent review in the Guardian, Stephen Curry points out that “the real story is…more complex” (with reference to the use of Photograph 51) whilst linking in a footnote to the Cobb article with the comment. Matthew Cobb’s recent article gives an efficient summary of the facts of the matter”.

Whatever it would appear from the review that the piece is well worth going to see.

Noël Coward Theatre: Photograph 51 Till 21 November 2015

Nicole Kidman as Rosalind Franklin Photograph: Johan Persson/Johan Persson Source: The Guardian

Nicole Kidman as Rosalind Franklin Photograph: Johan Persson/Johan Persson
Source: The Guardian

The New York Times: In ‘Photograph 51’, Nicole Kidman Is a Steely DNA Scientist

The Telegraph: Rosalind Franklin should be a feminist icon – we women in science need her more than ever

The Guardian: Photograph 51: how do you bring science to the stage?

New Scientist: Photograph 51: Inside the race to understand DNA

Quotes of the week:

“Genius and science have burst the limits of space, and few observations, explained by just reasoning, have unveiled the mechanism of the universe. Would it not also be glorious for men to burst the limits of time, and, by a few observations, to ascertain the history of this world, and the series of events which preceded the birth of the human race?” – Georges Cuvier h/t @hist_astro

“Every book is the wreck of a perfect idea.” – Iris Murdoch h/t @askpang

“In the UK we call them lifts but in the US they call them elevators, because we’re raised differently”. – Moose Allain (@MooseAllain)

“Does anyone know what the smallest number is that can’t be described in a single tweet?” – Guy Longworth (@GuyLongworth)

Ding dong dell

Pussy’s in the well

Who put her in?

Schrödinger, Erwin

What is her state?

Indeterminate – Matthew Hankins (@mc_hankins)

He was very careful during bondage sessions. He always used a safe word that contained upper and lower case letters and at least one number. – @50Nerds of Grey

[History] does not use induction or deduction, it does not demonstrate, it narrates. —Collingwood discussing Croce. h/t @gabridli

Birthday of the Week:

John Goodricke born 17 September 1764

 goodricke_john1

Yovisto: John Goodricke and the Variable Star Persei

teleskopos: Sights and sounds: darkness and silence

Alexander von Humboldt born 14 September 1769

Portrait of Alexander von Humboldt by Friedrich Georg Weitsch, 1806 Source: Wikimedia Commons

Portrait of Alexander von Humboldt by Friedrich Georg Weitsch, 1806
Source: Wikimedia Commons

New Scientist: The Invention of Nature finds science’s lost hero

National Geographic: Why Is the Man Who Predicted Climate Change Forgotten?

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Inside the Science Museum: Russia’s 19th century cosmic pioneers

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 14 – Charles François de Cisternay du Fay

Charles François de Cisternay du Fay Source: Wikimedia Commons

Charles François de Cisternay du Fay
Source: Wikimedia Commons

arXiv: 100 Years of General Relativity (pdf)

Scientific American: Guest Blog: Paris: City of lights and cosmic rays

AIP: Murray Gell-Mann

New Science Theory: William Gilbert On The Magnet (Full text English New Translation)

Forbes: New Evidence The Nazis Didn’t Come close to the Bomb

Starts with a Bang: Maxwell’s Unification Revolution

World Digital Library: Explanation of the Telescope

journals.cambridge.org: Connecting Heaven and Man: The role of astronomy in ancient Chinese society and culture

The Timaru Herald: Big telescope with an even bigger history to be restored in Fairlie

The historic Brashear telescope will be the centrepiece of the new Astronomy Centre built by Earth and Sky near the shore of Lake Tekapo. Source: The Timaru Herald

The historic Brashear telescope will be the centrepiece of the new Astronomy Centre built by Earth and Sky near the shore of Lake Tekapo.
Source: The Timaru Herald

In the Dark: A Botanic Garden of Planets

guff: Einstein’s Amazing Scientific Contemporaries That Changed the World

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

BuzzFeed News: The Wreck of HMS Erebus: How a Landmark Discovery Triggered a Fight for Canada’s History

Scientific Data: Roads and cities of 18th century France

PBA Galleries: The Warren Heckrotte Collection of Rare Cartography

Miguel Costansó’s Carta Reducida Del Oceano Asiatico, Ó Mar Del Sur - See more at: http://www.pbagalleries.com/content/2015/09/14/the-warren-heckrotte-collection-of-rare-cartography/#sthash.KgAcxIEl.dpuf

Miguel Costansó’s Carta Reducida Del Oceano Asiatico, Ó Mar Del Sur – See more at: http://www.pbagalleries.com/content/2015/09/14/the-warren-heckrotte-collection-of-rare-cartography/#sthash.KgAcxIEl.dpuf

globes.consciencebibliotek.be: Erfgoed Antwerpen, Blaeu Globes

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Dr Alun Withey: Medicine in a Vacuum – Practitioners in Early Modern Wales

Yovisto: William Budd and the Infectious Diseases

storify: Things I’m going to miss teaching my medical students

Embryo Project: Margaret Higgins Sanger (1879–1966)

Margaret Sanger in 1922 Source: Wikimedia Commons

Margaret Sanger in 1922
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Center for the History of Medicine: Barbara Barlow

Morbid Anatomy Museum: Anatomical Atlases Digitized

19th Century-Disability Cultures and Contexts: Talking Gloves

Thomas Morris: The supernumerary leg

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 17 – Guillaume-Benjamin-Amand Duchenne du Boulogne

Thomas Morris: Give that man a medal

Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow: Glasgow Surgical Instrument Makers

Newman’s cytoscope for examination of the bladder by John Trotter Ltd.

Newman’s cytoscope for examination of the bladder by John Trotter Ltd.

Thomas Morris: Nutmeg is the best spice for students

The Harvard Crimson: Harvard Field Hospital Unit Active in England

Academia: Typhoid Fever and Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, 1891

Remedia: Gossip, News and Manners: the Barber-Surgeon in 16th Century Italy

Thomas Morris: The mystery of the poisonous cheese

The Medicine Chest: Mapping histories of medicine

TECHNOLOGY:

Conciatore: The Discovery of Glass

English Heritage: 5 Clocks Which Tell the Story of Time

The Grandfather Clock at Mount Grace Priory Source: English Heritage

The Grandfather Clock at Mount Grace Priory
Source: English Heritage

Capitalism’s Cradle: How many industrial Revolutions?

Teyler’s Museum: Dompelbatterij

99% Invisible: Episode 180: Reefer Madness

Yovisto: Happy Birthday Linux

Tux the penguin, mascot of Linux Source: Wikimedia Commons

Tux the penguin, mascot of Linux
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Contributor: Decoding Alan’s apple

Leaping Robot: Frank Malina’s Cosmos

Still image of Malina’s Vortex and 3 Molecules (1965) Source: Leaping Robot

Still image of Malina’s Vortex and 3 Molecules (1965)
Source: Leaping Robot

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Why Evolution is True: The duck-faced lacewing, its baby and an ancient Egyptian inscription

York Daily Record: Dover Intelligent Design trial: 10 years later

3 Quarks Daily: The Scopes “Monkey Trial”, Part 1: Issues, Fact, and Fiction

Scopes in 1925 Source: Wikimedia Commons

Scopes in 1925
Source: Wikimedia Commons

3 Quarks Daily: The Scopes “Monkey Trial”, Part 2: Evidence, Confrontation, Resolution, Consequences

AMNH: Digitizing Darwin’s Work

Hakai Magazine: The Great Quake and the Great Drowning

Embryo Project: Wilhelm Roux (1850–1924)

Google Cultural Institute: Historic Moments: Beauty from Nature: Art of the Scott Sisters

Notches: Revisiting Loves Golden Age

Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience: Mechanical Neuroscience: Emil du Bois-Reymond’s Innovations in Theory and Practice

The Guardian: Revealed: how Indigenous Australian storytelling accurately records sea level rises 7,000 years ago

Indigenous rock art in Kakadu national park in the Northern Territory. Researchers say stories about sea level rises in Australia date back though more than 7,000 years of continuous oral tradition. Photograph: Helen Davidson for the Guardian

Indigenous rock art in Kakadu national park in the Northern Territory. Researchers say stories about sea level rises in Australia date back though more than 7,000 years of continuous oral tradition. Photograph: Helen Davidson for the Guardian

Jacob Darwin Hamblin: The Atom does not wait for favors from nature

The Raw Story: The ‘missing link’ in evolution is a myth that comes from medieval theology not modern science

Public Domain Review: Dr Mitchill and the Mathematical Tetrodon

PNAS.org: Strong upslope shifts in Chimborazo’s vegetation over two centuries since Humboldt (pdf)

Notches: Out in the Open: Rural Life, Respectability, and the Nudist Park

NCSE: Huxley’s Paley, Part 3

News Works: How Old Faithful earned its name

Until Darwin: The “American School”: A brief timeline of the Monogenist/polygenist Debate

Until Darwin: Digital Biography for the Works Cited in Darwin’s “A Historical Sketch of the Recent Progress of Opinion on the Origin of Species” (Updated)

Geschichte der Geologie: Von den Untiefen der Meere zu den Gipfeln der Welt

University of Cambridge: Research: The Magna Carta of scientific maps

Sigmund & Jocelyn: Fine Art: Birdman 1: George Edwards

Artist George Edwards Source: Sigmund & Jocelyn

Artist George Edwards
Source: Sigmund & Jocelyn

Embryo Project: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (1890– )

Why Evolution is True: Another DNA anniversary, which ells a different story from the textbooks

Current Biology: Oswald Avery, DNA, and the transformation of biology

New Historian: Navy Drove Fishing Globalisation in 16th Century England

CHEMISTRY:

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 15 – Aleksandr Mikhaylovich Butlerov

Conciatore: Deadly Fumes

The Renaissance Mathematicus: A breath of fresh air

Stephen Hales Source: Wikimedia Commons

Stephen Hales
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 18 – Edwin Mattison McMillan

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Creator unknown

Creator unknown

Lady Science: Issue 12: The Pill in America: Subscribe!

oral contraceptives, 1970s Source: Wikimedia Commons

oral contraceptives, 1970s
Source: Wikimedia Commons

University of Glasgow Library: Themes from Smith and Rousseau: the best and the worst aspects of archival research

Now Appearing: On a Bacon Hunt

Double Refraction: Is it post-modern to be present-centred? Thoughts prompted by Nick Tosh

American Science: We’re Back, or, Monday on the Blog with George

Bookplate of George Sarton Source: Wikimedia Commons

Bookplate of George Sarton
Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Recipes Project: Teaching High School American History With Cookbooks

the many-headed monster: What is to be done? Mending academic history

NHM: Digital Museum: Mobilising the world’s natural history collections for the benefit of human well-being

The Renaissance Mathematicus: When Living in the Past Distorts the Past; Or, Why I Study the Victorian Era

Forbes: History as Big Data: 500 Years of Book Images and Mapping Million of Books

The Recipes Project: Spicing up the Victorians: Teaching Mrs. Beeton’s Recipe for Mango Chutney

Niche: New Scholars New Links

History in Photographs: Vintage Harvard

Observatory group, ca. 1910

Observatory group, ca. 1910

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Revolution contra Gradualism: Let the debate begin

International Commission on the History of Meteorology: History of Meteorology – Volume 7 (2015) Contents Page

Macro-Typography: Glory of Asia

Chronologia Universalis: On the Road: In Royal Prussia

The Washington Post: How publishing a 35,000-word manifesto led to the Unabomber

A view from the bridge: The undisciplinarian

Making Science Public: Naturel/artificial

ESOTERIC:

Forbidden Histories: Two Years of ‘Forbidden Histories’

Academia: Scientific rationalism, occult empiricism? Representations of the microphysical world, c. 1900

Hermetic.com: The Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz (full text English)

Conciatore: A Network of Alchemists

“The Alchemist” 1558, Pieter Brugle the Elder.

British Library: Digitised Manuscripts: Alchemical Rolls (The Ripley Scrolls)

BOOK REVIEWS:

Science Book a Day: House Guests, House Pests: A Natural History of Animals in the Home

house-guests-house-pests

University of Glasgow Library: Glasgow Incunabula Project Update: The Nuremberg Chronicle

Academia: Women at the Edge of Science

Public Books: Speaking in Science

Popular Science: Eureka: How Invention Happens – Gavin Weightman

Elle Thinks: Cryptonomicon, by Neal Stephenson

The Independent: The Royal Society Winton Prize: Top scientists and shortlisted authors share that have excited them

Science Book a Day: The Value of Believing in Yourself: The Story of Louis Pasteur

NEW BOOKS:

VRIN: Alzheimer La vie, la mort, la reconnaissance

Renaissance Mathematicus: The growing pile – too many good books not enough time

Historiens de la santé: Soigner le cancer au XVIIIe siècle. Triomphe et déclin de la thérapie par la ciguë dans le Journal de Médecine

Palgrave Macmillan: Psychiatry in Communist Europe

9781137490919

Academia: Dis/unity of Knowledge: Models for the Study of Modern Esotericism and Science

David Wootton: The Invention of Science Web Site

Museum Boerhaave: Stripboek: Ehrenfest!

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age Opens 18 September 2015

Galileo’s World: e-newsletter September

BBC: Tenby man who invented the equals sign remembered in exhibit

The first known equation, equivalent to 14x+15=71 in modern syntax. Source: Wikimedia Commons

The first known equation, equivalent to 14x+15=71 in modern syntax.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Museum Boerhaave: Einstein & Friends 19 September 2015–3 January 2016

Science Museum: Julia Margaret Cameron: Influence and Intimacy 24 September 2015–28 March 2016

Painting of Julia Margaret Cameron by George Frederic Watts, c. 1850-1852 Source: Wikimedia Commons

Painting of Julia Margaret Cameron by George Frederic Watts, c. 1850-1852
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Dundee Science Centre: Nature’s Equations: D’Arcy Thompson and the Beauty of Mathematics Till 25 October 2015

Science Museum: Cosmos and Culture Till 31 December 2015

The Old Operating Theatre, Museum & Herb Garret: The Operating Theatre

THEATRE AND OPERA:

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Till 18 June 2016

FILMS AND EVENTS:

Florence Nightingale Museum: Please, Matron! Dramatic reconstruction of a 1900 lecture to nursing students 22 October 2015

Florence Nightingale Museum: Meet the Florence Nightingale Museum Curator 28 September 2015

Victoria University in the University of Toronto: Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies: Early Modern Interdisciplinary Graduate Forum I: Adam Richter Biblical History in the Natural Philosophy of John Wallis (plus other talks) 6 October

Bodleian Library: Women in Science: Wikipedia improve-a thon 14 October

Wellcome Library: A celebration of Elizabeth Garrett Anderson and 150 years of medicine 29 September 2015

Elizabeth Garrett Anderson

Elizabeth Garrett Anderson

RGU Sport, Aberdeen: Journey to the Centre of the Earth 29 September 2015

Surgeon’s Hall Museum Edinburgh: Leonardo da Vinci: The Mechanics of Man Lecture 28 September 2015

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

The student of chemistry and pharmacy by Karl Joseph Litschaur Source: Wikigallery.org

The student of chemistry and pharmacy by Karl Joseph Litschaur
Source: Wikigallery.org

TELEVISION:

PBS America: 1,000 Days of Fear: The Deadly Race at Los Alamos

SLIDE SHOW:

Fadesingh: The Age of Games: Black Magic, Mathematics, Automata & Games

VIDEOS:

Youtube: The Einstein Theory of Relativity (Max Fleischer, 1923)

Youtube: Tidal predicting machine Part II

Youtube: How the Moon Affects the Ocean Tides – Tides and the Moon – CharlieDeanArchive / Archival Footage

Youtube: Visita do físico Albet Einstein ao Brasil completa 90 anos

RADIO:

BBC: Ada Lovelace: Letters shed light on tech visionary

BBC: Computing Britain

PODCASTS:

Nevada Public Radio: Even Einstein Made Mistakes

Physics Buzz Blog: A Time Capsule of the Universe

Science for the People: Eye of the Beholder

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

HaPoC 2015: 3rd International Conference on the History and Philosophy of Computing Pisa Italy 8–11 October 2015

Advances in the History of Psychology: Workshop: Photography, Representation, and Therapy Villa Di Breme Oven, Via Martinelli 23 in Cinisello Balsamo 24 September

MPIWG: Art and Knowledge in Pre-Modern Europe” Colloquia 2015/16

BSECS: CfP: BSECS 45th Annual Conference St Hugh’s College Oxford 6-8 January 2016

Athens: Workshop: Science Fiction. Jules Verne and 19th Century Science 17–18 December 2015

Almagest: CfP: Special issues Science fiction in the framework of science and literature studies Deadline 15 December 2015

University of Cambridge: History of Medicine Seminars

University of Paderborn: International Workshop: Emilie du Châtelet – Laws of Nature/Laws of Morals 23–24 October 2015

Advances in the History of Psychology: Round up: Calls for Papers in Allied Fields

LOOKING FOR WORK:

H–Physical Sciences: American Physical Society StudTravel Grants

NYU Polytechnic School of Engineering: Dibner Chair in History or Philosophy of Technology

Bern Dibner Source: Wikimedia Commons

Bern Dibner
Source: Wikimedia Commons

University of Queensland: 3 Research Fellows Harnessing Intellectual Property to Build Food Safety

University of Vienna: 1 Fully paid student position + 6 associate positions

University of Pittsburgh: Assistant Professor History and Philosophy of Science

University of Pittsburgh: Associate Professor History and Philosophy of Science

MIT: Program in Science, Technology, and Society Assistant, Associate, or Full Professor


Whewell’s Gazette: Year, 2 Vol: #11

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #11

Monday 28 September 2015

EDITORIAL:

The world didn’t end on Sunday night so we are back again with your weekly #histSTM links list, Whewell’s Gazette, bringing you all that could be culled from cyberspace on the histories of science technology and medicine during the last seven days.

The reference to the end of the world is of course to Sundays so-called Super-Blood-Moon or to put it somewhat less sensationally and more scientifically the simultaneous occurrence of the moon at perigee in its elliptical orbit around the earth and a lunar eclipse caused by the earth passing between the moon and the sun.

Super Blood Moon

Super Blood Moon

This double astronomical phenomenon illustrates two important developments in the long history of astronomy. The astronomers of Babylon were the first to realise that lunar eclipses follow a predictable arithmetical pattern and were thus able, using an algebraic algorithm, to predict the occurrence of this particular astronomical phenomenon. It would appear that the ancient Greeks were the first to realise that eclipses are the result of the earth casting its shadow onto the moon when both of them and the sun were in the right alignment.

The world would have to wait almost another couple of thousand years before the young English astronomer Jeremiah Horrocks demonstrated in the seventeenth century that the moon also obeyed Kepler’s laws of planetary motion in its orbit around the earth, that is an elliptical orbit with the earth at one focus of the ellipse, thus processing a furthest point, apogee, and a nearest point, perigee, in its orbit.

Put these historical astronomical discoveries together and you have the correct scientific explanation of Sunday’s Super-Blood-Moon. The next one is in 2033 so don’t forget to set the alarm clock.

Quotes of the week:

“It’s time to say it again: I am an atheist but Richard Dawkins does not speak for me”. – Karen James (@kejames)

“Autocorrect just changed Winton Prize into Wino Prize! In vino veritas?” – Thony Christie (@rmathematicus)

“Ultimately the one goal appointed to science may be not to comprehend the nature of things, but to comprehend that it is incomprehensible.” – Emil du Bois-Reymond

“Young men should prove theorems, old men should write books.” – G. H. Hardy h/t @AnalysisFact

“There’s a guy in this coffee shop sitting at a table, not on his phone, not on a laptop, just drinking coffee, like a psychopath”. – Jason Gay (@jasongay)

“There is no branch of mathematics, however abstract, which may not someday be applied to the phenomena of the real world.” – Lobachevsky

“the natural scientist is the man [sic] to decide about wombats and unicorns.”—W. V. O. Quine h/t @GuyLongworth

The Old English word for ‘equinox’ is ’emniht’ (from efen + niht ‘even nights’); so today is the ‘hærfestlice emniht’, autumnal equinox.

After the equinox, as Byrhtferth of Ramsey says, ‘langað seo niht and wanað se dæg’ (the night lengthens and the day wanes). – Eleanor Parker (@ClerkofOxford)

“Occupy yourselves with the study of mathematics. It is the best remedy against the lusts of the flesh.” – Thomas Mann h/t @intmath

“Note to self- if you dig up graves you’re a criminal and creep but if you wait long enough you’re an archaeologist”. – Trver Noah (@Trevornoah)

“And when you read other people’s diaries and mail, you’re a historian”. – Adam Shapiro (@TryingBiology)

How, great,

to, be, a, comma,

and, separate,

one, word, fromma,

nother. – Brian Bilston (@brian_bilston)

“History just burps, and we taste again the raw-onion sandwich it swallowed centuries ago.” – Julian Barnes h/t (@jondresner)

Talk

Birthday of the Week:

Michael Faraday born 22 September 1791

 

Michael Faraday delivering a Christmas Lecture at the Royal Institution in 1856. Source: Wikimedia Commons

Michael Faraday delivering a Christmas Lecture at the Royal Institution in 1856.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Yovisto: A Life of Discoveries – the Great Michael Faraday

Brain Pickings: Michael Faraday on Mental Discipline and How to Cure Our Propensity for Self-Deception

Mental Floss: 10 Electrifying Facts for Michael Faraday’s Birthday

Portrait of Faraday in his late thirties Source: Wikimedia Commons

Portrait of Faraday in his late thirties
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Skulls in the Stars: A Cornucopia of Faraday Posts!

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 21 – Donald Arthur

KAUST Museum: Explore the Museum > Astronomy and Navigation

Palamar Observatory: Searching the Sky for Dangerous Neighbors: Eleanor Helin and the 18-inch Telescope

Dr. Helin holding the discovery image for asteroid Ra-Shalom, circa 1979. (Helin Family Estate)

Dr. Helin holding the discovery image for asteroid Ra-Shalom, circa 1979. (Helin Family Estate)

The Guardian: Building the Bomb (Multimedia)

Listverse: 10 Incredible Astronomical Instruments That Existed Before Galileo

Yovisto: Hippolyte Fizeau and the Speed of Light

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 23 – Neptune

The Asian Age: Relativity & comedy of errors

JSTOR Daily: Los Alamos had a Secret Library

Academia: Origins of the “Western” Constellations

A Covent Garden Gilflurt’s Guide to Life: From Augsburg to the Moon: Johann Matthias Hase

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Reaching for the stars

Dürer's Star Map: Northern Hemisphere Source: Ian Ridpath’s Star Tales

Dürer’s Star Map: Northern Hemisphere
Source: Ian Ridpath’s Star Tales

Nature: Archimedes’ legendary sphere brought to life

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Jane Yantis’s Interview

The Local: The German astronomer who found Neptune

Waffles at Noon: Classic Urban Legend: NASA Space Pen

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

Crain’s. How the New York Public Library digitizes its vast map collection

PC Mag: 5 Digital Mapping Projects That Visualize History

The Public Domain Review: Amundsen’s South Pole expedition

6504419625_c5a71cd002_o

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Remedia: Surgical Devices and Placebo Testing – A Rehearsal

Thomas Morris: Roger ‘two urinals’ Clerk

Center for the History of Medicine: Dawes, Lydia M. Gibson papers, 1926–1959

Yovisto: David Vetter, the Bubble Boy

The Atlantic: The ‘Noble Savage’ Diet

The Sloane Letters Blog: A Friend in Need is a Friend Indeed

Embryo Project: Diethylstilbestrol (DES) in the USA

Ptak Science Books: A Mechanical Night Nurse, 1869

Source: Ptak Science Books

Source: Ptak Science Books

Nursing Clio: Placentophagy Isn’t New, But It Has Changed

Autistica: The Lessons of Autism Research

The Public Domain Review: Gynecological Gymnastics from Outer Space (1895)

Vox: 7 Terrifying medical “treatments” that never caught on

Thomas Morris: A fatal nose job

Yovisto: Typhoid Mary

Typhoid Mary in a 1909 newspaper illustration

Typhoid Mary in a 1909 newspaper illustration

The Public Domain Review: A Treatise on Adulteration of Food and Culinary Poisons (1820)

Advances in the History of Psychology: Hall’s developmental theory and Haeckel’s recapitulationism

Atlas Obscura: How a Fake Typhus Epidemic Saved a Polish City from the Nazis

Chom News: Priscilla A. Schaffer Papers Now Open

PBS Newshour: Celebrating the life of Alice Hamilton, founding mother of occupational medicine

Thomas Morris: Heal thyself

Conciatore: Top Physician

Center for the History of Medicine: Oral history interview with Margaret Brenman-Gibson

Thomas Morris: The perils of toast

From the hands of quacks: Dieting Deafness Away

ph.ucla.edu: On the Inhalation of the Vapour of Ether in Surgical Operations, 1847 (pdf)

Branch: Matthew Rowlinson, “On the First Medical Blood Transfusion Between Human Subjects 1818”

TECHNOLOGY:

The Verge: Museum of telephones burned to ground in California wildfire

The Guardian: A long history of toilets in Ukraine museum

Yovisto: What a Brick! – The World’s First Cell Phone

Ptak Science Books: The Straight Line Series: Looking Straight Through a Vickers Gun Sight, 1916

Medievalists.net: How to Make Ink in the Middle Ages

Pocket Change: The World’s Oldest Surviving Paper Money

The National Museum of American History: American Watch Company Prototype

Pocket watch. ME*334625.

Pocket watch. ME*334625.

Smithsonian.com: The History of the Bar Code

Yovisto: William F. Friedman and the Art of Cryptology

Atlas Obscura: Vacuum Cleaner Museum and Factory Outlet

Open Culture: How French Artists in 1899 Envisioned Life in the Year 2000: Drawing the Future

Conciatore: Stonework

Medievalists.net: Renaissance Robotics: Leonardo da Vinci’s Lost Knight and Enlivened Materiality

Model of Leonardo’s robot with inner workings, as displayed in Berlin. Photo by Erik Möller

Model of Leonardo’s robot with inner workings, as displayed in Berlin. Photo by Erik Möller

Medievalists.net: Friction and Lubrication in Medieval Europe: The Emergence of Olive Oil as a Superior Agent

Smithsonian.com: Can You Guess the Invention Based on These Patent Illustrations?

distillatio: Making blue and green ink

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

BBC: The man who bought Stonehenge – and then gave it away

Embryo Project: Dizhou Tong (1902–1979)

Notches: Tempests and Teapots: Sexual Politics and Tea-Drinking in the Early Modern World

Yovisto: Peter Simon Pallas – A Pioneer in Zoography

Embryo Project: Paul Kammerer (1880–1926)

Embryo Project: The Inheritence of Acquired Characteristics (1924) by Paul Kammerer

Scientific American: Rosetta Stones: Darwin’s Encounter with a Chilean Earthquake

TrowelBlazers: Patty Jo Watson

Patty Jo Watson Image used with permission from the Archaeological Institute of America (AIA).

Patty Jo Watson
Image used with permission from the Archaeological Institute of America (AIA).

Leaping Robot: DNA…From Blueprint to Brick

Science League of America: Dixon, Not Darwin

arXiv: Exploration and Exploitation of Victorian Science in Darwin’s Reading Notebooks

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 25 – Thomas Hunt Morgan

Embryo Project: Thomas Hunt Morgan’s Definition of Regeneration: Morphallaxis and Epimorphosis

BuzzFeed: Inside the Natural History Museum’s Wonderfully Creepy Room of Things in Jars

Hayley Campbell / BuzzFeed

Hayley Campbell / BuzzFeed

The Molecular Ecologist: Measuring dispersal rate in Neotropical fishes in units of ‘wallace’

MBL History Project: People of the Lab: Happy Birthday Ivan Pavlov!

Ivan Pavlov (Image MBL History Project)

Ivan Pavlov
(Image MBL History Project)

Open Democracy: Bacteriology as conspiracy

Open Democracy: It’s the failure to admit failure that fuels conspiracy theories

CHEMISTRY:

Yovisto: James Dewar and the Liquefaction of Gases

Sir James Dewar (1842-1923)

Sir James Dewar (1842-1923)

Conciatore: Lixivitation

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 22 – Frederick Soddy

Academia: The Death of the Sensuous Chemist: The ‘New’ Chemistry and the Transformation of Sensuous Technology (pdf)

The Chymistry of Isaac Newton: Experiments in Mineral Acids

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 27 – Adolph Wilhelm Hermann Kolbe

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Alun Salt: I clearly don’t understand what an academic review is for

The History Woman’s Blog: Redefining the independent scholar

Thomas Morris: The bird and the bees

teleskopos: What are science museums for?

Social History: New Blog Site

Theos: So, what is science and what is religion and why do you think they clash?

Conciatore: Art and Science

Jacopo Ligozzi,1518, fanciful glass vessels, ink and watercolor on paper.

Jacopo Ligozzi,1518, fanciful glass vessels,
ink and watercolor on paper.

American Science: Announcing the Thomas Kuhn’s “Structure of Scientific Revolutions” Comparison Watch!

Forbes: From Steve Jobs to Oliver Sacks : 12 Scientists and Techies Who Tinkered as Kids

Taming the American Idol: Taylor’s World Pt. 1: Training in Frederick Winslow Taylor’s Social Networks

The Recipes Project: What Recipes Can Teach Us About Reading

Scientific American: Symbiartic: A Science Illustrator’s Legacy

Illustration of Pliciloricus enigmatus by Carolyn Gast, National Museum of Natural History. From a condensed Smithsonian report, New Loricifera from Southeastern United States Coastal Waters

Illustration of Pliciloricus enigmatus by Carolyn Gast, National Museum of Natural History. From a condensed Smithsonian report, New Loricifera from Southeastern United States Coastal Waters

The #EnvHist Weekly

Open Culture: The History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps Podcast, Now at 239 Episodes, Expands into Eastern Philosophy

Nautilus: Five Veteran Scientists Tell Us What Most Surprised Them

ESOTERIC:                      

BOOK REVIEWS:

History Today: Planck: Driven by Vision, Broken by War

planck

Some Beans: The Value of Precision edited by M. Norton Wise

Science Book a Day: 10 Great Books on the History of Medicine

Literary Hub: The Invention of Nature

NEW BOOKS:

Historiens de la santé: The Last Children’s Plague: Poliomyelitis, Disability, and Twentieth-Century American Culture

51VsFfox-IL._SX322_BO1,204,203,200_

Historiens de la santé: Femme Médecin en Algérie – Journal de Dorothée Chellier (1895–1899)

NCSE: The Story of Life in 25 Fossils

ART & EXHIBITIONS

National Museum Cardiff: Reading the Rocks: the Remarkable Maps of William Smith

William Smith

William Smith

Museum Boerhaave: Einstein & Friends 19 September 2015–3 January 2016

Slice: The Stars Align at OU for Galileo’s World

ars technica: Science Museum’s Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age reviewed

Dundee Science Centre: Nature’s Equations: D’Arcy Thompson and the Beauty of Mathematics Till 25 October 2015

Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh: Surgeons Hall Museum: Casualties

The Hunterian: The Kangaroo and the Moose 1 October 2015–21 February 2016

George Stubbs, The Kongouro from New Holland, 1772 © National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London

George Stubbs, The Kongouro from New Holland, 1772 © National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London

 THEATRE AND OPERA:

Berkeley City Club: Ada and the Memory Machine 17 October–22 November 2015

Noël Coward Theatre: Photograph 51 Till 21 November 2015

Photo 51, showing x-ray diffraction pattern of DNA Source: Wikimedia Commons

Photo 51, showing x-ray diffraction pattern of DNA
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Royal Opera House: Raven Girl/Connectome

FILMS AND EVENTS:

Bodleian: Ada Lovelace: Celebrating 200 years of a computer visionary 9–10 December 2015

Center for the History of Medicine: Celebrating 10 Years of the Archive for Women in Medicine 3 November 2015

Wellcome Collection: Fred Sanger Lecture: Angely Creager “EAT.DIE.” The Domestication of Carcinogens in the 1980s 4 November 2015

CHF: Brown Bag Lecture: “Making Money Circulate: Chemistry and ‘Governance’ in the Career of Coins in the Early 19th-century Dutch Empire”

Knight Science Journalism at MIT: Book Night Talk with Victor McElheny: Watson and DNA: Making a Scientific Revolution 1 October 2015

Victor McElheny Founding director of the Knight Science Journalism Fellowships at MIT

Victor McElheny
Founding director of the Knight Science Journalism Fellowships at MIT

Wellcome Library: A celebration of Elizabeth Garrett Anderson and 150 years of medicine 29 September 2015

Discover Medical London: Walking Tour: The Making of Thoroughly Modern Medicine

Bethlem Museum of the Mind: Brain Fag

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Newton Investigating Light from The Illustrated London News, June 4, 1870

Newton Investigating Light from The Illustrated London News, June 4, 1870

TELEVISION:

Radio Times: Cosmonauts: How Russia Won the Space Race

BBC Four: Cosmonauts: How Russia Won the Space Race

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

The Public Domain Review: Gertie The Dinosaur (1914)

Center for the History of Medicine: Oral history interview with Pricilla Schaffer

Youtube: Alfred Wegener: Science, Exploration, and the Theory of Continental Drift: Book Trailer

Youtube: Albert Einstein (Stock footage/archival footage)

RADIO:

BBC Radio 4: Natural History Heroes: Alfred Russel Wallace

BBC Radio 4: Book of the Week: The White Road

BBC Radio 4: Inside Science: Hiroshima radiation, Anthropocene, Bonobo noises, Physicist Henry Moseley

BBC Radio 4: Computing Britain

BBC Radio 4: In Our Time: Perpetual Motion

BBC Radio 3: Pohl Omniskop X-Ray Machine

PODCASTS:

The Guardian: Why is the scientific revolution still controversial?

Jefferson Public Radio: DNA Decoded: “Life’s Greatest Secret”

Little Atoms: Matthew Cobb & Alex Bellos

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

The Warburg Institute: Rethinking Allegory 30 October 2015

University of Paderborn: International Workshop: Emilie du Châtelet – Laws of Nature/Laws of Morals 23-24 October 2015

Émilie du Châtelet Portrait by Maurice Quentin de La Tour Source: Wikimedia Commons

Émilie du Châtelet Portrait by Maurice Quentin de La Tour
Source: Wikimedia Commons

IUHMSP: Lausanne: Thérapies dissonantes 30 October 2015

CHoM News: 2015 Fall Event Calendar

Royal Historical Society: Maritime History and Cultural Seminar Series 2015–16

University of Munich: Perspectives for the History of Life Sciences 30 October–1 November 2015

CHoSTM: Working Groups: Physical Sciences: Upcoming Meetings

HSTM Network Ireland: Inaugural Conference Maynooth University 13-14 November 2015

All Souls College, Oxford: Conference: Charles Hutton (1737–1823): being mathematical in the Georgian Period 17–18 December 2015

Charles Hutton Source: Wikimedia Commons

Charles Hutton
Source: Wikimedia Commons

University of London: Institute of Historical Research: History of Libraries Research Seminars

University of Leeds: CfP: Communication, Correspondence and Transmission in the Early Modern World 12–13 May 2016

University of Edinburgh: CfP: Sixth Integrated History and Philosophy of Science conference (&HPS6) 35 June 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

The Beckman Center for the History of Chemistry at the Chemical Heritage Foundation (CHF), an independent research library in Philadelphia, PA: Beckman Fellowships in #histSTM

UCL STS: Part Time Teaching Fellow in STS

Michigan State University: Assistant Professor Philosophy of Science

The German Historical Institute Washington DC: 5 Doctoral Fellowships in the History of Knowledge, Race & Ethnicity, Religion & Religiosity, Family & Kinship, and Migrant Knowledge.

University of Alicante: DOCTORADO EN ESTUDIOS HISTÓRICOS Y SOCIALES SOBRE CIENCIA, MEDICINA Y COMUN

University Miguel Hernández: Programa de Doctorado en Estudios Históricos y Sociales sobre Ciencia, Medicina y Comunicación Cient

University of Valencia: Programa de Doctorado en Estudios Históricos y Sociales sobre Ciencia, Medicina y Comunicación Científica


Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #12

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #12

Monday 05 October 2015

EDITORIAL:

 Another week, another edition of Whewell’s Gazette your weekly #histSTM links list, bringing you all of the histories of science, technology and medicine that could be scooped up from the distant reaches of cyberspace during the last seven days.

The week saw NASA announce that they had discovered mineral deposits on the surface of Mars that might have been made by flowing water. This announcement kicked off the expected hysteria of where there is water there will be life, as we know it. These reports set off alarm bells in my brain about Giovanni Schiaparelli, Percy Lowell and the canals of Mars.

1877 map of Mars by Giovanni Schiaparelli. Source: Wikimedia Commons

1877 map of Mars by Giovanni Schiaparelli.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Humanity has been obsessed with Mars and the possibility of there being Martians for a long time now and the NASA announcement didn’t just trigger memories in my brain and a number of people throughout the Internet wrote about the history of that obsession. So this edition of Whewell’s Gazette is dedicated to David Bowie’s famous musical question “Is there life on Mars?”

Martian channels depicted by Percival Lowell Source: Wikimedia Commons

Martian channels depicted by Percival Lowell
Source: Wikimedia Commons

 “This week in science: scientists broke the secret pact & talked about water on Mars, making the moon turn red. Now the great doom befalls us” – Ed Yong (@edyong209)

Mars

History Today: Roger Hennessy tells of a hundred years of investigation, imagination and speculation about live on Mars

Ptak Science Books: The Positively Enormous Skyscraper Plant Eyeballs of Mars, 1912

Source: via Chronicles of America series at the Library of Congress, here, and first seen via the interesting Pinterest collection of Trevor Owens, here. Ptak Science Books

Source: via Chronicles of America series at the Library of Congress, here, and first seen via the interesting Pinterest collection of Trevor Owens, here.
Ptak Science Books

The Conversation: NASA: streaks of salt on Mars mean flowing water, and raises new hopes of finding life

Popular Mechanics: A Short History of Martian Canals and Mars Fever

BibliOdyssey: Channelling Martian Maps

Source: BilbliOdyssey

Source: BilbliOdyssey

Scientific American: How Our View of Mars Has Changed from Lush Oasis to Arid Desert

News.com.au: My favourite Martian: behind the science is the story of why we love Mars

Not just little green men ... a scene from the Mars film John Carter.

Not just little green men … a scene from the Mars film John Carter.

“Water, water everywhere

Nor any drop to drink

‘Cause it was all saturated with perchlorate salts” – Rime of the Ancient Rover – Matthew R. Francis (@DrMRFrancis)

Quotes of the week:

“People say history is written by the winners, but actually history is written by historians, and most of them are losers”. – @The TweetOfGod

“’The ohm is where the art is’ is a brilliant title for an article” – Steven Gray (@Sjgray86)

“Everything’s connected, but some things are more connected than others”. – Liam Heneghan (@DublinSoil)

“We need to figure out if Jonas Salk was on the spectrum. Only then can we definitely say whether autism cause vaccines” – @WardQNormal h/t @stevesilberman

“If you don’t feel guilty about using maps and satnavs, don’t feel guilty about using introductory philosophy books and study guides” – Nigel Warburton (@philosophybites)

“Pure mathematics is, in its way, the poetry of logical ideas.” – Albert Einstein

“Almost all really new ideas have a certain aspect of foolishness when they are first produced”. – A. N. Whitehead h/t @PeterSjostedtH

BEAUTY TIP: Read a book

EMPATHY TIP: Read a book

EDUCATION TIP: Read a book

LOVE TIP: Read a book

HEALTH TIP: Read a book – Matt Haig (@matthaig1)

Birth of the Week:

The Space Race Began 4 October 1957

CQeBC0eWIAAiR6E

Leaping Robot: Apprehending the Artifact

Yovisto: The Sputnik Shock

CQfd67rUEAARf8D

Princeton University Press: Keep Watching the Skies!: The Story of Operation Moonwatch and the Dawn of the Space Age

NASA: NASA’s First 5o Years Historical Perspectives

CQfGSQMUcAAmLdv

Youtube: Omnicron & the Sputnik

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Agenda.ge: Ancient astronomy manuscripts published in Georgia

Physics Today: Information: From Maxwell’s demon to Landauer’s eraser

Fermi.lib.uchicago.edu: Letter from Fermi to Szilard re: use of carbon to slow chain reaction

NASA: Alouette 1

The Alouette 1 satellite Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Alouette 1 satellite
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Outside Prague: The Astronomical Clock

AIP: Nobels of the Past

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 1 – NASA

Science News: The amateur who helped Einstein see the light

With some help from Science News Letter (the precursor to Science News), a restaurant dishwasher named Rudi Mandl persuaded Einstein to explore the phenomenon of gravitational lensing.

With some help from Science News Letter (the precursor to Science News), a restaurant dishwasher named Rudi Mandl persuaded Einstein to explore the phenomenon of gravitational lensing.

Radio Ne Zealand News: Rare telescope’s crucial lens survives quake

AIP: Otto Frisch

NASA: Dr. Robert H. Goddard, American Rocketry Pioneer

NASA: NASA “Hacks”: The Real Stories

El País: Un cura dio la “más bella explicación de la Creación”, según Einstein

The Atlantic: Standing the Test of Time (and Space)

WGBH News: Meet America’s First Woman Astronomer: Maria Mitchell

Maria Mitchell's telescope, at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History. Credit Dpbsmith / WGBH News

Maria Mitchell’s telescope, at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History.
Credit Dpbsmith / WGBH News

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Mary Rockwell’s Interview

flickr: Project Apollo Archive

Sky & Telescope: Beyond the Printed Page: Soviet Stamps and Astronomy

Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings: Niels Henrik David Bohr

Museum Victoria Collections: Astrographic Catalogue

AIP: Happy Birthday Enrico Fermi

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

Atlas Obscura: The Maps That Helped The Citizens of a ‘Locked Country’ See The World

Half of “Screens of the Four Continents and People in 48 Countries in the World,” by an unknown Edo-era Japanese painter. (All images: Kobe City Museum/Google Cultural Institute)

Half of “Screens of the Four Continents and People in 48 Countries in the World,” by an unknown Edo-era Japanese painter. (All images: Kobe City Museum/Google Cultural Institute)

D News: 1500-Year-Old Mosaic Map Found

Slate: A Bizarrely Complicated Late-19th-Century Flat-Earth Map

The Hakluyt Society Blog: Australia Circumnavigated: The Story of the HMS Investigator

The Shakespeare Blog: Mapping Shakespeare’s world

The Sheldon tapestry map of Worcestershire

The Sheldon tapestry map of Worcestershire

Halley’s Log: Back in the Thames

Halley’s Log: Halley’s third logbook

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

History Today: Elizabeth Garrett Anderson passed her medical exams on September 18th 1865

Thomas Morris: Speaking in tongues

From the Hands of Quacks: Can Vitamin B Cure Deafness

Smithsonian.com: The Nose Job Dates Back to the 6th Century B.C.

Wellcome Trust: A Brief History of Childbirth: Exploring the National Childbirth Trust Archives

Remedia: The Window Operation: Hope through Surgery

Cross-section of the inner ear, showing the ossicles–mallelus, incus, and stapes. Illustrated by Henry Vandyke Carter for Henry Gray, “Anatomy of the Human Body ” (Philadelphia & New York: Lea & Febiger, 1918), plate 919.

Cross-section of the inner ear, showing the ossicles–mallelus, incus, and stapes. Illustrated by Henry Vandyke Carter for Henry Gray, “Anatomy of the Human Body ” (Philadelphia & New York: Lea & Febiger, 1918), plate 919.

Medium: Scurvy Dogs

Embryo Project: The Pasteur Institute (1887– )

Public Domain Review: Kaishi Hen, an 18th Century Japanese anatomical atlas

Early Modern Medicine: Dog Danger

Thomas Morris: The child with Bonaparte in his eyes

Wellcome Collection: Hysteria

Gross Science: The Horrors of Ancient Cataract Surgery

tumblr_nv59naD4s61sxczrdo1_1280

Countway Library of Medicine: The Archives for Women in Medicine

Concocting History: Strong as a mountain

Forbes: Ancient Pompeiians Had Good Dental Health But Were Not Necessarily Vegetarians

This Intrepid Band: More Misdeeds of Military Nurses

Embryo Project: The Effects of Thalidomide on Embryonic Development

John Rylands Library Special Collections Blog: History of Midwifery

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 2 – Baruj Benacerraf

Science Museum: Brought to Life: Seishu Hanaoka (1760–1835)

Perspectives: The art of medicine: Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Body Snatcher

MBL History Project: “By living we learn.” Happy Birthday Sir Patrick Geddes!

Embryo Project: Marie Charlotte Stopes (1880–1958)

Marie Stopes in her laboratory, 1904 Source: Wikimedia Commons

Marie Stopes in her laboratory, 1904
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Thomas Morris: Electrical anaesthesia

Bustle: The Average Age Women Got Their First Period, Throughout History

Mosaic: How to mend a broken heart

Thomas Morris: The petrol cocktail: a cure for cholera

TECHNOLOGY:

Medievalists.net: Rapid Invention, Slow Industrialization, and the Absent Entrepreneur in Medieval China

Open Culture: The World’s Oldest Surviving Pair of Glasses (circa 1475)

Yale Books: Dirty Old London: 30 Days of Filth: Day 13 Deodorising and Flushing

Thomas Morris: Top Gear (steam edition)

Atlas Obscura: The Rise and Fall of the Cash Railway

Inside the Lamson ball, from a 1912 Lamson catalogue. (Image: Tony Wolf)

Inside the Lamson ball, from a 1912 Lamson catalogue. (Image: Tony Wolf)

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 29 – Rudolf Diesel Mystery

Airminded: The oscillation of R33

Conciatore: The Art of Metals

Conciatore: The Blue Tower

Medium: Backchannel: How Steve Jobs Fleeced Carly Fiorina

Quartz: Not Enough for Goodenough: The man who brought us the lithium-ion battery at the age of 57 has an idea for a new one at 92

Yovisto: Tōkaidō Shinkansen – the Bullet Train

Tōkaidō Shinkansen passing tea fields between Shizuoka and Kakegawa

Tōkaidō Shinkansen passing tea fields between Shizuoka and Kakegawa

Yovisto: The Unfortunate Inventions of Charles Cros

IEEE Spectrum: When Engineers Had the Stars in Their Eyes

News Works: Sound it out: the (sometimes creepy) history of the talking machine

Slate: What Could Go Wrong?

Collectors Weekly: Rise of the Synthesizer: How an Electronics Whiz Kid Gave the 1980s Its Signature Sound

Paleofuture: Drunk Driving and The Pre-History of Breathalysers

BBC News: Drawings reveal Germans’ World War Two boobytrap bombs

One of Fish's drawings shows an Army mess tin adapted for nefarious purposes Picture: Anthony Thompson TWN

One of Fish’s drawings shows an Army mess tin adapted for nefarious purposes
Picture: Anthony Thompson TWN

BBC News: Dorman Long: The Teesside firm that bridged the world

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 31 – Joseph Wilson Swan

United States Patent and Trademark Office: A. C. Reid Handset Telephone

BBC News: The lost rivers that lie beneath London

Ian Visits: Unbuilt London: Straightening the River Thames

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Making Science Public: The pause

Ptak Science Books: Charting the Winds: a Superb Anemographic Chart from 1598

ChoM News: New Acquisitions: Rose E. Frisch Papers

Slate: The Great September Gale of 1815

TrowelBlazers: Lucy Allen: Curator and Librarian

Lucy Allen Smart, 1955. This photo is reproduced here under the Central Library Consortium's fair use policy; may not be used for commercial purposes without contacting copyright holder.

Lucy Allen Smart, 1955. This photo is reproduced here under the Central Library Consortium’s fair use policy; may not be used for commercial purposes without contacting copyright holder.

NYAM: Censoring Leonhart Fuchs: Examples from the New York Academy of Medicine

Notches: “A promiscuous class of females. All huddled together in a mass”: Sex and Food in the Nineteenth-Century American Metropolis

University of Cambridge Museums: The Next Big Leap at the Whipple

io9: Which Animals Did Nuclear Scientists Pick to Represent the Entire World?

Science League of America: Did Darwin Know “Acres of Diamonds”?

Circulating Now: A German Botanical Renaissance

Perspectives on History: An Environmental History of the Real Thing

The Guardian: Calling all palaeo bloggers! Do you ant to write for the Guardian science blog network

Forbes: How Geologists Determined The Way That Mountains Formed

The mountains around the Urnersee, from Scheuchzer´s “Helvetiae Stoicheiographia” published in 1716 (image in public domain).

The mountains around the Urnersee, from Scheuchzer´s “Helvetiae Stoicheiographia” published in 1716 (image in public domain).

Mommoth Tales: Mammoth in the News: Michigan Edition

Scientific American: Tetrapod Zoology: Piltdown Man and the Dualist Contention

Wired: The Battle Over Genome Editing Gets Science All Wrong

The Leakey Foundation: Louis Seymour Bazett Leakey

Science Insider: Q&A: Francis Crick’s granddaughter on her genomic sculpture

CHEMISTRY:

Science Notes: Today in Science History – September 28 – Henri Moissan

News Work: A Nobel Prize for noble gasses

William Ramsay in 1904 (Munn & Co./Appleton's Magazine)

William Ramsay in 1904 (Munn & Co./Appleton’s Magazine)

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 4 – Mole

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

History Matters: Voices from 1915: Public Engagement with the First World War

New HSS: Sleep Laboratories, Psychiatry in Penguin Books, & More

Mersenne: Heroic Journeys? Networks of women scientists in the late nineteenth and twentieth century: Conference Report

The Renaissance Mathematicus: The Penny Universities

Coffeehouse in London, 17th century Source: Wikimedia Commons

Coffeehouse in London, 17th century
Source: Wikimedia Commons

ChoM News: Archivist attends “Women in Biotech” symposium at Radcliffe Institute

Chronologia Universalis: A Moment of Wonder: Overlapping Networks

Chronologia Universalis: Pervolvi totum librum…

JCOM: Ships, Clocks and Stars: The Quest for Impact

Deathplanation: Publishing with Integrity (Whilst Still Having Career Options)

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Political correctness and the history of science

The Conversation: Jesuits as science missionaries for the Catholic Church

BBC Culture: The places the world forgot (includes several #histSTM sites)

Flanders and Brabant power station, Belgium Source: BBC

Flanders and Brabant power station, Belgium
Source: BBC

The Recipes Project: The Digital Humanities Turn

THE: What it’s like to work with the academic greats

MHS Oxford: Newsletter – October 2015

The Harvard Crimson: Gathering the Galleries

Medieval Books: The Incredible Expandable Book

Wired: The Nobel Committee Hasn’t Always Picked the Right Winners

THE: Progressive Science Institute challenges researcher ‘bias’

Nautilus: Why Science Needs Metaphysics

ESOTERIC:

Conciatore: Alchemy of Plants

Compasswallah: Annie Besant: The Occult Freedom Fighter

Annie Besant Source: Wikimedia Commons

Annie Besant
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Academia: Physics in the Twelfth Century: The Porta Elementorum of Pseudo-Avicenna’s Alchemical De Anima and Marius’ De Elementis

Sociatas Magia: A Medieval Charm with Music

BOOK REVIEWS:

The Space Review: A Sky Wonderful with Stars: 50 Years of Modern Astronomy on Maunakea

Thinking Like a Mountain: Food, Inc: Mendel to Monsanto – The Promises and Perils of the Biotech Harvest

Public Domain Review: Bad Air: Pollution, Sin, and Science Fiction in William Delisle Hay’s The Doom of the Great City (1880)

Front cover of Hay’s The Doom of the Great City Source: The British Library

Front cover of Hay’s The Doom of the Great City
Source: The British Library

The New York Times: Sunday Book Review: ‘The Invention of Nature,’ by Andrea Wulf

Dissertation Reviews: Chemistry in Imperial and Weimar Germany

Geographical: Alfred Russel Wallace; Letters from the Malay Archipelago OUP

The Dispersal of Darwin: Darwin on Evolution: Words of Wisdom from the Father of Evolution  

Popular Science: 13.8: the quest to find the true age of the universe and the theory of everything John Gribbin

Los Angeles Review of Books: Paula Findlen on Galileo’s Telescope: A European Story

Archives of Natural History: Benton, Ted: Alfred Russel Wallace: explorer, evolutionist, public intellectual – a thinker for our own times?

Science News: Centennial books illuminate Einstein’s greatest triumph

NEW BOOKS:

Vrin: Psychologie et psychologisme

Enfilade: Scenes of Projection: Recasting the Enlightenment Subject

image-3

Historiens de la santé: Bretonneau: Correspondance d’un médicine

NCSE: The Story of Life in 25 Fossils

Emotions Blog: History in British Tears

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Nature: Space Travel: When Soviets ruled the great beyond

MHS Oxford: ‘Dear harry…’ – Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Extended till 31 January 2016

CHF: Science at Play On view through September 2 2016

Skil-Craft No. 430 Microscope Chemistry Lab, ca. 1955. CHF Collections. Photo by Gregory Tobias.

Skil-Craft No. 430 Microscope Chemistry Lab, ca. 1955. CHF Collections. Photo by Gregory Tobias.

Massachusetts Historical Society: Terra Firma: The Beginnings of the MHS Map Collection

Dundee Science Centre: Nature’s Equations: D’Arcy Thompson and the Beauty of Mathematics Closes 25 October 2015

Hunterian Glasgow: The Kangaroo and the Moose 2 October 2015–21 February 2016

THEATRE AND OPERA:

Noel Coward Theatre: Photograph 51 Booking until 21 November 2015

Etcetera Theatre: LHF: The Devil Without 13–18 October 2015

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

FILMS AND EVENTS:

Wellcome Collection: ‘The Thing is …Beards!’ 15th October 2015

World Health Organization Global Health Histories: Webinar: Ebolar: exploring the cultural contexts of an epidemic 8 October 2015

Royal Museums Greenwich: Plague takeover 21 November 2015

Royal Society: Cells: from Robert Hooke to Cell Therapy – a 350 year journey 5_6 October 2015

Royal Astronomical Society: Fred Hoyle Birth Centennial – his remarkable career and the impact of his science 9 October 2015

A statue of Fred Hoyle at the Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge Source: Wikimedia Commons

A statue of Fred Hoyle at the Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Providence Public Library: Exploring the Eye of History: NEA Symposium on 19th Century Photography 7 November 2015

Dittrick Museum: Lecture: The Eye as Art: Anatomy and Vision in the 18th Century 14 October 2015

CHoM News: Celebrating 10 Years of the Archive for Women in Medicine 7 November 2015

Musée Claude Bernard: Colloque: Claude Bernard et le diabète 10 Octobre 015

Discover Medical London: Walking Tour One for the Road!

Museum of the History of Science: Sacrifice of a Genius Tonight!

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Joaquin Sorolla 1863- 1923 Doctors Laboratory, an investigation, Oil on canvas

Joaquin Sorolla 1863- 1923 Doctors Laboratory, an investigation, Oil on canvas

TELEVISION:

BBC 2: Bletchley Park: Code-breaking’s Forgotten Genius

Gordon Welchman Source: Wikimedia Commons

Gordon Welchman
Source: Wikimedia Commons

AHF: “Manhattan” Season One Recaps

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Museo Galileo: Eudoxus’s system

Youtube: Royal Society: Science stories – Small

Youtube: Interview with J. Robert Oppenheimer

Youtube: The Royal Institution: Quantum Physics and Universal Beauty – with Frank Wilczek

Youtube: Polio Hero Frank Shimada

Youtube: Gilbert White: The Nature Man (2006) May Vision International

RADIO:

BBC Radio 4: Natural History Heroes

PODCASTS:

The Diane Rehm Show: Andrea Wulf: “The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt’s New World

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies: Symposium: Early Modern Journeys: Practice and Everyday Experiences of Travel, 1450–1800 15-16 October 2015

University of Leeds: Centre for HPS: HPS Seminars, Semester 1, 2015-2016

Harnack House Berlin: The 100th anniversary of Einstein’s field equations 30 November–2 December 2015

ChoM News: Colloquium on the History of Psychiatry and Medicine: Madness and Mayhem in Maine: The Parkman-Portland Parley and a Mass Murder 12 November 2015

ChoM News: Colloquium on the History of Psychiatry and Medicine: War and Human Nature in Modern America 17 December 2015

ChoM News: Studying Traumatic Wounds and Infectious Diseases in the Civil War Hospitals: The Medical Photography of the American Civil War 19 November 2015

Historiens de la santé: CfP: ISCHE 38 Education and the Body

University of Kent: CfP: Medicine in its Place: Situating Medicine in Historical Contexts 7-10 July 2016

IHPST: 1st Regional IHPST Conference: Science as Culture in the European Context: Historical, Philosophical, and Educational Perspectives Flensburg Germany 22–25 August 2015

Oxford Seminars in the History of Science, Medicine, and technology: Michaelmas Term 2015

HSS: THATCamp: The History of Science Society hosts its second annual THATCamp on November 19 2015 San Francisco

The Haluyt Society: Conference: Maritime Trade, Travel and Cultural Encounter in the 18th and 19th Centuries 13–14 November 2015

University of Birmingham: History of Medicine and Health Seminars

UCL STS: Seminar Series

University of Vienna: CfP: Claiming authority, producing standards: The IAEA and the history of radiation protection 3–4 June 2016

Maynooth University: HSTM Network Ireland Inaugral Conference 13–14 November 2015

Birkbeck College University of London: CfP: After the End of Disease 26–27 May 2016

University of Edinburgh: CfP: Eighteenth–Century Research Seminars Series 2016

University of London: School of Advance Study EMPHASIS Seminar: Amateurs and Authorship: Oronce Fine’s Projection of a Republic of Mathematics 17 October 2015

Oronce Fine Source: Wikimedia Commons

Oronce Fine
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Res Philosophica: CfP: Res Philosophica Essay Prize: Philosophy of Disability

The Warburg Institute: Colloquia 2015–2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

University of Huddersfield: Research Assistant in History of Health or Medicine

AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Awards in the Science Museums and Archives Consortium (SMAC) from October 2016

H-Sci-Med-Tech: Fully Funded PhD Studentship – Science and Religion in Society

Ohio State University Department of History: Assistant or Associate Professor in Environmental History and Sustainability

University of Harvard: Tenure–track Assistant Professor History of Pre-Modern or Early Modern Science or Medicine

University of Groningen: Netherlands Research School for Medieval Studies: 4 PhD Positions: Communication and Exploitation of Knowledge in the Middle Ages

Oxford Brookes University: PhD Studentships

University of Copenhagen: Professor of History and Philosophy of Science

Think Oxford: Over 1000 Scholarships

University of London: Research fellowships in cultural and intellectual history


Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #13

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #13

Monday 12 October 2015

EDITORIAL:

 If you’ve been holding your breath, you can breathe out now, as the thirteenth edition of the second year of the weekly #histSTM links list, Whewell’s Gazette, is finally here. Putting aside their triskaidekaphobia our editorial team has collected together all that they could find on the histories of science, technology and medicine in the vast reaches of cyberspace over the last seven days.

Whenever I write a blog post or research a lecture, sooner or later I will almost always make a pilgrimage to consult the volumes of the Dictionary of Scientific Biography, a cornucopia of history of science information presented at the highest levels of scholarship. This invaluable tool of historical research was put together under the editorship of Charles Coulston Gillispie one of the giants of post Second World War history of science. Beyond the DSB Gillispie was a important historian of science writing mostly about eighteenth-century French science, whilst teaching and establishing the history of science department at Princeton University.

Charles Gillispie died on 6 October at the age of 97. In the DSB he left behind a monument in the history of science that others will struggle to equal and with this thought I would like to humbly dedicate this edition of Whewell’s Gazette to him.

Charles Coulston Gillispie 6 August 1918­ – 6 October 2015 Photo by Denise Applewhite, Office of Communications

Charles Coulston Gillispie
6 August 1918­ – 6 October 2015
Photo by Denise Applewhite, Office of Communications

News at Princeton: Charles Gillispie, trailblazer in the history of science, dies at 97

NCSE: Charles Coulston Gillispie dies

facebook: Marco Berratta: Charles Gillispie Obituary

Quotes of the week:

The *Great Man of Science* is a myth. They all had collaborators that disappeared from history. – Andrew David Thaler (@SFriedScientist)

“Sir Humphrey Davy was asked to name the greatest discovery he’d ever made. He answered “Michael Faraday””. – Verity Burke (@VerityBurke)

“‘thank God! there is no drinking of coffee [in the next world], and consequently no waiting for it.’”—De Quincey, quoting Kant h/t @GuyLongworth

“I’m a scientist. I don’t want to people to accept that what I say is accurate. I want to give them the tools to find out for themselves”. – John Hawks (@johnhawks)

“We must labour to find out what things are in themselves by our owne experience … not what another sayes of them” – John Wilkins 1640 h/t @felicityhen

“Science doesn’t suffer fools, but it can make fools suffer.” – Richard Hammond

h/t @Pillownaut

“Nothing more ruins the world than a conceit that a little knowledge is sufficient.” – Thomas Traherne. h/t @telescoper

“50 yrs from now, people will see the discovery of exoplanets as a major development in #HistSTM” – Patrick McCray (@LeapingRobot)

“The only reason that christianity imagined hell as a pit of fire is because Christ was born too early to experience a bus full of teens”. – Marc Girard Alleyn (@StevenAlleyn)

“Is it too much to ask for conference coffee that isn’t brown pisswater? Where is my Black Ichor of Awakeness?” Ed Yong (@edyong209)

“I rather like “defy the facts”. Ignorance is strength”. – Guy Longworth (@GuyLongworth)

“Shit doesn’t just happen. Shits make it happen”. – Peter Coles (@telescoper)

Wren quote

6 October was National Badger Day

A badger, as illustrated in Histoire Naturelle des Mammiféres, 1824-57. (1257.l.1-4)

A badger, as illustrated in Histoire Naturelle des Mammiféres, 1824-57.
(1257.l.1-4)

Birthdays of the Week:

Robert Goddard born 5 October 1882

Robert Hutchings Goddard was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1882. The phyicist determinedly pursued his spaceflight obsession.

Robert Hutchings Goddard was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1882. The phyicist determinedly pursued his spaceflight obsession.

Barron Hilton Pioneers of Flight Gallery: Robert Hutchins Goddard

NASA: Goddard Space Flight Center: Dr. Robert H. Goddard, American Rocketry Pioneer

Niels Bohr born 7 October 1885

 Niels Bohr on G. Gamow's motorcycle, with his wife Margrethe sitting behind. Photo credit Emilio Segrè Visual Archives h/t Alex Wellerstein

Niels Bohr on G. Gamow’s motorcycle, with his wife Margrethe sitting behind.
Photo credit Emilio Segrè Visual Archives
h/t Alex Wellerstein

“An expert is a man who has made all the mistakes which can be made, in a narrow field”. – Niels Bohr h/t @ChemHeritage

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 7 – Niels Bohr

AIP: Niels Bohr – Session I

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Cambridge University Library Special Collections Blog: ‘It’s all in a day’s work’: the Royal Greenwich Observatory Audio-Visual Collection, Stories of Observatory Life

Cosmos: Émilie du Châtelet: the woman science forgot

Particle Decelerator: New Zealand recognised as major contributor to radio astronomy history

Physics Today: Seeing dark matter in the Andromeda galaxy

Vera Rubin Source: Physics Today

Vera Rubin
Source: Physics Today

Conciatore: A Fast Calendar

Collect Space: Astronaut Sally Ride’s personal items and papers acquired by Smithsonian

ahram online: Mars, the invincible planet

ethw.org: George Westinghouse AIEE membership application

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 6 – Ernest Walton

Atlas Obscura: These Atomic Tourists Have Visited 160 Forgotten Nuclear Sites Across the U.S.

NASA History: James E. Webb

Pasadena Star-News: Astronomy: These women were ‘human computers’ before they were allowed to be astronomers

AHF: Operation Plumbbob – 1957

AEON: Light dawns

Scientific American: 20 Years Later – a O&A with the first Astronomer to Detect a Planet Orbiting Another Sun

Independent: Prague Astronomical Clock: Three things you probably didn’t know about today’s Google Doodle

Prague astronomical clock Source: Wikimedia Commons

Prague astronomical clock
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Heavy: Prague Astronomical Clock: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know

Gizmodo: Prague Astronomical Clock Celebrated by Google Doodle on its 605th Birthday

The Guardian: A Fife church minister first imagined space flight – beating Jules Verne

AHF: Britain’s Early Input – 1940–41

IET Blog: The Great Melbourne Telescope

Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog: Neglected Niigata

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 11 – James Prescott Joule

AHF: The Einstein Letter – 1939

Dannen.com: Einstein to Roosevelt, August 2, 1939

BLink: Mystery of the starry sphere

Too big for the palm: Emperor Jahangir is shown holding a globe in this Mughal-era painting. The globe is believed to have been made by metallurgist Muhammad Salih Tahtawi. Photo: Wikipedia

Too big for the palm: Emperor Jahangir is shown holding a globe in this Mughal-era painting. The globe is believed to have been made by metallurgist Muhammad Salih Tahtawi. Photo: Wikipedia

AIP: Robert Marshak

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

Ptak Science Books: Blank and Missing Things: a Map of Missing people of Europe and Russia, 1881

University of Cambridge: Digital Library: Oppidium Cantebrigiae

British Library: Maps and views blog: Drawing Lines across Africa – from the War Office Archive

World Digital Library: Map of Louisiana, View of New Orleans

The French royal engineer, de Beauvilliers, drew this 1720 map of the entire hydrographic network of the Mississippi River Source: World Digital Library

The French royal engineer, de Beauvilliers, drew this 1720 map of the entire hydrographic network of the Mississippi River
Source: World Digital Library

A Thoroughly Anglophile Journal: The Center of Space and Time, and History

Geographicus Rare Antique Maps: 1650 Jansoon Wind Rose, Anemographic Chart, or Map of the Winds

Factum Arte: Terra Forming: Engineering the Sublime

Atlas Obscura: Found: 39 Maps from the Mid-1800s That ‘Show Chicago Being Born’

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Yovisto: James Lind and a Cure for Scurvy

Vice: How One Man Ran the World’s Only Menstruation Museum from his Basement

The first-ever Kotex advertisement, from January 1921

The first-ever Kotex advertisement, from January 1921

Thomas Morris: The case of the luminous patients

Remedia: Roaring Horses, Lame Dogs and the Re-framing of British Veterinary Surgery

Medievalists.net: Medieval Viagara [sic]

Early Modern Experimental Philosophy: “Secta Empírica y Domáticos Racionales”: medicine and the ESD in early modern Spain II

BBC Future: It’s time we dispelled these myths about autism

Conciatore: The Duke’s Mouthwash

The Conversation: Could ancient textbooks be the source of the next medical breakthrough

Center for the History of Medicine: On View: Powered Air Purifying Respirator (PAPR). 1967-68

Circulating Now: Radam’s Microbe Killer: Advertising Cures for Tuberculosis

Advertisement in Roanoke Times, March 28, 1894

Advertisement in Roanoke Times, March 28, 1894

ph.ucla.edu: On The Inhalation of the Vapour of Ether in Surgical Operations (pdf)

Philly.com: Remember what ‘Aunt Sammy’ said … about babies and drafts?

The Recipes Project: From Bloodstone to Fish Soup: Iron Recipes

TECHNOLOGY:

Yovisto: John Atanasoff and the first Electronic Computer

Yovisto: Christiaan Huygens and the Pocket Watch

Atlas Obscura: The Simple, Elegant History of the Swiss Army Knife

Modell 1890, the first Swiss Soldier Knife produced by Wester & Co. Solingen. (Photo: Cutrofiano/WikiCommons CC BY-SA 3.0)

Modell 1890, the first Swiss Soldier Knife produced by Wester & Co. Solingen. (Photo: Cutrofiano/WikiCommons CC BY-SA 3.0)

Engineering & Technology History Wiki: Reginald A. Fessenden Biography

BBC News: Forth Bridge ‘is Scotland’s favourite engineering work’

Atlas Obscura: Kansas Barbed Wire Museum

Conciatore: Antonio Who?

Yale Books Blog: Dirty Old London: 30 Days of Filth: Day 29: The Great Exhibition Toilet Myth

Pioneers of Flight: Amelia Earhart and Eleanor Roosevelt flying from Washington, D.C. to Baltimore

Amelia Earhart and Eleanor Roosevelt flying from Washington, DC to Baltimore in 1933

Amelia Earhart and Eleanor Roosevelt flying from Washington, DC to Baltimore in 1933

Ptak Science Books: A Massively Geared “Tricycle” of 1879

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Dispersal of Darwin: Article: Exploration and Exploitation of Victorian Science in Darwin’s Reading Notebooks

Dispersal of Darwin: Article: Flattening the World: Natural Theology and the Ecology of Darwin’s Orchids

Gizmodo: Here’s the Drawing That Proved the Earth has a Solid Core

1460648158338612877

Engineering Life: Putting synthetic biology in historical context: Becoming a Tralfamadorian

The Scientist: The First Neuron Drawings, 1870s

Notches: The Hunger of the Finnish Bachelor: Married Men, Desire and Domesticity in 20th Century Finland

geoitaliani: Tacchi a spillo, capigliature corte alla garconne, continenti alla deriva: Federico Sacco contro tutti

Atlas Obscura: The Scrappy Female Paleontologist Whose Life Inspired a Tongue Twister

Ancient Origins: The Ancestral Myth of the Hollow Earth and Underground Civilizations

MBL History Project: Zoology in Color: Rudolf Leuckart

“It is not possible for man, as a thinking being, to close his mind to the knowledge that he is ruled by the same power as is the animal world.” –Rudolf Leuckart

“It is not possible for man, as a thinking being, to close his mind to the knowledge that he is ruled by the same power as is the animal world.” –Rudolf Leuckart

Physics Buzz Blog: Meteorite Markings Offer Clues to Their Past

Science Magazine: Beyond the “Mendel-Fisher Controversy”

Notches: “This is Your Pasty”: The Performance of Queer Domesticity in Small-Town Wisconsin

Embryo Project: Study of Fossilized Massospondylus Dinosaur Embryos from South Africa (1978–2012)

Audubon: John J. Audubon’s Birds of America: The life’s work of both a lover and observer of birds and nature

Plate 1 of Birds of America by John James Audubon depicting a wild turkey. Source: Wikimedia Commons

Plate 1 of Birds of America by John James Audubon depicting a wild turkey.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

U.S: Immigration and Customs Enforcement: ICE returns stolen Charles Darwin book

Road to Paris: A very short history of climate change research

Fistful of Cinctans: The Well Worn Paths of Natural History

Macroevolution: Orangutan-human hybrids?

MBL History Project: People of the Lab: Calvin Bridges

CHEMISTRY:

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 8 – Henry-Louis Le Chatelier

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 9 – Max von Laue

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 10 – Henry Cavendish

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Source: Wikimedia Commons

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

The H-Word: The Greenwich longitude exhibition on tour

Adam Matthew: To Publish 500 Years of Unique Materials on the History of Printing, Publishing and Bookselling (Stationers’ Company Archives)

Smithsonian.com: How Not to Win a Nobel Prize

3 Quarks Daily: How did the Nobel Prize become the biggest award on earth?

Washington Post: What people in 1900 thought the year 2000 would look like

Air Canada enRoute: The World’s 14 Coolest New Museums

Shanghai Natural History Museum

Shanghai Natural History Museum

Independent: Paintings reveal what people in 19oo thought the year 2000 would look like

AHA Today: The Past for the Present: the New Mock Briefings Program and Reasons to Study History

Wynken de Worde: questions to ask when you learn of digitization projects

INKUNABULA: New Blog (German)

The Recipes Project: Exploring Six Degrees of Francis Bacon in Beta

Portrait of Francis Bacon, by Frans Pourbus (1617), Palace on the Water in Warsaw. Source: Wikimedia Commons

Portrait of Francis Bacon, by Frans Pourbus (1617), Palace on the Water in Warsaw.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

#EnvHist Weekly

Science Museum: Clockmaker’s Museum

Scroll.in: The history of science has been West-centric for too long – it’s time to think global

University of Cambridge: Research: A world of science

151007historyofindianscience

Richard Carter: Bacon and X

Tincture of Museum: The Crime Museum Uncovered, Museum of London, October 2015

Somatosphere: Summer Roundup: Forums – Books & Films

Academia: Science in the Everyday World: Why Perspectives from the History of Science Matter

h-madness: How I Became a Historian of Psychiatry: Andrew Scull

Engaging Science, Technology, and Society: First Issue: Table of Contents

The Atlantic: 12 Historical Gems From One of the Best Time Capsules Online

ESOTERIC:

University of Cambridge: Digital Library: Chinese Oracle Bones

distillatio: Alchemy and Magic, are they related

Royal 6.E.vi, f. 396v. detail

BOOK REVIEWS:

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Science contra Copernicus

Graney001

sehepunkte: Audra J. Wolfe: Competing with the Soviets (German!)

Nature: Geology: The continental conundrum

NEW BOOKS:

Routledge: Ancient Botany

9780415311205

URSUS: World of Innovation: cartography in the time of Gerhard Mercator

Historiens de la santé: On Hysteria: The Invention of a Medical Category between 1670 & 1820

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Bletchley Park: Last Chance to see the Imitation Game, The Exhibition: Closes 1 November 2015

Alan Turing memorial statue in Sackville Park, Manchester. Source: Wikimedia Commons

Alan Turing memorial statue in Sackville Park, Manchester.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Right Relevance: Gender and Representations of the Female Subject in Early Modern England

Musée d’Orsay: Splendours and Misery, Pictures of Prostitution, 1850–1910

Museum of the History of Science: ‘DEAR HARRY…’ – HENRY MOSELEY: A SCIENTIST LOST TO WAR Extended to 31 January 2016

Hunterian Glasgow: The Kangaroo and the Moose 2 October 2015–21 February 2016

Dundee Science Centre: Nature’s Equations: D’Arcy Thompson and the Beauty of Mathematics Closes 25 October 2015

Science Museum: Cosmos & Culture

THEATRE AND OPERA:

Etcetera Theatre: LHF: The Devil Without 13–18 October 2015

Noel Coward Theatre: Photograph 51 Booking until 21 November 2015

Nicole Kidman as Rosalind Franklin Photograph: Johan Persson/Johan Persson Source: The Guardian

Nicole Kidman as Rosalind Franklin Photograph: Johan Persson/Johan Persson
Source: The Guardian

FILMS AND EVENTS:

Dittrick Museum Blog: Conversations: Bodies Wanted – Anatomy and the Dissection Debate 4 November 2015

CHoM News: Celebrating 10 Years of the Archive for Women in Medicine 3 November 2015

Dittrick Museum: Lecture: Eye of the Artist 14 October 2015

Engraving of the eye in A Complete Physico-Medical and Churugical on the Human Eye and the Demonstration of Natural Vision (Degraver, 1780).

Engraving of the eye in A Complete Physico-Medical and Churugical on the Human Eye and the Demonstration of Natural Vision (Degraver, 1780).

CHoM News: Colloquium on the History of Psychiatry and Medicine “Remorse Without Regret: Experimentalism, Consent, Apology, and the Affective Economies of Biomedicine” 15 October 2015

The Royal Society: The Big Draw – Seeing Closer 17 October 2015

Dr John Dee Mortlake Society: Events: AGM 13 October 2015

Open Culture: Watch Breaking the Code, About the Life & Times of Alan Turing (1996)

Wellcome Library: Talk: A history of health? Integrating food and drink into the history of medieval medicine 13 October 2015

Discover Medical London: Walking Tour: Women and Medicine

Wellcome Library: Joseph Banks: Lincolnshire botanist 12 October 2015

Sir Joseph Banks, as painted by Sir Joshua Reynolds in 1773 Source: Wikimedia Commons

Sir Joseph Banks, as painted by Sir Joshua Reynolds in 1773
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Royal Society: A new visible world: Robert Hooke’s Micrographia 17 October 2015

Museum of the History of Science Oxford: Too Valuable to Die? 13 October 2015

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Don Shank: Laboratory Still Life 1

Don Shank: Laboratory Still Life 1

TELEVISION:

Indiewire: Can WGN America’s Stellar ‘Manhattan’ Finally Break Through?

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Youtube: Turkey

Youtube: Invention of Radio – Reginald A. Fessenden Part 1

The Excavator: Bill Bailey on Alfred Russel Wallace

Youtube: Gresham College: Was the Great Plague of 1665 London’s Problem? – Professor Vanessa Harding

RADIO:

BBC Radio 4: Great Lives: Andrew Adonis on Joseph Bazalgette

BBC Radio 4: Natural History Heroes

BBC Radio 4: Natural Histories: Anemone

PODCASTS:

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

University of Winchester: CfP: Death, Art and Anatomy 3–6 June 2016

Anita Guerrini: Notes and Records – Essay Prize – deadline 31-01-16

University of Flensburg: 1st European IHPST Regional Conference: Science as Culture in the European Context: Historical, Philosophical, and Educational Perspectives 22–25 August 2016

Notches: CfP: Histories of Sexuality and Religion

British Society for the History of Mathematics: Christmas Meeting Birmingham 5 December 2015

St Anne’s College Oxford: CfP: Knowing Demons, Knowing Spirits – Scientiae 2016 5–7 July

University of Exeter: Online Store: One day workshop: Framing the Face: New perspectives on the history of facial hair Friends Meeting House London 28 November 2015

H–Material–Culture: CfP: American Material and Visual Culture in the “Long” Nineteenth Century

Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine Oxford: Seminars in the History of Science, Medicine, and Technology Michaelmas Term 2015

Cleveland.com: Dittrick Medical Museum to host series of ‘Conversations’ on hot-button medical topics

HSTM Network Ireland: Inaugural Conference Maynooth University 13-14 November 2015

University of Groningen: CfP: Early Modern Women on Metaphysics, Religion and Science 21–23 March 2016

The Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe – Institute of the Leibniz Association Marburg: Entangled Science? Relocating German-Polish Scientific Relations 28–30 October 2015

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Source: Wikimedia Commons

University of Lancaster: Culture, Society and Medicine Seminars

eä: Journal of Medical Humanities & Social Studies of Science & Technology CfP: Information for Authors

University of Lyon: Séminaire de l’Institut d’histoire de la médecine de Lyon Cycle 2015-2016

Rowan University, NJ: CfP: Society for Philosophy of Science in Practice Sixth Biennial Conference 17–19 June 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

University of Stirling: Chair in Environmental History and Heritage

University of Harvard: History of Pre-Modern or Early Modern Science or Medicine Tenure Track

University of Hull: PhD Studentships in Visual Culture

British Library: AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Partnerships

Academic Jobs Wiki: History of Science, Technology, and Medicine 2015–2016

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine: Wellcome Trust History of Medicine PhD Studentship: Health Systems in History: the case of Nigeria 1946–c. 2000

Telegraph Museum Porthcurno: Director

n the 19th century Porthcurno was connected to the rest of the world by submarine cables Source: Wikimedia Commons

n the 19th century Porthcurno was connected to the rest of the world by submarine cables
Source: Wikimedia Commons

University of Hertfordshire: PhD Studentship in Early Modern History

California Institute of Technology: Postdoctoral Instructor Position in Philosophy of Science

Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy: Postdoc


Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #14

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #14

Monday 19 October 2015

EDITORIAL:

It’s that time again, time for the next edition of your weekly #histSTM links list, Whewell’s Gazette bringing you all of the histories of science, technology and medicine that could be scooped up from the depths of cyberspace over the last seven days.

Last Tuesday was Ada Lovelace Day, an international celebration of women in STEM, so naturally this week’s Whewell’s Gazette has the same theme. The first section of links deals with women in STEM in general.

FIVE: An interview with… Athene Donald on Women in Science

The Guardian: Why Ada Lovelace Day Matters

Churchill College Cambridge: Professor Dame Carol Robinson

BuzzFeed: 100 Inspiring Women Who Made History

New Statesman: This Ada Lovelace Day, Let’s celebrate women in tech while confronting its sexist culture

The next section is a collection of links about Ada Lovelace that mostly concentrate on the real history and less on the hagiography.

“If Ada Lovelace did not exist, it would be necessary to invent her”. –Christopher Burd (@christopherburd)

“Ada Lovelace exhibition at the Science Museum seemed to me like a nice, balanced, modest display, and well worth a visit”. – Philip Ball (@philipcball)

Royal Museums Greenwich: Ada Lovelace and female computers

Inside the Science Museum: Ada Lovelace: A visionary of the computer age

Gallery View of “Ada Lovelace Enchantress of numbers. An exhibition about the remarkable story of Ada Lovelace, a Victorian pioneer of the computer age, celebrating the bicentenary of her birth.

Gallery View of “Ada Lovelace Enchantress of numbers. An exhibition about the remarkable story of Ada Lovelace, a Victorian pioneer of the computer age, celebrating the bicentenary of her birth.

ODNB: Ada Lovelace

BBC Four: Calculating Ada: Not your typical role model: Ada Lovelace the 19th century programmer

BBC Radio 4: The Letters of Ada Lovelace

BBC News: Ada Lovelace’s letters and work on display at Oxford Library

CHF: the French Connection

An 1839 woven silk portrait of French textile merchant and inventor Joseph-Marie Jacquard, recently added to CHF’s collections. The portrait, made on a Jacquard loom, required more than 24,000 cards to create the pattern. (CHF Collections/Jesse Olanday)

An 1839 woven silk portrait of French textile merchant and inventor Joseph-Marie Jacquard, recently added to CHF’s collections. The portrait, made on a Jacquard loom, required more than 24,000 cards to create the pattern. (CHF Collections/Jesse Olanday)

We then have a section of links on the stories of individual or groups of women in #histSTM.

Atlas Obscura: The Daredevil Girl Pals Who Conquered the Sky

A signed photograph of Harriet Quimby and Matilde Moisant. (Photo: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archives/flickr)

A signed photograph of Harriet Quimby and Matilde Moisant. (Photo: San Diego Air and Space Museum Archives/flickr)

Google Cultural Institute: 1944: Women in Computing: A British Perspective

The Renaissance Mathematicus: A bewitching lady astronomer

Aglaonice Source: unknown

Aglaonice
Source: unknown

ODNB: Squire, Jane (bap. 1686, d. 1743)

Scientific American: 15 Works of Art Depicting Women in Science

“Portrait of Gabrielle-Émilie le Tonnelier de Breteuil, Marquise du Châtelet” – Nicolas de Largillière
(oil on canvas)
Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Guardian: On Ada Lovelace Day, here are seven other pioneering women in tech

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Isabella Karle’s Interview

Open Culture: Hear Seven Hours of Women Making Electronic Music (1938–2014)

Delia Derbyshire

Delia Derbyshire

Government Equalities Office: Women in Engineering

Wellcome Library: Women pharmacists demand the vote

Wired: Her Code Got Humans on the Moon – And Invented Software Itself

Margaret Hamilton at the MIT Museum in Cambridge, MA. Photo: HARRY GOULD HARVEY IV FOR WIRED

Margaret Hamilton at the MIT Museum in Cambridge, MA.
Photo: HARRY GOULD HARVEY IV FOR WIRED

Musings of a Clumsy Palaeontologist: In Honour of Ada Lovelace – Female Palaeontologists

Letters From Gondwana: Marie Stopes and Her Legacy as Plaeobotanist

Marie Stopes (1880-1958) photographed by George Bernard Shaw. (LSE Archives Image Record, 1921).

Marie Stopes (1880-1958) photographed by George Bernard Shaw. (LSE Archives Image Record, 1921).

Embryo Project: Marie Stopes International

TrowelBlazers: Veronica Seton-Williams

Veronica Seton-WIlliams, image courtesy of the EES.

Veronica Seton-WIlliams, image courtesy of the EES.

Brain Pickings: Trailblazing Astronomer Vera Rubin on Obsessiveness, Minimizing Obstacles, and How the Trill of Accidental Discovery Redeems the Terror of Uncertainty

Mental Floss: 8 Stellar Facts About the Most accomplished Female Astronomer You’ve Never Heard Of

Caroline Herschel IMAGE CREDIT: MRS. JOHN HERSCHEL, WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

Caroline Herschel
IMAGE CREDIT:
MRS. JOHN HERSCHEL, WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

A lot of the articles in the Internet on the #histSTM of women are unfortunately historically not very accurate and mythologizing. A great exception is Lady Science, which celebrated its first anniversary last Friday. Lady science is well researched, well written and historically accurate and if you don’t already subscribe to their monthly newsletter you should.

Lady Science 1 Year Anniversary

Lady Science

We close our women in #histSTM on a sombre note. 12 October was the one hundredth anniversary of the English nurse Edith Cavell in Belgium in WW I.

Edith Cavell executed 12 October 1915

 CRGXCp-W8AAyqvD

The Conversation: Edith Cavell: the British nurse who taught women the way of the stiff upper lip

The H-Word: Edith Cavell: nurse, martyr, and spy?

image-20151009-9124-1xz2zt2

British Pathé: Service at Westminster Abbey – Nurse Cavell 1915

ODNB: Cavell, Edith Louisa (1865–1915)

CRGZ_klWoAEMZ-8.jpg-large

Quotes of the week:

Calvin

“People laugh about children who ask “why?” all the time but not about the adults who never do”. – Andy Matuschak (@andy_matuschak)

‘Science in itself’ is nothing, for it exists only in the human beings who are its bearers. –Virchow h/t @embryoprojct

“Men don’t make passes at girls who wear glasses.”

“Why do you think I wear them?” – Jennifer Wallis (@harbottlestores)

“Hard work is for people who have nothing better to do”–

“The truth is rarely pure and never simple”. – Oscar Wilde

“My take on scientists saying that we might have MAYBE! detected an alien civilization? Crying in my beer over the stupidization of astronomy” – Mike Brown (@plutokiller)

“When Adam delved, and Eve span, who was then the gentleman? From the beginning all men by nature were created alike” – John Ball 1338-1381

“I think I cracked the Gödel Code. It’s like God but this heavy metal version with the Nazi dots”. – Casmilus (@Casmilus)

 Wren quote

 PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

New Scientist: Explore 100 years of general relativity

moonandback.com: Ninth Planet Named For God of Dark, Dank, Distant Underworld

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Henry Frisch and Andrew Hanson’s Interview

Physics Central: Buzz Blog: Christopher Columbus Steals the Moon

The Space Review: Declassified documents offer a new perspective on Yuri Gagarin’s flight

Gagarin being led to his spaceship at the top of the gantry by Oleg Ivanovsky who was the “lead” (production) designer of the Vostok spaceship.

Gagarin being led to his spaceship at the top of the gantry by Oleg Ivanovsky who was the “lead” (production) designer of the Vostok spaceship.

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 14 – Friedrich Kohlrausch

AHF: Norman Ramsey:

The H–Word: Frank Malina and an overlooked Space Age milestone

AIP: Jesse Greenstein I

AIP: Jesse Greenstein II

Martin J. Clemens: The Mysterious Celestial Spheres of the Ancient Mughal Empire

The famous celestial globe of Muhammad Salih Tahtawi is inscribed with Arabic and Persian inscriptions, completed in the year 1631.

The famous celestial globe of Muhammad Salih Tahtawi is inscribed with Arabic and Persian inscriptions, completed in the year 1631.

AHF: The Alsos Mission

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 16 – China Goes Nuclear

Louvre: Roofed spherical sundial

Slate: The Vault: An Early-20th-Century Globe Promoting the Fantasy of a Socialist Culture on Mars

The Royal Society: The Repository: Newton’s dog-ears

NASA: Remembering George Mueller, Leader of Early Human Spaceflight

Yovisto: Réaumur and the Réaumur Temperature Scale

BBC News: The First Spacewalk

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

Atlas Obscura: Mariners Today Still Use a Math Genius’ 1802 Navigation Guide

Atlas Obscura: China’s Classroom Maps Put The Middle Kingdom at the Center of the World

Ptak Science Books: A Glorious if Not Accurate Map of Ocean Currents 1675

Intelligent Life: Deleted Islands

Atlas Obscura: How Marshall Islanders Navigated the Sea Using Only Sticks and Shells

Cambridge University Library: Collections: Marshal Islands Sailing Charts

Sailing chart of Marshall Islands archipelago. Black & White photograph, taken in May 1928, from the Science Museum Photo Archive. Object on loan to the Science Museum from the Royal Empire Society

Sailing chart of Marshall Islands archipelago. Black & White photograph, taken in May 1928, from the Science Museum Photo Archive. Object on loan to the Science Museum from the Royal Empire Society

Atlas Obscura: Places You Can No Longer Go: The Navigation Trees

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Business Insider: A relic of medieval history explains why glasses make people look smart

Thomas Morris: Stay of execution

The Atlantic: A Short History of Empathy

Mimi Matthews: Aphrodisiacs, Elixirs, and Dr, Brodum’s Restorative Nervous Cordial

V0016204 Two unorthodox medical practitioners, J. Graham and G. Kater Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images images@wellcome.ac.uk http://wellcomeimages.org

V0016204 Two unorthodox medical practitioners, J. Graham and G. Kater
Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images
images@wellcome.ac.uk
http://wellcomeimages.org

Royal College of Physicians: Mark Edwin Silverman

The Cut: The First Legal Abortion Providers Tell Their Stories

Embryo Project: Rudolf Carl Virchow (1821–1902)

Museum of Health Care: Diphtheria

The History of Modern Biomedicine: History of Cervical Cancer and the Role of Human Papillomavirus, 1960–2000

Remedia: Crafting a (Written) Science of Surgery: The First European Surgical Texts

Atlas Obscura: The True Story of Dr. Voronoff’s Plan to Use Monkey Testicles to Make Us Immortal

L0003517 Caricature of Serge Samuel Voronoff (1866 - ) Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images images@wellcome.ac.uk http://wellcomeimages.org

L0003517 Caricature of Serge Samuel Voronoff (1866 – )
Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images
images@wellcome.ac.uk
http://wellcomeimages.org

Fugitive Leaves: Tracing Monsters Across Medicine

Thomas Morris: Brained by a bull

Conciatore: A Gift for the Innocent

Thomas Morris: A case of hiccups

NYAM: Cook Like a Roman: The New York Academy of Medicine’s Apicius Manuscript

The Recipes Project: Removing Arrowheads in Antiquity and the Middle Ages

History of Medicine in Ireland: AIDS and history

Conciatore: Alessandro Neri

Thomas Morris: Aleing all day, and oiling all night

Medium: Ralph M. Rosen: The Best Doctor is Also a Philosopher: Galen on Science and the Humanities

Thomas Morris: Hemlock and millipedes

One to be taken three times a day

One to be taken three times a day

Center for the History of Medicine: On View: The Origins of Anesthesia

Smells Like Science: Ether and the Discovery of Anesthesia

TECHNOLOGY:

Conciatore: The Purse of Envy

A Thoroughly Anglophile Journal: Uncovering a History of Secrets

The Atlantic: The Sexism of American Kitchen Design

Mrs. H.M. Richardson, Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) housewife is shown as she prepares a meal in her all-electric kitchen in Morris, Tenn., on January 15, 1936. (AP Photo)

Mrs. H.M. Richardson, Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) housewife is shown as she prepares a meal in her all-electric kitchen in Morris, Tenn., on January 15, 1936. (AP Photo)

Christie’s The Art People: The evolution of the modern PC in Eight objects

NPR: Turnspit Dogs: The Rise and Fall of the Vernepator Cur

AEON: The hand-held’s tale

Academia: Seeing the Invisible: The Introduction and Development of Electron Microscopy in Britain, 1935–1945

Leaping Robot Blog: Remembering Lines of Light

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

The Washington Post: A scientist found a bird that hadn’t been seen in half a century, then killed it. Here’s why

Embryo Project: Theodor Heinrich Boveri (1862–1915)

Royal Society: The Repository: Drawing under the Microscope

BHL: Fossils Under the Microscope: Hooke and Micrographia

Robert Hooke's microscope. Micrographia, 1665. http://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/786364. Digitized by: Missouri Botanical Garden.

Robert Hooke’s microscope. Micrographia, 1665. http://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/786364. Digitized by: Missouri Botanical Garden.

BHL: Proving Extinction: Cuvier and the Elephantimorpha

BHL: Early Innovations in Paleontology: Gessner and Fossils

BHL: The Roots of Paleontology: Brongniart and Fossil Plants

BHL: A Sinner Killed During the Great Flood or a Fossil Reptile? Discovering a Plesiosaur

World of Phylogenetic Networks: Buffon and the origin of the tree and network metaphors

Brain Pickings: Gorgeous 19th-Century Illustrations of Owls and Ospreys

Royal Natural History Lydekker 6

Royal Natural History Lydekker 6

BHL: Fact or Fiction? Discovering the Mosasaur

Hyperaallergic: The 16th–Century Fossil Book that First Depicted the Pencil

BHL: The First Described and Validly Named Dinosaur

BHL: Uncovering the “Fish Lizard”: Ichthyosaurs and Home

BHL: Naming the Second Dinosaur: Mantell and Iguanodon

BioInteractive: Reading Primary Sources: Darwin and Wallace

Public Domain Review: Richard Spruce and the Trials of Victorian Bryology

Map showing Spruce’s route through the Andes from Notes of a Botanist on the Amazon and Andes (1908), edited by Alfred Russel Wallace – Source.

Map showing Spruce’s route through the Andes from Notes of a Botanist on the Amazon and Andes (1908), edited by Alfred Russel Wallace – Source.

American Museum of Natural History: Invertebrate Zoology: Amber

Mammoth Tales: The First Trilobite

Embryo Project: The Meckel-Serres Conception of Recapitulation

CHEMISTRY:

io9: How Pee Led to One of the 17th Century’s Most Important Chemistry Breakthroughs

The Alchemist in Search of the Philosopher's Stone, by Joseph Wright, 1771 Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Alchemist in Search of the Philosopher’s Stone, by Joseph Wright, 1771
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Gizmodo: How One Man’s Love of Urine Led to the Discovery of Phosphorus

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 12 – Ascanio Sobrero

Science at Play: Periodic Round Table

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 13 – Margaret Thatcher

Chemistry World: Chemistry Nobel laureate Richard Heck dies

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Factually: The patron saint of the internet is Isidore of Seville, who tried to record everything ever known

Culture 24: The Crime Museum Uncovered: Museum of London’s show merges morbid curiosity and real stories

The Recipes Project: Categories in a Database of Eighteenth-Century Medical Recipes

The Chronicle of Higher Education: The Future of History

The Guardian: History v historical fiction

Willing to suspend disbelief … Jane Smiley. Photograph: Rex

Willing to suspend disbelief … Jane Smiley. Photograph: Rex

#EnvHist Weekly

In Useful: Nathaniel Comfort Begins as Third NASA/Library of Congress Chair of Astrobiology

CHF: Merger Announced

CHF: CHF and LSF Announce Merger

The Return of Native Nordic Fauna: Change, history, and a talk before Parliament

EurekaAlert!: Six Degrees of Francis Bacon launches

Smithsonian.com: Six Degrees of Francis Bacon Is Your New Favourite Trivia Game

Corpus Newtonicum: Isaac Newton Library Online

The Newton Project: Books in Newton’s Library

Londonist: Pie Charts of the Life of the Londoner Who Invented Pie Charts

William Payfair's pie chart. Much better and less frivolous than our own examples.

William Payfair’s pie chart. Much better and less frivolous than our own examples.

Priceonomics: Should You Ever Use a Pie Chart?

The Bookseller: Knowledge Unlatched moves into second phase

the many-headed monster: Sources, Empathy and Politics in History from Below

ESOTERIC:

Open Culture: In 1704, Isaac Newton Predicts the World Will End in 2060

Modern Mechanix: Machine Reads Your Head Bumps (Jul, 1931)

med_machine_reads_head_bumps

BOOK REVIEWS:

The New York Review of Books: The Very Great Alexander von Humboldt

Forbes Tech: Pre-Digital Cartography is Still Key to “Mapping” Human History

MAP-flat-cover-1705x1940

Notches: “The Gay Revolution”: An Interview with Lillian Faderman

Science Book a Day: Imagination and a Pile of Junk: A Droll History of Inventors and Inventions

Thinking Like a Mountain: Mosquito Empires: Ecology and War in the Greater Caribbean, 1620-1914

NEW BOOKS:

Wellcome Witnesses to Contemporary Medicine: A History of Bovine TB c.1965–c.2000 Free download

W.W. Norton: Lady Byron and Her Daughters

9780393082685_198

University of Toronto Press: The Secrets of Generation: Reproduction in the Long Eighteenth Century

Bloomsbury Publishing: Medical Negligence in Victorian Britain

Jim Baggott: Origins: The Scientific Story of Creation

Science Book a Day: Epidemics (eyewitness Guides)

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Science Museum: Ada Lovelace

BBC News: Ada Lovelace: Opium, maths and the Victorian programmer

Wellington.scoop: History of maps of charts – new exhibition opening at National Library

Academia: #ColeEx – Twitter Exhibition of Twentieth-Century Natural History and Zoology at the Cole Museum of Zoology, UK

Journal of Art in Society: Science Becomes Art

Joseph Wright of Derby, A Philosopher giving that Lecture on the Orrery (1766) Derby Museums (detail)

Joseph Wright of Derby, A Philosopher giving that Lecture on the Orrery (1766) Derby Museums (detail)

University of Dundee: A History of Nearly Everything 10 October–28 November 2015

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs till 21 February 2016

Dundee Science Centre: Nature’s Equations: D’Arcy Thompson and the Beauty of Mathematics Closes 25 October 2015

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age Runs till 13 March 2016

Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Extended to 31 January 2016

CLOSING SOON: Florence Nightingale Museum: The Kiss of Light 23 October 2015!

Royal Society: Seeing closer: 350 years of microscopy Runs till 23 November 2015

THEATRE AND OPERA:

Early Modern Medicine: Review: Jane Wenham the Witch of Walkern

The Conversation: Good year for science on stage as Nicole Kidman discovers the double helix in Photograph 51

Photograph 51, , Credit Johan Persson

Photograph 51, , Credit Johan Persson

Noel Coward Theatre: Photograph51 Bookings until 21 November 2015

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

FILMS AND EVENTS:

Science Museum: Evening Exchange: Ada Lovelace

University of York: Ada Lovelace Day Wikipedia 2015 Editathon at YorkU 29 October

Youtube: Experimenter – Official Trailer 1 (2015)

Barts Pathology Museum: Contraception & Consent: a 19thC Sex Education 25 November 2015

Youtube: The Forgotten Voyage: Alfred Russel Wallace and his discovery of evolution by natural selection

Museum of Fine Arts Boston: Sorting Out a World of Wonders: Science in the Dutch Golden Age 4 November 2015

Johns Hopkins University: History of Medicine Department: Colloquium with Harold Cook: Descartes’ Early Medical Interests: Some Conjectures 22 October 2015

University of Strathclyde: James Watt’s heat engine: energy transitions past, present, and future 21 October 2015

Royal College of Physicians: Walking Tour: Fit to rule?

Oxford University Museum of Natural History: Handwritten in Stone: How William Smith and his maps changed geology

The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities: Inaugural Annual Ada Lovelace Lecture 27 October 2015

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek by Jan Verkolje, c.1680

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek by Jan Verkolje, c.1680

TELEVISION:

Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog: Manhattan noir

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Youtube: Damon Albarn’s Dr Dee live session

Youtube: Alpen-Adria-University Klagenfurt: POPSCI 2015

Youtube: Continental Drift Alfred Wegener Song by The Amoeba People

Nature Documentaries.org: The Making of a Theory: Darwin, Wallace, and Natural Selection

BSHS: BSHS Annual Conference in Swansea

Vimeo: Jim Endersby: Darwin, Hooker, and Empire

RADIO:

BBC Radio 4: In Our Time: Perpetual Motion

PODCASTS:

New Books in Medicine: EUGENE RAIKHEL, EDITOR; TODD MEYERS, ASSOCIATE EDITOR; EMILY YATES-DOERR, MEMBER Somatosphere.net

Soundcloud: Poem: On the Publishing of Robert Boyle’s The Sceptical Chymist, 1661

The_Sceptical_Chymist

abc.net: RN Drive: Twitterati: @brennawalks

The Royal Society: Hooke’s microscopic world

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

University of Leeds: Call for Participants: Workshops: Pasts, Presents and Futures of Medical Regeneration January, April and June 2016

University of Oxford: Bodleian Libraries: Gough Map Symposium 2015: 2 November

St Anne’s College Oxford: CfP. Medicine and Modernity in the Long Nineteenth Century 10–11 September 2016

UCL: CfP: Workshop: Technology, Environment and Modern Britain during April 2016

H–SCi–Med–Tech: CfP: Technology, Innovation, and Sustainability: Historical and Contemporary Narratives 25 January 2016

The Linnaean Society of New York: Programs 2015–2016 Seasons

University of Lancaster: CfP: Panel on Photographic History at SHS Conference 21–23 March 2016

UCL: Conference: Europe From The Outside in? Imagining Civilization through Collecting the Exotic

The Wagner Free Institute of Science: Chemistry Series: The Periodic Table of Elements: How We Got It and How We Can Use It Mondays Begins 19 October 2015

University of Alberta: Three Societies Meeting: BSHS–CSHPS–HSS 22-25 June 2016

ICHST 2017: 25th International Congress of History of Science and Technology Rio de Janeiro Brazil 23-29 July 2017

banner_1434035935_5_4_layer1

University of Minneapolis: CfP: The International Society for History and Philosophy of Science 11th International Congress 22–25 July 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

University of Harvard: Tenure-Track Assistant Professor in the History of Modern or Contemporary Physics

The Rhine-Waal University of Applied Sciences: Professor for Science Communications

University of Ghent: Three Fully Funded PhD Scholarships in European Periodical Studies

University of Basel: Postdoc: The Effects of Glass Making in Venetian Self-Perception and Identity

APS: Long-Term Pre-Doctoral Fellowships

UC Irvine: Assistant, Associate or Full Professor: History and Philosophy of Science preference



Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #15

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #15

Monday 26 October 2015

EDITORIAL:

We are back again with Whewell’s Gazette your weekly #histSTM links list, as always bursting at the seams with all the histories of science, technology and medicine that the Internet had to offer over the last seven days.

I’m not actually sure if anybody reads the editorials that I put up here every week. They, together with the Quotes of the Week and Birthday(s) of the Week, are here to give the whole thing more the atmosphere of a real journal rather than just a rather tedious looking list of Internet links. The editorials that I write are always spontaneous, something that has occurred to me whilst putting together those rather formidable looking links lists. Some weeks its difficult thinking of anything to write, other times they write themselves with very little effort on my part.

This weeks editorial has sadly written itself, as on Sunday the #histsci community lost one of its most prominent, colourful and loved members with the death of Lisa Jardine. I’m not even going to attempt to outline all that Lisa did over a ridiculously prolific academic career, you can read all of that in the Wikipedia article I link to below. Instead I’m going to reproduce some, but by no means all, of the heart felt comments that flooded Twitter as the sad news spread throughout our Internet community. Lisa was one of a kind both as an academic and as a human being and she will be sorely missed by many who knew her personally and even more who only knew her through her numerous publications. After the comments are some links to radio broadcasts, videos, interviews etc. where you can experience once again in her own words, as well as the obituaries from the papers and others.

I humbly dedicate this edition of Whewell’s Gazette to one of the most vibrant British historians of the last fifty years, Lisa Jardine.

Lisa Jardine (1944–2015) Source: CELL

Lisa Jardine (1944–2015)
Source: CELL

 “Behave Badly”

We’ve lost one of the giants – Thony Christie

 Bugger. Lisa Jardine has died. Bugger. We all die, some sooner, some later. Some too soon. RIP Lisa. You are sadly missed. – Cornelius J. Schilt

 So sad to hear of the death of the wonderful Lisa JardineShe will be greatly missed by all who knew her – Athene Donald

 RIP Lisa Jardine, noted historian and public intellectual. Many happy memories of her lively company – Graham Farmelo

 Hugely shocked and sad to hear of Lisa Jardine’s death. She had such gusto and spirit, it doesn’t seem possible. Great loss for culture. – Philip Ball

Lisa Jardine always sparkling. Took me aside once and said I should speak up more. She did that for so many women…. – Suzanne Moore

Oh….terribly sad news about Lisa Jardine’s death. A fabulous scholar and colleague. Let us remember her well – Joe Cain

Lisa Jardine has been such an inspiration to me over the past few years! What a wonderful person and a terrible loss. – Meg Rosenburg

The death of a great historian is tragic, but they live on through their work – in their reconstruction of the past, we find their thoughts – Greg Jenner

Lisa Jardine dies at 71, leaving us too soon. Memories of our term together at Princeton in 1988. RIP. – Kathryn Olesko

So sad to hear that we’ve lost Lisa Jardine. A giant, a true renaissance woman, the model of what a scholar & public intellectual should be. – John Gallagher

So very sad to hear of the death of Lisa Jardine, such a generous warm-hearted academic whenever I encountered her ­– Katy Barrett

Just saw the news about the loss of Lisa Jardine. It’s hard to believe. She had such energy and presence. – Cathryn Pearce

RIP Lisa Jardine whose publications made a huge impact on my own research and dissertation – Katherine Martinez

Such an amazing response for Lisa Jardine tonight. In the sadness I’m glad for that, the books, broadcasts & the inspiration & generosity. – Rebekah Higgitt

Lisa Jardine an irresistible force finally met her immoveable object. Much missed. – Pete Langman

I am deeply saddened to hear that Lisa Jardine has passed away. I lived for her appearances on In Our Time. – Paraic O’Donnell

Oh my goodness. Sad news. Rest in peace. – Jennifer Park

Saddened to hear of the death of Lisa Jardine. She was very encouraging when I was hesitating over doing a Master’s as a mature student. – Sally Osbourne

Tremendously sad news about the death of Professor Lisa Jardine – Lee Durbin

Just heard that Lisa Jardine has died. Very sad. She was a great scholar & communicator of culture, science, and the cultures of science – Carsten Timmermann

So sorry to hear. “Worldly Goods” helped me discover my love for the Renaissance. – Susan Rojas

Sad to lose our groundbreaking Early Modernist colleague, Lisa – American Science Blog

Lisa Jardine used to give out badges to women saying ‘Behave Badly’ on it. RIP. – Mirander Fay Thomas

Lisa Jardine (1944-2015). A giant of a public intellectual by any measure, a presence the moment you set foot in the vicinity of her fields. In research I encountered Lisa Jardine’s footprints everywhere; today I’m learning something new about her by the hour. Remarkable scholar.– Nicholas Tam

So sad to hear about Lisa Jardine. What a giant. Ingenious Pursuits was a high point in grad school. – Elly Truitt

Sad to hear that Lisa Jardine has died. Was inspired to study early modern history after reading ‘Erasmus, Man of Letters’ as an undergrad. – Robert Harkins

I’ve been very moved by the outpouring of love for Lisa Jardine on Twitter this evening. – Mathew Lyons

Jardine was wildly clever, funny, a great supporter of women in academia, and had excellent taste in music – Sophie Pitman

I never had the honor of meeting Lisa Jardine, but I am so sad to hear of her death. We have lost one of the giants of Renaissance history! – Alisha Rankin

Very sad to hear of the death of Lisa Jardine: great colleague, scholar, progressive, historian, mentor, author & shared admirer of Wedgwood – Tristram Hunt

We’ve lost Lisa Jardine today. I met her only twice, but those meetings had a huge impact on me; Lisa Jardine was one of the sharpest, boldest, wittiest, and most generous scholars I’ve met. But I’ve also met Lisa Jardine through the scholars she collected around herself, at Live & Letters but also in a wider circle. They are the brightest, most generous, most badly behaved, most adventurous group of historical scholars I’ve ever seen. Meeting them has reinvigorated my scholarship, and it has done so with many, I’m sure. Tonight my thoughts are with those scholars around Lisa Jardine, in sadness, and in excited anticipation of everything they’ll create. – Sjoerd Levelt

Lisa Jardine was one of my supervisors at grad school. An immense intellect (and personality), but unfailingly generous and unconceited. – Ross Dandridge

Lisa Jardine was one of the great historians. She understood that to write of humanity you needed to be fully part of it. – Simon Schama

Lisa Jardine kindly praised my article ‘A Physicist’s Lost Love.’ I’ll always feel honored. – Gene Dannen

Sad to hear of the death of Prof. Lisa Jardine. As V&A Trustee for 8 years, her expertise & intellect was invaluable – V&A

Lisa Jardine has died. Warm, provocative, inspiring. She still had too much to tell to us. – Johan Oosterman

Really sad Lisa Jardine has died. Funny, warm and mischievous — when we agreed and disagreed. Especially when we disagreed. – Mark Henderson

Sad to hear of death of Lisa Jardine. As a tribute I hope everyone takes up her call to “behave badly” – Peter Broks

So sad to hear about Lisa Jardine – I will miss her warmth, energy, wit and fantastic support for female colleagues – Felicity Henderson

We’re saddened by news Lisa Jardine has died aged 71 Our thoughts are with her family and friends. – Royal Society

Sad for history to be mourning 2 greats in Jardine & Cesarani; but note w/ pride huge value of their research/expertise beyond academe. – Sara Pennell

We are heartbroken to learn of the death of our beloved and respected President, Lisa Jardine – AHS

Lisa Jardine was an inspiring and exemplary historian. And a wonderful friend. The world is a poorer place without her. Amada Foreman

Lisa Jardine “I only do the things I love and I love the things I do” – Rose Essex

Finally got the courage up to look at twitter. Lisa was the best, and I’m so so glad that she helped and influenced so many of us x I keep returning to the memory of Lisa Jardine at RSA this year, utterly gleeful at the work being presented by ECRs at CELL panels & beyond. She had such a great, infectious love for smart, thoughtful research, and such deep, instinctive care for the people who take part in it. That’s how you do it, right. You love the work, and you support the people who do it in any way you can, and you never elide the hard graft and the effort doing that kind of work takes, and the differing challenges people face. – Kirsty Rolfe

In hope she might laugh:

Lisa your critics compared to thee

Excite contempt & laughter.

No pair of heels I do believe

So many have run after – Faye Getz

 

Wikipedia: Lisa Anne Jardine, CBE FRS FRHistS (née Bronowski 12 April 1944–25 October 2015)

Lisa Jardine Source: Tribune REporter

Lisa Jardine
Source: Tribune REporter

Lisa in her own words

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Behind the Scenes: The Seven Ages of Science an Interview with Lisa Jardine

BBC Radio 4: Seven Ages of Science

Science Museum Group Journal Review: Seven Ages of Science, BBC Radio 4

BBC Radio 4: Desert Island Discs: Lisa Jardine

Youtube: Lisa Jardine: Lecture: ‘What is left of Culture and Society’

Soundcloud: Conway Hall: Things I Never Knew about my Father

Youtube: Inaugural Lecture – Professor Lisa Jardine

New Statesman: Lisa Jardine on life and death

New Statesman: Lisa Jardine (1944–2015): How history can be built around fictions, not events

UCL Press: Lisa Jardine: Temptation in the Archives (free download)

BBC Radio 4: In Our Time: The Royal Society

BBC Radio 4: In Our Time: Zero

BBC Radio 4: Point of View: Keeping time

Tributes and Obituaries

BBC Radio 4: A Point of View: A Tribute to Lisa Jardine

The Guardian: Renowned historian Lisa Jardine dies aged 71

THE: Lisa Jardine: academics pay tribute to historian

The Independent: Lisa Jardine dead: ‘Inspirational historian’ and broadcaster dies aged 71

UCL Press: A Tribute to Lisa Jardine (12 April 1944–25 October 2015)

BBC News: Lisa Jardine: Tributes after renowned historian dies

The Guardian: Lisa Jardine ‘She bedazzled her generation’ – (audio)

In The Dark: R.I.P. Lisa Jardine

The Guardian: Lisa Jardine and David Cesarani were just the kind of public intellectuals Britain needs

British Science Association: A tribute to Professor Lisa Jardine

Apollo Magazine: A Tribute to Lisa Jardine

History News Network: Lisa Jardine, historian, humanist, daughter of Jacob Bronowski, dies

 

Quotes of the week:

“We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be.” – Kurt Vonnegut

“If history is boring, it’s the historian’s fault” – Alexis Coe (@AlexisCoe)

“Astronomy is one of the sublimest fields of human investigation. The mind that grasps its facts and principles receives something of enlargement and grandeur belonging to the science itself. It is a quickener of devotion”. – Horace Mann h/t @HistAstro

“Documentation on journals can be really hard to find. Nature threw everything away in the 60s!” – Malinda Baldwin (@Malinda_Baldwin)

“The only truth in Music” – Jack Kerouac

“I immediately loved working with flies. They fascinated me, and followed me around in my dreams.” – Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard h/t @embryoproject

“When everyone is dead, the Great Game is finished. Not before.”– Rudyard Kipling

“”Why isn’t there cool stuff like hoverboards!?” types stupid man on handheld device capable of accessing the sum total of human knowledge”. – Stu Lux Lisbon (@StuLuxLisbon)

“Though God cannot alter the past, historians can; it is perhaps because they are useful to Him in this respect that He tolerates their existence.” – Samuel Butler h/t @jondresner

“What’s this Mummy?” “It’s a pachy… pachyceph… It’s a sort of allosaurus, because Mummy can pronounce that one.” – Sophia Collins (@sophiacol)

“To study the abnormal is the best way of understanding the normal”. – William James

“Every meme ever: I wish humans weren’t so human. I wish we were what we pretend we are”. – Liam Heneghan (@DublinSoil)

Birthdays of the Week:

The Earth was born 23 October 4004 BCE

The Earth as seen from Apollo 17

The Earth as seen from Apollo 17

 October 23, 4004 B.C.: Happy Birthday Earth!

Renaissance Mathematicus: In defence of the indefensible

Irish Philosophy: James Ussher academic modernity

Science League of America: Seven Myths about Ussher

James Chadwick born 20 October 15

 

James Chadwick Source: Wikimedia Commons

James Chadwick
Source: Wikimedia Commons

AIP: James Chadwick

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 20 – James Chadwick

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Nature Physics: A century of physics

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 19 – Ernest Rutherford

Modern Contemporary: The Global Transformation of Time: 1870–1950

Linked in: A Letter From Albert Einstein To His Daughter

Popular Science: General Relativity: 100 Years Old and Still Full of Surprises

The New York Times: George Mueller, Engineer Who Helped Put Man on Moon, Dies at 97

A tense moment during the AS-101 launch. Standing, from left to right are George Mueller, Wernher von Braun, and Eberhard Rees (Director for Research and Development at MSFC). Source: Wikimedia Commons

A tense moment during the AS-101 launch. Standing, from left to right are George Mueller, Wernher von Braun, and Eberhard Rees (Director for Research and Development at MSFC).
Source: Wikimedia Commons

AHF: Los Alamos, NM

AHF: The Science Behind the Atom Bomb

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Rose Bethe’s Interview

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Robert Furman’s Interview

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Robert Lamphere’s Interview

Voices of the Manhattan Project: David P. Rudolph’s Interview

AHF: The Alsos Mission

AHF: Nuclear Fission

The Conversation: The astronomer and the witch – how Kepler saved his mother from the stake

Great Comet of 1577, which Kepler witnessed with his mother as a child.

Great Comet of 1577, which Kepler witnessed with his mother as a child.

Journal of Art in Society: Comets in Art

The Christian Science Monitor: How astronomy solved a Civil War mystery

Wellcome Trust Blog: Image of the Week: Prince Iskandar’s horoscope

AIP: Felix Bloch

Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog: The plot against Leo Szilard

The Atlantic: The First Image of Earth Taken From Space (It’s Not What You Think)

Compasswallah: The Rings on Buddha’s Saturn

tumblr_inline_nwrejzcJaq1rwys5r_500

BBC Future: How a Nazi rocket could have put a Briton in space

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 25 – Evangelista Torricelli

IOLbeta: A brief history of relativity

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

Mental Floss: 8 Antique Maps That Were the First of Their Kind

Atlas Obscura: The Hole Truth About Why We ‘Dig to China’

Atlas Obscura: The 50-Foot Long Map of Manhattan Only On View for 6 Hours

History Today: Richard Burton dies in Trieste

Slate: The Vault: An Early-20th-Century British Map of the Global Drug Trade

Opium Map

Opium Map

British Library: Revelatory Rivers in Germany – Part 2

Princeton.edu: Hydrography

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Thomas Morris: Lettuce, a Class A drug

Wellcome Library: Doctors and the invention of the English seaside

V0012256 Humorous image of society ladies trying to swim, Brighton. C Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images images@wellcome.ac.uk http://wellcomeimages.org Humorous image of society ladies trying to swim, Brighton. Coloured etching by W. Heath after himself. By: William HeathPublished:  -

V0012256 Humorous image of society ladies trying to swim, Brighton. C
Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images
images@wellcome.ac.uk
http://wellcomeimages.org
Humorous image of society ladies trying to swim, Brighton. Coloured etching by W. Heath after himself.
By: William HeathPublished: –

The Wall Street Journal: LSD Archive Has Been on a Long, Strange Trip

CHICC Manchester: Early Medical Printed Illustrations

Royal College of Physicians: The ornament of his age

Wellcome Images: Aids Posters

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 22 – Vitamin C

Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow: Littlejohn’s Report of the Sanitary Conditions of Edinburgh

The New York Times: In Ancient DNA, Evidence of Plague Much Earlier Than Previously Known

The Recipes Project: Antimony and Ambergris: ‘New’ Ingredients in the Antidotarium Magnum

Apothecary shop, British Library Ms Sloane 1977 f. 49v. From an early 14th century manuscript of the Circa instans (and other works), France (Amiens). Image Credit: The British Library.

Apothecary shop,
British Library Ms Sloane 1977 f. 49v. From an early 14th century manuscript of the Circa instans (and other works), France (Amiens). Image Credit: The British Library.

Thomas Morris: An ‘unnatural propensity’ and its perils

The Atlantic: There Will Be Blood

Thomas Morris: The electric scalpel

Oxford Today: Cigarettes, bully beef and camel meat: How First World War soldiers survived in the Near East

TECHNOLOGY:

The J.Paul Getty Museum: Thomas Annan Steam Engine

Royal Society of Chemistry: Classic kit: Vernier scale

Gizmodo: The History and Future of Locks and Keys

1485731789406437413

Conciatore: San Giovanni

Time Out London: Back to the past: ideas for London that never took off

Ptak Science Books: A Note on the Future of the Future, 1911

Science Museum: The Clockmakers’ Museum

CEO’s Blog: Alex Benay: Canada’s Spirit of Innovation: Music, Sound and Technology

All Things Georgian: 18th Century Hearing Aids

Atlas Obscura: Why Was It Faster To Build Subways in 1900

Conciatore: Black is Beautiful

We Are Dorothy: Electric Love Blueprint – A History of Electronic Music

Inside the Science Museum: Ruth Belville: The Greenwich Time Lady

Ruth Belville in the Evening News, 1929.

Ruth Belville in the Evening News, 1929.

Pictorial: How the Inventors of the 19th Century Brought People Closer to Talking with the Dead

Noah Veltman: What shape is the internet?

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Reciprocal Science: Structural Biology: a beginners’ guide?

Natural History Apostilles: Those who cavalierly reject the theory of…what?

NCSE Reports: Out of Darwin’s Shadow

the many-headed monster: Can the Sodomite Speak? Voicing Sodomy in Early Modern England

Asia One: Firm friends since double-helix DNA discovery

Atlas Obscura: A 16th Century Pope Buried His Pet Elephant Under The Vatican

 One of Raphael's sketches of Hanno (Image: Raphael/Wikimedia)


One of Raphael’s sketches of Hanno (Image: Raphael/Wikimedia)

Natural History Apostilles: The real decimal-point error that transmogrified into the spinach-iron myth

Science League of America: The Cave of Homo naledi, or A Textbook Example of How to Do Science

Medievalists.net: ‘I know not what it is’: Illustrating Plants in Medieval Manuscripts

Notches: From Cod to Codpieces: Benjamin Franklin’s Guide to Food and Sex

Embryo Project: George Wells Beadle (1903–1989)

University of Leeds: Learning the right lessons from Mendel’s peas

BHL: From the Experts: Recommended Fossil Books

storify: Fossil Stories

RCPE: Basil Besler’s Hortus Eystettensis

Basil Besler

Basil Besler

The Guardian: US film of parachuting beavers found after 65 years (it’s OK, they survived)

BHL: Ancient Myths Inspired by Fossils

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 24 – Antonie van Leeuwenhoek

The New York Times: Robert M. White, Who Revolutionized Weather Forecasts, Dies at 92

HSS: When history Meets Science: A Remembrance of William B. Provine (1942–2015)

Why Evolution is True: Was Darwin lactose-intolerant?

CHEMISTRY:

Yahoo News: What can we learn about the discovery of Thomas Jefferson’s chemistry lab at the University of Virginia

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 21 – William A. Mitchell

Chemistry World: Pregl’s analysis tubes

Pregl's apparatus allowed michrochemical determination of many elements © Image source: DOI: 10.1039/AP9933000272

Pregl’s apparatus allowed michrochemical determination of many elements © Image source: DOI: 10.1039/AP9933000272

Distillations Blog: Jane Marcet Conversations on Chemistry

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 23 – Gilbert Lewis

Education in Chemistry Blog: The early teaching of chemistry

The Renaissance Mathematicus: The Phlogiston Theory – Wonderfully wrong but fantastically fruitful

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Chemical Heritage Magazine: Nylon: A Revolution in Textiles

Richard Carter: Darwin on earthworms: small change writ large

Open Culture: Charles Darwin’s Kids Drew on Surviving Manuscript Pages of On the Origin of Species

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Now Appearing: The evils of science exaggerations

The Guardian: Humanities research is groundbreaking, life-changing…and ignored

Wellcome Trust: Research Spotlight: Dr Angela Cassidy

Dr Angela Cassidy

Dr Angela Cassidy

Royal Society: All journal content free access until 30 November 2015

Conciatore: Pirates

Irish Examiner: Cork City wined and dined during Famine, Boole letters show

The New York Times: Museum Specimens Find New Life Online

storify: Ad Stijnman on early modern engraving techniques

History Matters: Historic Fiction and Alternative Truths

The Recipes Project: The (Near) Magic of Digital Access to Manuscript Cookbooks

Page from “Gemel Book of Recipes : manuscript, circa 1660-1700,” New York Academy of Medicine. Curse on bottom of page: Jean Gembel [Gemel] her book / I wish she may be drouned yt steals it from her.

Page from “Gemel Book of Recipes : manuscript, circa 1660-1700,” New York Academy of Medicine. Curse on bottom of page: Jean Gembel [Gemel] her book / I wish she may be drouned yt steals it from her.

The Guardian: Royal Institution to sell science treasures to rescue finances

Cradle in Caricature: Programming Historian Live

Girl in the Moon: Rare books gifs – John Dee, volvelles, apples and things

The #EnvHist Weekly

University of Kent: Notes on periodical genres, inspired by a trip to Trondheim

Heterodoxology: Why fear the history of science? A brief response to Don Wiebe

storify: Scientific Books and their makers

India Today: Bad miss, Nobel!: 7 discoveries that should have got the Nobel Prize

Daily Camera: Boulder’s climb from ‘scientific Siberia’ to scientific peak

ESOTERIC:

The Toast: Scientists Announce Ultimate Success of Alchemy

The Somnium Project: Hekla, Witchcraft and Katherina Kepler

Detail of Abraham Ortelius' 1585 map of Iceland showing Hekla in eruption. The Latin text translates as "The Hekla, perpetually condemned to storms and snow, vomits stones under terrible noise". Source: Wikimedia Commons

Detail of Abraham Ortelius’ 1585 map of Iceland showing Hekla in eruption. The Latin text translates as “The Hekla, perpetually condemned to storms and snow, vomits stones under terrible noise”.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

BOOK REVIEWS:

The Guardian: Maps: charting and changing the world

NCSE: Reports: Wallace, Darwin, and the Origin of Species

Science Book a Day: The Red Canary: The Story of the First Genetically Engineered Animal

red-canary

Wall Street Journal: Man’s Other Best Friend (Goggle title and click on first link to avoid paywall!)

Brain Pickings: Ten Days at the Mad-House: How Nellie Bly Posed as Insane in 1887 in Her Brave Exposé of Asylum Abuse

Forbes: When Scientific Amateurs Have Eureka Moments

The Economist: Understanding the universe

NEW BOOKS:

University of Toronto Press: The Secrets of Generation: Reproduction in the Long Eighteenth Century

Editions Hermann: Écrits de phénoménologie et de philosophie des sciences

Palgrave Macmillan: Navigational Enterprises in Europe and its Empires, 1730–1850

9781137520630

AIP: Selection of 2014–2015 titles researched at NBL&A

Advances in the History of Psychology: Rethinking Interdisciplinarity across the Social Sciences and Neurosciences

ART & EXHIBITIONS

U.S. National Library of Medicine: Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature

photo-home-digitalgallery

Natural History of Museum: Images of Nature

Culture 24: A magical glimpse into the Tudor imagination: Lost library of John Dee to be revealed

Royal College of Physicians: Scholar, courtier, magician: the lost library of John Dee

Chadds Ford Live: Audubon to Warhol: The Art of American Still Life

Hyperallergic: Remembering Forgotten Female Printmakers from the 16th to 19th Centuries

Maria Sibylla Merian, “Der Raupen wunderbare Verwandelung” (“The Wonderful Transformation of Caterpillars”) (1679-83) (photo by the author for Hyperallergic)

Maria Sibylla Merian, “Der Raupen wunderbare Verwandelung” (“The Wonderful Transformation of Caterpillars”) (1679-83) (photo by the author for Hyperallergic)

CLOSING SOON: Royal Society: Seeing closer: 350 years of microscopy

Museum of the History of Science: Extended to 31 January 2016: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War

University of Dundee: A History of Nearly Everything Runs till 28 November 2015

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs till 21 February 2016

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age Runs till 13 March 2016

Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Tuesdays & Wednesdays

THEATRE AND OPERA:

The Blue Orange Theatre: Frankenstein Runs till 8 November 2015

Coach House Theatre: Nothing to Hyde Closes 31 October 2015

Noel Coward Theatre: Photograph51 Runs till 21 November 2015

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Runs till 18 June 2016

FILMS AND EVENTS:

CHoM News: Celebrating Ten Years of the Archives for Women in Medicine 3 November 2015

University of Yale: 2015 Terry Lecture: Becoming Darwin: History, Memory, and Biography 5 November

London Museums of Health & Medicine: Lecture: Finding Voices in the Medical Collection 28 October 2015

Webinar: Medical technology and disability in the First World War 12 November 2015

Science Museum: Computer says Lates 28 October 2015

The Guardian: The dangers of Disney’s film about Charles Darwin

‘Whether Darwin will seem so swashbuckling if the film is honest about his chronic sea-sickness is another matter.’ Photograph: Shaun Curry/AFP/Getty Images

‘Whether Darwin will seem so swashbuckling if the film is honest about his chronic sea-sickness is another matter.’ Photograph: Shaun Curry/AFP/Getty Images

Royal College of Physicians: Walking Tour: “London’s Plagues”

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Unknown artist: Chemist or Pharmacist in His Laboratory, with Assistants and Apparatus (c) Museum of the History of Science; Supplied by The Public Catalogue Foundation

Unknown artist: Chemist or Pharmacist in His Laboratory, with Assistants and Apparatus
(c) Museum of the History of Science; Supplied by The Public Catalogue Foundation

TELEVISION:

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Laughing Squid: A Fascinating Look Into What Goes Into Building Miniture Replicas for the Museum of Scotland

Scientific American: The Pigeon, the Antenna, and Me: Robert Wilson

Youtube: Alfred Russel Wallace Top #10 Facts

RADIO:

PODCASTS:

BookLab 009: Sapiens and the Upright Thinker

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

ICHST2017: CfP: 25th International Congress of History of Science and Technology Rio de Janeiro 23–29 July 2017

banner_1434035935_5_4_layer1

Drew University: CfP: Transatlantic Connections 3 Conference: How Medical Humanities is Building Bridges to the Future of Medicine 13–16 January 2016

Binghampton University: CfP: The Pre-Modern Book in a Global Materiality and Visuality 21–22 October 2016

University of Hull: Maritime Trade, Travel and Cultural Encounter in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries 13–14 November 2015

The Hakluyt Society Essay Prize: This year’s results and Next year’s CfP

University of Kent: Medicine in its Place: Situating Medicine in Historical Context 710 July 2016

Society for Renaissance Studies: CfP: Medieval and Renaissance Music Conference University of Sheffield 5–8 July 2016

Victoria University in the University of Toronto: Workshop: Jesuit Science in the Early Modern World

Wrocław, Poland: CfP: Ludwik Fleck’s theory of thought styles and thought collectives – translations and receptions 10–11 March 2016

Hôpital Adultes Timone, Marseille: Colloque: Classification et catégories en psychiatrie : enjeux éthiques 29 Janvier 2016

BPS/UCL Hist Psych Disciplines Talk: “Getting on in Gotham: Preventing Mental Illness in New York City, 1945-1980” 29 October 2015

Institute of Historical Research: Maritime History and Culture Seminars 2015–16

Karl Jaspers Centre Heidelberg: Conference: Psychiatry in Europe after World War II 30-31 October 2015

UCL: CfP: Science/Technology/Security: Challenges to global governance? 20-21 June 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

Nazarbeyev University, Astana, Kazakhstan: Assistant Professor History of Medicine, Public Health, and/or Environmental History

Royal Museums Greenwich: Fellowships 2016

Trinity College Dublin: Assistant Professor in Environmental History

University of Cambridge: Graduate funding opportunities in History and Philosophy of Science at Cambridge 2016–17

British Library: Curator of Ancient and Medieval Manuscripts

National Maritime Museum: seeks proposals from university partners for collaborative doctoral scholarships to start in October 2016

Academic Job Wiki: History 2015–16

UCL: Research Associate Inner Lives

University of Leeds Library: Medical Collections Project Assistant

UEA: Self-Funded PhD Project: History of Logic

British Library: Collaborative Doctoral Partnership Hans Sloane’s Books: Evaluating an Enlightenment Library

University of Hertfordshire: PhD Studentship in Early Modern History

Sorbonne Universités Paris: Postdoctoral Fellowship – History of nuclear energy and society

South, West, and Wales: Doctoral Training Partnerships 2016/17

University of Leiden: 3 PhD Positions on Rethinking Disability: the Global Impact of the International Year of Disabled Persons (1981) in Historical Perspective

The Antique Boat Museum: Executive Director

Antique Boat Museum Ian Coristine Photo

Antique Boat Museum
Ian Coristine Photo

University of Göttingen: 4 Early Career Fellowships

American Geographical Society Library: Fellowships

Carnegie Mellon University: One-Year Visiting Assistant Professor in History of Science and Technology and/or Science and Technology Studies

 

 


Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol: #16

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #16

Monday 02 November 2015

EDITORIAL:

Once again your weekly #histSTM links list is available on computer, tablet and smartphone screens bringing you a comprehensive selection of the histories of science, technology and medicine picked up from the far flung reaches of cyberspace over the last seven days.

Our guiding acronym #histSTM includes both of the disciplines science and technology. These two areas of human endeavour have shared an intricate and complex history over the millennia. Historians and philosophers of both disciplines have often discussed and tried to define the exact relationship between the two throughout their twisted and long history. Did the one lead or drive the other or did they develop totally separately from each other. If so was that development parallel, the one mirroring the other or did each go its own way. The answers to these questions are complex and to some extent still unresolved; the arguments ebbing and flowing from generation to generation.

About a week ago Matt Ridley reopened that debate with an article in The Wall Street Journal, The Myth of Basic Science. In this article he argued that technology was not driven by basic science but developed separately by itself; technologists finding technological solutions for technological problems when required. The conclusion he seemed to draw in his article is that governments should not finance basic scientific research but leave the technological innovation required by society to industry, who will deliver the goods when necessary.

This article provoked a cry of outrage amongst both scientists and STS people. Particularly in view of the fact that both the Conservatives in Britain and the GOP in America are seriously threatening to cut funding for basic scientific research. The first salvo for the defence was fired by Jack Stilgoe in an article in the Guardian, Countering libertarian arguments against science funding. Stilgoe was soon joined on the barricades by historian of technology Anton Howes , who unleashed a double barrelled blast on his blog Capitalism’s Cradle, Innovation vs Science and Is Innovation Autonomous?

Nature got into the fray with an article entitled Does Innovation always come from science?, in which Matt Ridley was seen to backpedal, claiming per email that he had not suggested cutting science research grants.

The final attack to date came from Derek Lowe writing on his blog In The Pipeline, Technology and Funding: Myths and Alternate Worlds. Lines have been drawn, positions have been taken and in all probability the argument will remain as inconclusive as it always has done.

Quotes of the week:

“Creationist commenter: ‘I never saw a monkey turn into a man’. Presumably, however, they were there to see Eve fashioned from Adam’s rib”. – Richard Carter (@friendsofdarwin)

“The scientific literature should exist to communicate ideas and results, not to inflate egos with impact factors and citations”. – Peter Coles (@telescoper)

“A brilliant German word: “verschlimmbessern,” which means ‘to make something worse by trying to improve it’. Happens everyday everywhere”. – Richard Smith (@Richard56)

“Stephen’s 1st law of typographical errors: typos can be neither created or destroyed; autocorrection serves only to move them around”. – Stephen Curry (@Stephen_Curry)

“UK: where fake medicine is legal under health laws, while tea is an exempted substance under drug laws”. – Frank Swain (@SciencePunk)

“Emeritus professors never die. They just lose their faculties”. – Shit Academics Say (@AcademicsSay)

“I bet when cuneiform was invented everyone was like, look at how no one talks anymore and just stares at their tablets”. Ekaterina Sedia (@esedia)

#histSTM Halloween

 95237

The H-Word: Babbage’s brain and Galileo’s finger: six macabre scientific relics

Concocting History: Peter Peter Pumpkin Eater

Ashmolean Halloween:

Early Modern Medicine: Pumpkin Power

CHF: Science and the Supernatural in the 17th Century

The Public Domain Review: The Poet, the Physician and the Birth of the Modern Vampire

Harvard Divinity School: Who are the Dead and What do They Want?

Scientific American: Cemetery Science: The Geology of Mausoleums

Smithsonian.com: The Gruesome History of Eating Corpses as Medicine

Motherboard: From Zombies to Telepathy: When Science Takes on the Supernatural

Strange Remains: The morbid history of Harvard Medical School

1446271417954231

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 26 – Far Side of the Moon

AIP: Henrietta Swope

AHF: Isotope Separation Methods

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Paula and Ludwig Bruggemann’s Interview

JHI Blog: Goodnight Moon: Kepler’s ‘Somnium’

Kepler’s ‘Somnium’ and other writings, published posthumously in 1634

Kepler’s ‘Somnium’ and other writings, published posthumously in 1634

The Somnium Project: Exploring Johannes Kepler’s ‘Somnium’ – the first science fiction story

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 27 – Lise Meitner

Yovisto: The Peltier Effect

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Ted Taylor’s Interview

Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog: “Mortuary Services in Civil Defense” (1956)

OUP Blog: Thinking of Kepler on the Beach

Johannes Kepler, 1610. Public domain via Wikimedia Commons.

Johannes Kepler, 1610. Public domain via Wikimedia Commons.

The Guardian: The astronomer who saved his mother from being burned as a witch

lorentz.leidenuniv.ni: Four centuries of physics dissertations from Leiden University

The Irish Times: Fred Hoyle: The brilliant man who lost the Big Bang debate

AHF: Hydrogen Bomb – 1950

Academia: Priority claims and public disputes in astronomy: E.M. Antoniadi, J. Comas I Solà and the search for authority and social prestige in the early twentieth century Pedro Ruiz-Castell (pdf)

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Marshall Rosenbluth’s Interview

Yovisto: The “King of Bombs” and the Craze of Cold War Nuclear Armament

Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog: The improbable William Laurence

Ptak Science Books: Glorious Gearworks, Extended­ – Models of the Solar System, 1817–1821

Source: Ptak Science Books

Source: Ptak Science Books

Robinince’s Blog: Psychoastronomy – a morning of awe with Brian Cox

Science Notes: Today in Science History – November 1 – Operation Ivy Mike

AIP: Hermann Bondi

Fusion: Einstein’s life was in turmoil while he developed general relativity

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

British Library: Untold lives blog: Captain Cook – Endeavour and Resolution

Just Bod: The Isles: Monsters, Mariners and Old Maps of Exploration

Anglesey by John Speed 1610 Public Domain Wikimedia

Anglesey by John Speed 1610 Public Domain Wikimedia

Sarah E. Bond: Mapping the Underworld: Space, Text, and Imaginary Landscapes in Antiquity

The Afternoon Map: The Most Beautiful 19th Century Arabic Map of Syria and Palestine

World Digital Library: World Map, 1566

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Smithsonian.com: How Contact Lenses Were Made in 1948

British Pathé

British Pathé

Thomas Morris: A case for Dr Coffin

Royal College of Physicians: A physician’s cane and the secrets it contained

Remedia: Butchers & Surgeons: Rethinking the 17th-Century English Surgeon

Atlas Obscura: The Tarantula-Possessed Woman Who Could Only be Cured by Dance

Independent: Obituary: Anne Spoerry

Advances in the History of Psychology: BPS’s The Psychologist: Psychology and the Great War, 1914–1918

The Guardian: Can you stomach it? The grim, grisly world of historical surgery – in pictures

Source: The Guardian

Source: The Guardian

Origins of Science as a Visual Pursuit: Networking with the Fabrica

BHL: Eerie Anatomy: Vesalius’ De humani corporis fabrica

Medium: Ancient Medicine and Fetal Personhood

Thomas Morris: Glass half-empty

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 28 – Jonas Salk

Discover: A Mouldy Cantaloupe & The Dawn of Penicillin

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 29 – Baruj Benacerraf

Thomas Morris: Saliva and crow’s vomit

Wales Online: Welsh History Month: Some kind of Recorde…polymath, physician, mathematician and inventor of the equals sign

robert2

Harvard Gazette: Lessons on the brain: The Phineas Gage story

TECHNOLOGY:

The modern world in old Ladybird, pt 54. "The computer is like a gigantic cash register" (1972)

The modern world in old Ladybird, pt 54. “The computer is like a gigantic cash register”
(1972)

 

Conciatore: Solid Water

Plus Magazine: Happy Birthday, George Boole!

Popular Mechanics: 11 Calculators That Show How Far Computing Has Come in the Past 2,000 Years

Quanta Magazine: The Physical Origin of Universal Computing

George Boole 200: Georg Boole: Timeline of Life Events

Wellcome Library Blog: An epoch in the history of typography

Simple City: Obituary Barry Cooper, 1943–2015

O Say Can You See: 6 surprising objects in the history of the Internet

Prisoner ankle bracelet and control box, about 1990

Prisoner ankle bracelet and control box, about 1990

Ptak Science Books: America Attacked, 1937 – and the Unusual Architectural Response to poison Gas and the Homeless

Yovisto: Hans Grade – German Aviation Pioneer

Motherboard: Heroic Junkyard Owner Says He Saved Priceless Moon Rover From Scrap Heap

Conciatore: Witch’s Brew of Glass

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 30 – Joseph Wilson Swan

Joseph Wilson Swan

Joseph Wilson Swan

Alex Wellenstein: RIP Joan Lisa Bromberg, historian who wrote on lasers, fusion, and many things.

Georgian Gent: Hester Bateman – an extraordinary woman: a brilliant silversmith, clever in business

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

AMNH: The Horseshoe Crab

flickr: Biodiversity Heritage Library’s photos: Birds

Fistful of Cinctans: Sea Fables Explained

barnacles-web

Embryo Project: “The Potency of the First Two Cleavage Cells in Echinoderm Development. Experiment Production of Partial and Double Formations” (1891–1892), by Hans Driesch

No Roads Barred: Tracing the footsteps of A. R. Wallace in Singapore

Forbes: In the Alps Myths about dragons may be Rooted in Geology

Yovisto: Othniel Charles Marsh and the Great Bone Wars

TrowelBlazers: Maria Antonina Czaplicka

Portrait of Marie Czaplicka and Henry Usher Hall standing with some of the objects which they collected on the Yenisei Expedition to Siberia (1914-15). Images courtesy of the Pitt-Rivers Photo Collection.

Portrait of Marie Czaplicka and Henry Usher Hall standing with some of the objects which they collected on the Yenisei Expedition to Siberia (1914-15).
Images courtesy of the Pitt-Rivers Photo Collection.

Daily Kos: Daily Bucket: Herbaria Ode and Obituary

Embryo Project: Gavin Rylands de Beer (1899–1972)

The Dispersal of Darwin: Article: Neptunism and Transformism: Robert Jameson and other Evolutionary Theorists in Early Nineteenth-Century Scotland

Science League of America: Evolution for John Doe , Part 1

AL.com: Alabama’s hidden role in Darwin’s theory of Evolution

CHEMISTRY:

Chemistry World: Speaking of chemistry

Science Notes: Today in Science History – October 30 – Hermann Franz Moritz Kopp

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Academia: The rising of chemical kinds through epistemic iteration Hasok Chang (pdf)

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Wikipedia: WikiProject Women Scientists

Barts Health NHS: Archives catalogue

EMROC: The Transcribathon in Numbers… and Names

The Recipes Project: Transcription Communities: Experiencing a Transcribathon in a Class Setting

Medical Museion: Exhibiting Epistemic Objects

BSHS: Ayrton Prize Shortlist

AEON: Paradigms Lost

BBC News: Historical items ‘being destroyed’ by mould in Carmarthen

Book Mould Source: National Library of Wales

Book Mould
Source: National Library of Wales

History Matters: Historical Fiction and Fictional History

Conciatore: Neri and the Inquisition

HSS: October 2015 Newsletter

HSS: Interview—Joan Vandegrift: On the Occasion of Her 30th Anniversary as Manuscript Editor to Isis

HSS: Is Membership an Anachronism?

Cilo@King’s: The Enlightenment bull market and its decolonial future

AHF: October Newsletter

The Getty Iris: A Beginner’s Guide to the Renaissance Book

A 16th-century print shop. A “puller” removes a printed sheet from the press, while a “beater” inks type. - Source Wikimedia Commons

A 16th-century print shop. A “puller” removes a printed sheet from the press, while a “beater” inks type. –
Source Wikimedia Commons

Absolutely Maybe: Curiosity to Scrutiny: the Early Days of Science Journalism

Wellcome Library: A month of pogonography on the blog

CNN: The historical analogs of brilliant women

ESOTERIC:

The Recipes Project: A Remedy for Witchcraft and Demonic Possession in Seventeenth-Century Ireland

An early eighteenth-century depiction of a witch conjuring up demons to do her evil work. From: Richard Boulton, A Compleat History of Magick, Sorcery and Witchcraft … (London, 2 vols, 1715-1722), vol. 1, frontispiece.

An early eighteenth-century depiction of a witch conjuring up demons to do her evil work. From: Richard Boulton, A Compleat History of Magick, Sorcery and Witchcraft … (London, 2 vols, 1715-1722), vol. 1, frontispiece.

BOOK REVIEWS:

Science League of America: A New Book to Introduce Evolution to Preschoolers: Grandmother Fish

Nature: Books in Brief

British Library: Maps and views blog: British Town Maps

6a00d8341c464853ef01bb0887ffde970d-800wi

TLS: Truth, beauty, science and art

The Lancet: Soul medicine

Mirror: 13 fascinating and obscure science questions – complete with answers

Popular Science: Light: A Very Short Introduction – Ian Walmsley

LSE: Review of Books: A Historical Atlas of Tibet by Karl E. Ryavec

A-Historical-Atlas-of-Tibet

NEW BOOKS:

Schweizerbart Science Publishers: The Climates of the Geological Past/Die Klimate der geologischen Vorzeit

Palgrave: Constructions of Cancer in Early Modern England: Ravenous Natures

Ashgate: Spaces of Global Knowledge: Exhibition, Encounter and Exchange in an Age of Empire

9781472444363.PPC.qxd:Withers

The Dispersal of Darwin: Making “Nature”: The History of a Scientific Journal

Ashgate: Geography, Technology and Instruments of Exploration

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Lincoln Cathedral Chapter House: The Life and Legacy of George Boole 14 September–3 November 2015

George Boole Source: Wikimedia Commons

George Boole
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Boston Public Library: Women in Cartography: Five Centuries of Accomplishment 31 October 2015–27 March 2016

Before Newton: Indigenous Knowledge & the Scientific Revolution

Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Runs until 31 January 2016

University of Dundee: A History of Nearly Everything Runs until 28 November 2015

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs until 21 February 2016

The Kongouro from New Holland (Kangaroo) 1772 by George Stubbs. ZBA5754 National Maritime Museum

The Kongouro from New Holland (Kangaroo) 1772 by George Stubbs. ZBA5754
National Maritime Museum

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age Runs until 13 March 2016

Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday & Saturday

CLOSING SOON: Royal Society: Seeing closer: 350 years of microscope

CLOSING SOON: Maudsley Hospital: The Maudsley at War: the story of the hospital during the Great War

 

THEATRE AND OPERA:

The Blue Orange Theatre: Frankenstein Runs until 8 November 2015

Noel Coward Theatre: Photograph51 Booking until 21 November 2015

Photo 51, showing x-ray diffraction pattern of DNA Source: Wikimedia Commons

Photo 51, showing x-ray diffraction pattern of DNA
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Booking to 18 June 2016

FILMS AND EVENTS:

Florence Nightingale Museum: How To Die Like a Victorian 2 December 2015

1887 Victorian Mourning

1887 Victorian Mourning

Royal Museum Greenwich: Pepys Show Late: Party like it’s 1669

Motherboard: The ‘Steve Jobs’ Movie Bombed at the Box Office

Preserved Films: Fifty Million Years Ago (1925)

Framing the Face: Programme 28 November 2015

George Boole 200: Happy 200th Birthday George Boole 2 November 2015

Wellcome Collection: Recycling: London’s dirty past 5 November 2015

Wellcome Collection: Home Remedies (British Sign Language Discussion) 6 November 2015

 

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Painting by Samuel Scott. Comet Halley over the river Thames near London, England in 1759.

Painting by Samuel Scott.
Comet Halley over the river Thames near London, England in 1759.

 

TELEVISION:

AHF: “Manhattan” Season 2, Episode 2: Mind Games

AHF: “Manhattan” Season 2, Episode 2: The Queen of Los Alamos

A View From the Bridge: Electrifying: Tesla on television

teslaseries_poster_medt

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Museo Galileo: Systems of celestial coordinates

AEON Video: The art of data visualisation

Youtube: The George Boole Song

Aljazeera: Pioneers of Engineering: Al Jazari and the Banu Masa

Youtube: 3.5* ‘til infinity

Vimeo: Lord Rutherford – Goettingen Lecture 14 December 1931

Harvard University Department of Physics: Recollections of Los Alamos and the Nuclear Era

Vimeo:Horrible Histories: Charles Darwin Evolution Song

Youtube: PBS Nova S33E06 Newton’s Dark Secret

RADIO:

BBC Radio 3: Free Thinking – Feature: Health Care in 18th Century Bamburgh Castle

Bamburgh Castle Source: Wikimedia Commons

Bamburgh Castle
Source: Wikimedia Commons

PODCASTS:

Mixcloud: The Genealogy Radio Show – Episode 8 Series 3 – George Boole *200 Genealogy project

To the best of our Knowledge: In the Newton Archives

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

Calgary, Alberta: CfP: Canadian Society for the history and Philosophy of Science Annual Conference 28–30 May 2016

UCL: CfP: 10th London Ancient Science Conference 15–17 February 2016

École Normale Supérieure: Salle du Centre Cavaillès: Colloque de la Société Française d’Histoire des Sciences Humaines 5 et 6 Novembre 2015

University of Trieste: CfP: International Society for Cultural History Annual Conference 2016 18–22 July

Society for Philosophy and Technology: Call for Nominations for Society for Philosophy and Technology Board and President

University of Lancaster: CfP: Social History Society 40th Anniversary Conference 21-23 March 2016

Origins of Science as a Visual Pursuit: Notes and Records – Essay Prize – deadline 31–01-16

University of Lancaster: Symposium: Literature, Science and Medicine 30–31 March 2016

Maritime at Greenwich: ‘Britain and the Sea’ – Free to attend seminar series at Greenwich

boat

University of Hull: Maritime Trade, Travel, and Cultural Encounter in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century 13–14 November 2015

University of Prague: CfP: 7th International Conference for the European Society for the History of Science 22–24 September 2016

Forum for Inter-American Studies: CfP: Special Issue Bodies in the Americas

The Warburg Institute: Ptolemy’s Science of the Stars in the Middle Ages 5–7 November 2015

4af2ac60d6

National Maritime Museum Greenwich: CfP: From Sea to Sky: the Evolution of Air Navigation from the Ocean and Beyond 9–10 June 2016

Notches: History of Sexuality at the 2016 American Historical Association Conference

Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow: Glasgow History of Medicine Group – Autumn Meetings 2015

Society for the Social History of Medicine: Conference: Practical Knowledge and Medical Practice in Ancient Mediterranean Cultures Berlin 2–3 November 2015

University of Winchester: CfP: Death, Art and Anatomy Conference 3–6 June 2016

Florence Nightingale 2020: Nightingale 2020: General Discussion Meeting on 7th December

USF Tampa Florida: CfP: Philosophy of Science Roundtable 11–13 March 2016

Birkbeck College: CfP: Birkbeck EMS’S 9th Annual Student Conference Sensing the Early Modern 20 February 2016

Birkbeck & Kings Colleges London: CfP: Conference: Life and death in early modern philosophy 14–16 April 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

University of Amsterdam: Professor of Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Heritage

University of Leeds: Faculty of Arts: New Postdoctoral Position: Cultures of the Book

University of Exeter: Over 100 PhD studentships available for 2016 entry

Council on Library and Information Resources: Mellon Fellowships for Dissertation Research in Original Sources

avhumboldt.de: Stellenausschreibung: Wissenschaftliche/r Mitarbeiter/in im Akademienvorhaben „Alexander von Humboldt auf Reisen – Wissenschaft aus der Bewegung“

Nazarbayev University: Assistant Professor – History of Medicine, Public Health, and/or Environmental History

 

 

 


Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #17

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #17

Monday 09 November 2015

EDITORIAL:

Assuming you didn’t blow yourself up on Guy Fawkes Night you are now reading the latest edition of the weekly #histSTM links list, Whewell’s Gazette going off in all directions with all the histories of science, technology and medicine ignited in cyberspace over the last seven days.

The second of November saw a very noteworthy anniversary with the bicentenary of the birth of the mathematician and logician George Boole. Boole’s life is a real rags to mathematical riches story. Born the son of a shoemaker and a housemaid his formal education reached an end at the age of fourteen. A bright lad he became an assistant schoolmaster at the age of sixteen and set up his own small private school whilst only just nineteen. However his true passion was mathematics. Having learnt Latin and Greek as a child he taught himself modern French, Italian and German in order to be able to read the latest continental mathematics; England lagging far behind the continent in mathematics in the early nineteenth century. Already at the age of twenty-four he began publishing papers on cutting edge subjects with the active assistance Of the Cambridge University fellow, Duncan Gregory, a great-great-grandson of Newton’s contemporary James Gregory.

In the late 1840s the British Government decide to set up new universities in Ireland, the Queen’s Colleges of Belfast, Cork and Galway. Boole by now an acknowledged mathematician with a solid reputation decided, with the support of his friends, to apply for a teaching position. One must remember that he had no formal qualifications but with an application that was supported by testimonials from the elite of the then British scientific establishment he was appointed to the professorship of mathematics at Queen’s College Cork in 1849.

Boole was a successful and respected university teacher and would go on to write and publish important textbooks on differential equations and the calculus of finite differences as well as about fifty papers on diverse topic, winning several important awards. If he had never written anything on logic he would still be counted as one of the leading nineteenth-century British mathematicians but is for his work in logic that he mainly remembered today.

In two works, The Mathematical Analysis of Logic from 1847 and An Investigation of The Laws of Thought from 1854, Boole set out his logical algebra, a two-valued logic of classes. Receiving scant attention before his untimely death in 1864 Boolean logic or Boolean algebra, as it is now known went on, in the hands of others, such as C. S. Peirce and Ernst Schröder, to become a powerful analytical tool before being superceded in the 1920s by the mathematical logic of Whitehead and Russell’s Principia.

Just as it seem destined to fade into obscurity it was rediscovered as a perfect medium for the design of electric switching circuits thus going on to become the design tool for the circuitry of the electronic computer on which I’m typing this editorial. As the circuitry of the hardware was two valued it followed that the programmes that run on that circuitry should also contain Boole’s logic at their core.

The self educated son of a cobbler unknowingly delivered the heart of the computer age, as he turned his attention to symbolic logic almost 170 years ago and so it was that the bicentenary of his birth was acknowledge and celebrated last Monday not only in his birthplace Lincoln and in Cork but all over the world.

 George Boole born 2 November 1815

 George_Boole_color

Google: George Boole’s 200th Birthday

george-booles-200th-birthday-5636122663190528.2-hp2x

George Boole 200: Celebrating George Boole’s Bicentenary

Yovisto: George Boole – The Founder of Modern Logic

Time: New Google Doodle Honors Prolific Mathematician George Boole’s 200th Birthday

Sydney Padua: Happy 200th Birthday George Boole!

Irish Philosophy: Ones and Zeros

The River-side: George Boole blog posts

Scientific American: The Bicentennial of George Boole, the Man Who Laid the Foundations of the Digital Age

UCC Library: Boole Papers

Dan Cohen: George Boole at 200: The Emotion Behind the Logic

BBC: Magazine Monitor: George Boole and the AND OR NOT gates

BBC: World at One: Marcus on Boole

Silicon Republic: 6 Disciplines Georg Boole revolutionised

Open Plaques: George Boole (1815–1864)

facebook: Capturing George Boole Day at UCC

Stephen Wolfram Blog: George Boole: A 200-Year View

Nature: Smooth operator

RTE Player: Film: The Genius of George Boole

Irish Philosophy: George Boole Day – Bicentenary Links [an even longer links list than the one here!]

IMG_20151103_134248812-1024x768

Quotes of the week:

Joseph Needham

Joseph Needham

“Thomas D’Urfey d.1723, poet, wit, author (e.g. of a book titled ‘The Fart’) who said that “the principle business of life is to enjoy it”!” – Alun Withey (@DrAlun)

“My computer is actually based on Babbage’s lesser known creation; “The Indifference Engine.”

Or maybe it isn’t. I don’t really care”. – Sarcastic Rover (@SarcasticRover)

“Don’t worry about people stealing your ideas. If your ideas are any good, you’ll have to ram them down people’s throats.” – Howard Aiken h/t @JohnDCook

Last letter of Capt Charles Clerke to Joseph Banks always gets to me. Clerke died in the Bering Sea while commanding the last Cook Exped. His concerns are duty to country, getting specimens to Banks, and asking that Banks take on patronage for Clerke’s men. ‘Now my dear & honoured friend I must bid you a final adieu; may you enjoy many happy years in this world, & in the end ‘attain that fame your indefatigable industry so richly deserves.’ *sheds a tear* – Cathryn Pearce (@CathrynPearce)

“Though I love chemistry much – very much, I love botany more!” – John Torrey h/t

@KewDC

“Botany I assure you, my dear Sir, is with me a far more pleasant subject to write on, than Cholera” – Charles Short h/t @KewDC

A telegraph company's answer to Bell's offer to sell them the telephone patent

A telegraph company’s answer to Bell’s offer to sell them the telephone patent

“On this day in history, people who have since been forgotten created things that will never be found nor understood” – Night Vale Podcast

“The limits to my, and all historians’, knowledge and expertise. Lest we forget” – Tina Adcock (@TinaAdcock)

“Today I learned about chicken phrenology. This was a thing. It predicted chicken productivity. I don’t know what to do with this info”. – Michael Egan (@EganHistory)

“I said that the only thing to be learned from history is that there is nothing to learn”. – Emil du Bois-Reymond

“For the astronomer and the physicist may both prove the same conclusion — that the earth, for instance, is round.” – Thomas Aquinas h/t @JohnDCook

“There is TOO MUCH STUFF. Of all kinds. Please stop making/discovering it”. – Matthew Cobb (@matthewcobb)

“The outer circles of hell are slightly softer, while the centre remains quite firm to the bite” – Al Dente’s Inferno. – @NickMotown

Maria Mitchell Quote

Birthdays of the Week:

CTOBJx9WsAAgMhT

 Lise Meitner born 7 November 1878

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Unsung! I hardly think so.

CTNtyNWUsAAJTcT

AHF: Lise Meitner

CTOiao1XAAAgNM3

CHF: Otto Hahn, Lise Meitner, and Fritz Strassmann

800px-Lise_Meitner_(1878-1968),_lecturing_at_Catholic_University,_Washington,_D.C.,_1946

Marie Curie born 7 November 1867

CTNtx5fW4AAKo85

CHF: We’re History: Marie Curie Led Science – and Women Scientists – to a New Age

CTOKlmfU8AAHMLB

AHF: Marie Curie

CTOuANIUEAAYeOg

Brain Pickings: Radioactive: The Incredible Story of Marie Curie Told in Cyanotype

Pierre and Marie Curie Source: Wikimedia Commons

Pierre and Marie Curie
Source: Wikimedia Commons

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Yovisto: The Arecibo Radio Telescope – Looking for Extraterrestrial Signals

Cosmology: Carnegie Science: 1920: Harlow Shapley Finds Our Place in the Milky Way

Physics Today: Arch and scaffold: How Einstein found his field equations

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Robert Nobles and William Sturm’s Interview – Part 2

NASA: 15 Years of Station Told in 15 Gifs

Source: The Guardian

Source: The Guardian

The Guardian: 15 years of the International Space Station – in pictures

Yovisto: Howard Shapley and the Milky Way

FQXi Blogs: Losing Neil Armstrong

AHF: Plutonium

AIP: Nick Holonyak

Motherboard: Why We Still Want Laika the Space Dog to Come Home

Laika in her final resting place. Image: National Space Science Data Center

Laika in her final resting place. Image: National Space Science Data Center

NEWS! From the Naval Observatory: New Research Explains Moving Meridian Mystery

Voices of the Manhattan Project: General Leslie Groves’s Interview

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Paula and Ludwig Bruggemann’s Interview

Telegraph & Argos: Celebrating the life of Fred Hoyle, who coined the term Big Bang Theory

The New Yorker: Tangled Up In Entanglement

Quanta Magazine: Einstein’s Parable of Quantum Insanity

Institute of Advanced Studies: The Advent and Fallout of EPR

AHF: Norman Ramsey

Restricted Data. The Nuclear Secrecy Blog: The doubts of J. Robert Oppenheimer

The New York Times: How Politics Shaped General Relativity

Motherboard: The Online Afterlife of Manhattan Project Physicist Philip Morrison

AHF: Phillip Morrison

Phys Org: On the 120th anniversary of the X-ray, a look at how it changed our view of the world

Hand mit Ringen (Hand with Rings): print of Wilhelm Röntgen's first "medical" X-ray, of his wife's hand, taken on 22 December 1895 and presented to Ludwig Zehnder of the Physik Institut, University of Freiburg, on 1 January 1896 Source: Wikimedia Commons

Hand mit Ringen (Hand with Rings): print of Wilhelm Röntgen’s first “medical” X-ray, of his wife’s hand, taken on 22 December 1895 and presented to Ludwig Zehnder of the Physik Institut, University of Freiburg, on 1 January 1896
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Universe Today: Who Was Galileo Galilei?

Universe Today: Who Was Christiaan Huygens?

Popular Science: When We First Saw The Far Side of the Moon

Princeton University Press Blog: Feynman on the historic debate between Einstein & Bohr

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

 

Herbert G. Ponting (British, 1870 - 1935) "Vida", one of the best of the dogs used by Capt. Smith on his South Pole Expedition (1910 - 1913)., about 1912, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Herbert G. Ponting (British, 1870 – 1935)
“Vida”, one of the best of the dogs used by Capt. Smith on his South Pole Expedition (1910 – 1913)., about 1912,
The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles

 

 British Library: Maps and views blog: Magnificent Maps of New York

Ptak Science Books: The End is Near for You: Germany, May, 1945

Slate Vault: These 18th– and 19th-Century “Dissected Maps” Were the First Jigsaw Puzzles

Worlds Revealed Geography and Maps at The Library of Congress: Of Maps and Data

BBC News: National Library shares 2nd Century Ptolemy map image

_86547920_prima_europe_tabula

UVA Today: McGregor Library Offers Rare Digital History of the Americas

Christie’s The Art People: CAO, JUNYI (FL. 1644). TIANXIA JIUBIAN FENYIE RENJI LUCHENG QUANTU. [A COMPREHENSIVE MAP OF THE KINGDOM OF CHINA AND NEIGHBOURING COUNTRIES.] NANJING: BEGINNING OF SUMMER IN THE 17TH YEAR OF THE REIGN OF EMPEROR CHONGZHEN [I.E. 1644].

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Hyperallergic: 15 Million Pages of Medical History Are Going Online

Dr Alun Withey: BBC Free Thinking Feature: Bamburgh Castle Surgery, c. 1770–1800

Remedia: Amateur Surgeon of Dutiful Citizen? The First Aid Movement in the Nineteenth Century

Cartoon from Punch , 1914. Doctor (at Ambulance Class) ‘My dear lady, do you realise that his lad’s ankle was supposed to be broken before you bandaged it?’ © Wellcome Images, Wellcome Library, London.

Cartoon from Punch , 1914. Doctor (at Ambulance Class) ‘My dear lady, do you realise that his lad’s ankle was supposed to be broken before you bandaged it?’ © Wellcome Images, Wellcome Library, London.

Fugitive Leaves: Louis Pasteur, Joseph Lister, and the Mystery of the Smudged Date

Atlas Obscura: Object of Intrigue: The Prosthetic Iron Hand of a 16th-Century Knight

Historic UK: The Reputed Plague Pits of London

Medical Library: The Bamberg Surgery: An early European surgical text

A Covent Garden Gilflirt’s Guide to Life: For the Patient Who Has Everything…

Hopes & Fears: From lemon rinds to knitting needles: A visual history of abortion and birth control

MOTHER SHOWER SYRINGES

MOTHER SHOWER SYRINGES

Medievalists.net: Nursing and Caring: An Historical Overview from Anciet Greek Tradition to Modern Times

Harvard School of Dental Medicine: History

Dangerous Minds: The Literal Origins of the Phrase ‘Don’t Blow Smoke Up My Ass’

Thomas Morris: The rocket man

BT: Ingenious: Remembering the Post Office’s role in creating the first NHS hearing aid

Royal Museums Greenwich: ‘God preserve us all!’: Samuel Pepys and the Great Plague

Technological Stories: What If Beddoes & Davy Had Attempted Surgical Anesthesia in 1799?

Wonders & Marvels: The Unmanly Art of Breastfeeding in the Eighteenth Century

Library Company: The Library Company of Philadelphia Consults Aristotle’s Masterpiece

Origins of Science as a Visual Pursuit: Networking with a Book, or How Vesalius Gave away his Complimentary Copies of the Fabrica

The Public Domain Review: Georg Bartisch’ Ophthalmodouleia (1583)

L0078612 Folio 218 recto, Bartisch, Ophthalmodouleia, 1583. Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images images@wellcome.ac.uk http://wellcomeimages.org Coloured woodcut of a woman with an enlarged and protruding eyeball. Coloured Woodcut 1583 Ophthalmodouleia. Das ist Augendienst. Newer vnd wolgegründter Bericht von Ursachen vnd Erkentnüs aller Gebrechen, Schäden vnd Mängel der Augen vnd des Gesichtes, wie man solchen anfenglich mit gebürlichen mitteln begegenen, vorkommen vnd wehren, auch wie man alle solche gebresten künstlich durch Artzney, Instrument vnd Handgrieffe curiren, wircken vnd vertreiben sol ... / George Bartisch Published: 1583. Copyrighted work available under Creative Commons Attribution only licence CC BY 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

L0078612 Folio 218 recto, Bartisch, Ophthalmodouleia, 1583.
Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images
images@wellcome.ac.uk
http://wellcomeimages.org
Coloured woodcut of a woman with an enlarged and protruding eyeball.
Coloured Woodcut
1583 Ophthalmodouleia. Das ist Augendienst. Newer vnd wolgegr√ºndter Bericht von Ursachen vnd Erkentn√ºs aller Gebrechen, Sch√§den vnd M√§ngel der Augen vnd des Gesichtes, wie man solchen anfenglich mit geb√ºrlichen mitteln begegenen, vorkommen vnd wehren, auch wie man alle solche gebresten k√ºnstlich durch Artzney, Instrument vnd Handgrieffe curiren, wircken vnd vertreiben sol … /
George Bartisch
Published: 1583.
Copyrighted work available under Creative Commons Attribution only licence CC BY 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Mental Floss: 6 Ways Europe’s Best Doctors Tried to Cure Beethoven’s Deafness

BuzzFeed: Morbidly Beautiful Pictures Reveal the Horror of Surgery in the Victorian Era

O Say Can You See: The peace gun

Mental Floss: 11 Weird Old-School Plastic Surgery Techniques

TECHNOLOGY:

Anita Guerrini: The Moving Skeleton

Conciatore: Galileo and Glass

Open Culture: How Film Was Made in 1958: A Kodak Nostalgia Moment

Yovisto: The first Worm hit the Internet 24 Years ago

Yovisto: The Dream of the Largest Aircraft ever built

H-4 Hercules “Spruce Goose”

H-4 Hercules “Spruce Goose”

Yovisto: Alexander Lippisch and the Delta Wing

Letters of Note: New Fangled Writing Machine

The Creators Project: Rediscover Failed Eastern Utopias in Stark Winter Photographs

Diseases of Modern Life: Captivating respiration: the ‘Breathing Napoleon’

Yovisto: Alois Senefelder revolutionized Printing Technology

Yovisto: The Cornier Do X – the World’s Largest Seaplane

Conciatore: Lake of Flowers

University of Washington: University Libraries: Digital Collections: Tacoma Narrows Bridge Collection

Design is Fine History is Mine: Joseph Edmonson Mechanical calculator

B1131-2 Calculator, mechanical, Edmondson's  Patent, for addition and substraction, brass and steel mechansim, in polished wooden case with brass handles, W F Stanley, London, England, 1880

B1131-2 Calculator, mechanical, Edmondson’s
Patent, for addition and substraction, brass
and steel mechansim, in polished wooden
case with brass handles, W F Stanley,
London, England, 1880

Ptak Science Books: Measuring Things with Mountains & the German Big Gun of WWI (1918)

Ptak Science Books: Sound Landscapes of Lost Acoustics

New-York Historical Society: Silicon City: Computer History Made in New York

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Niche: When Blue Meets Green: The Intersection of Workers and Environmentalists

Niche: Seeing the Forest (Workers) for the Trees: Environment and Labour History in New Brunswick Forest

Science News: New fascination with Earth’s ‘Boring Billion’

Electronic Scholarly Publishing: Free Online Book: A History of Genetics by A. H. Sturtevent

histgene_f

AGU Blogosphere: Norman Bowen’s Papers

Letters from Gondwana: Darwin and the Flowering Plant Evolution in South America

Gizmodo: This Was the First Murder Solved Using Geology

Concocting History: The birth of roses

us10.campaign.com: Gertrude Bell: Archaeologist, Writer, Explorer

f4d83378-f46c-4b1a-85fb-7b3b374d512b

Science League of America: Evolution for John Doe, Part 2

Embryo Project: August Friedrich Leopold Weismann (1834–1914)

The Guardian: Scientists warned the US president about global warming 50 years ago today

Embryo Project: Oviraptor philoceratops Dinosaurs

York Dispatch News: Scientists discuss ‘What if?’ scenario in Dover intelligent-design case

Palaeoblog: Died This Day: Henry Fairfield Osborn

The Alfred Russel Wallace Website: Wallace’s megapode mystery…

Active History: What about the people? Place, memory, and Industrial Pollution in Sudbury

Paige Fossil History: Murdering Their Child: Wallace, Darwin, and Human Origins

History of Geology: A.R. Wallace on Geology, Great Glaciers and the Speed of Evolution

CHEMISTRY:

Yovisto: Antoine Lavoisier’s Theory of Combustion

Today in Science History: – November 2 – Thomas Midgely, Jr.

Label for Ethyl Gasoline Additive. Leaded gasoline was one of the major inventions of Thomas Midgley Jr.

Label for Ethyl Gasoline Additive. Leaded gasoline was one of the major inventions of Thomas Midgley Jr.

Academia: The Hidden History of Phlogiston (pdf)

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Early Modern Experimental Philosophy: Baconian Induction in the Principia

The People’s Daily Morning Star: World-Leading Mathematician and Activist Barry Cooper Dies

JISCM@il: New digital humanities tools

The Recipes Project: First Monday Library Chat: Newberry Library

Project Muse: Bulletin of the History of Medicine: Special Issue Communicating Reproduction Contents Page

The Recipes Project: Introducing… Graduate Student Posts!

BSHS: Reader Project in the History of Science – Survey

Medicine, ancient and modern: A post for the Day of the Dead (All Souls) and Remembrance Day: Galen, Classics and the First World War

Marburg, Issel’s native city, at the turn of the 20th c.

Marburg, Issel’s native city, at the turn of the 20th c.

Conciatore: Bibliomaniac

American Science: Can Contributors Change Journals?

Medievalist.net: The Medieval Magazine: Medicine in the Middle Ages (Issue 40)

Chicago Journals: ISIS: Focus: Bounded Rationality and the History of Science

The Recipe Project: Historical Recipes as Sources: A Special Series

History Today: A German scholar living in 17th-century London revolutionised the way scientists shared news of their latest advances

Publishing pioneer: Henry Oldenburg by Jan van Cleve, 1668.

Publishing pioneer: Henry Oldenburg by Jan van Cleve, 1668.

The H-Word: The best history of science fancy dress costumes

The #EnvHist Weekly

Royal College of Physicians: Wartime damage: evidence from the books

CHSTM: Science in the Jungle: The Missionary Mapping and National Imaging of Western Amazonia

Fistful of Cinctans: Subject Specialist Knowledge

Blink: Keepers of ancient peace

The National: Opinion: Recalling the science of Islam’s Golden Age is not enough

Alun Salt: Does history feel better when it has no connection to the past?

ESOTERIC:

Cambridge University Library Special Collections: A Book of Magic

Discover: The Crux: The Man Who Tried to Weigh The Soul

Robert Blair The Grave The Soul hovering over the Body reluctantly parting with Life

Robert Blair The Grave The Soul hovering over the Body reluctantly parting with Life

Penn Library: Penn in Hand: Selected Manuscripts: Alchemy

Steve Silberman has won the prestigious Samuel Johnson Prize for his book NeuroTribes

Youtube: Samuel Johnson Prize Winner Announcement 2015

Home

BBC Arts: Samuel Johnson Prize 2015: Steve Silberman

The Guardian: ‘Hopeful’ study of autism wins Samuel Johnson prize 2015

The Guardian: Steve Silberman on winning the Samuel Johnson prize: ‘I was broke, broke, broke’

‘Science is under attack’ … Silberman, whose book Neurotribes has won the 2015 Samuel Johnson prize for non-fiction. Photograph: David Levene for the Guardian

‘Science is under attack’ … Silberman, whose book Neurotribes has won the 2015 Samuel Johnson prize for non-fiction. Photograph: David Levene for the Guardian

The Independent: The publication of Steve Silberman’s Neurotribes will change how we understand autism

The Guardian: My hero: Allen Ginsberg by Steve Silberman

BBC News: Science author Steve Silberman on his book on autism

The Independent: Samuel Johnson Prize 2015: History of autism is first popular science winner of non-fiction book award

BOOK REVIEWS:

THE: Making Nature: The History of a Scientific Journal, by Melinda Baldwin

Science Book a Day: Chilled: How Refrigeration Changed the World and Might Do So Again

Brain Pickings: Nature Anatomy: A Glorious Illustrated Love Letter to Curiosity and the Magic of Our World

Science Book a Day: Genius at Play: The Curious Mind of John Horton Conway

genius-at-play

Centre for Medical Humanities: The Making of Modern Anthrax, 1875–1920 reviewed by Dr Anne Hanley

Science Book a Day: The Joy of X: A Guided Tour of Math, From One to Infinity

NEW BOOKS:

Rubedo Press: William Lilly’s History of his Life and Times 300 Anniversary Edition

University of Chicago Press: Charles Bell and the Anatomy of Reform

Gizmodo: How Ta-Nehisis Coates Inspired a Book About the Hunt for Vulcan

MIT News: 3Q: Thomas Levenson on the hunt for Vulcan, the missing planet

Soundcloud: The Hunt for Vulcan by Thomas Levenson, Narrated by Kevin Pariseau

National Geographic: Book Talk: The Hunt for Vulcan, the Planet That Wasn’t There

Harvard University Press: Newton’s Apple and Other Myths about Science

9780674967984

Princeton University Press: An Einstein Encyclopedia

Wiley Online Library: A Companion to the History of American Science

Palgrave: Domesticity in the Making of Modern Science

Historiens de la santé: Les sources du funéraire en France à l’époque contemporaine

New Books in Science; Technology, and Society: The Courtiers’ Anatomists: Animals and Humans in Louis XIV’s Paris

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Runs until 31 January 2016

University of Dundee: A History of Nearly Everything Runs until 28 November 2015

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs until 21 February 2016

CLOSING SOON: Royal Society: Seeing closer: 350 years of microscope

Hooke's microscope, from an engraving in Micrographia. Source Wikimedia Commons

Hooke’s microscope, from an engraving in Micrographia.
Source Wikimedia Commons

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age Runs until 13 March 2016

Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday & Saturday

Guiding Lights: 500 years of Trinity House and safety at sea Runs till 4 January 2016

THEATRE AND OPERA:

Noel Coward Theatre: Photograph51 Booking until 21 November 2015

Photo 51, showing x-ray diffraction pattern of DNA Source: Wikimedia Commons

Photo 51, showing x-ray diffraction pattern of DNA
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Booking to 18 June 2016

FILMS AND EVENTS:

Gresham College: Lecture: Hamilton, Boole and their Algebras 17 November 2015

HSS: Free Showing: Merchants of Doubt Colonial Ballroom, Westin St. Francis Hotel, San Francisco, CA 21 November 2015

Social Media Knowledge Exchange: Event: Can social media work for me? Cambridge 19 November

medhumlabmanchester: Launch Event 19 November 2015

ChoM News: Lecture: Studying Traumatic Wounds and Infectious Diseases in the Civil War Hospital Harvard Medical School 19 November 2015

UCL: STS: Talk: Professor Psillos Induction and Natural Necessities Gordon House 17 November 2015

University of London: School of Advanced Studies: Debate: Opening the book: reading and the evolving technology(ies) of the book 10 November 2015

Bodleian Library & Radclife Camera: John Aubrey and the idea of fame 10 November 2015

John Aubrey Source: Wikimedia Commons

John Aubrey
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Linnean Society: Explore Your Archive: Natural History on Record 16–20 November 2015

CHF: Rohm and Haas Fellow in Focus Lecture: William Newman, “New Light on Isaac Newton’s Alchemy”

UCLA Department of History: Lecture: Lorraine Daston: The Immortal Archives: Nineteenth-Century Science Imagines the Future 17 November 2015

Wellcom Library: Seminar: Executing magic: the healing power of criminal corpses in European popular culture 10 November 2015

The Indian Express: Film on Ramanujan to open IFFI this year, Spain is focus country

CHoM News: Colloquium on the History of Psychiatry and Medicine “Madness and Mayhem in Maine: The Parkman-Portland Parley and a Mass. Murder” 12 November 2015

The Geological Society: The William Smith Map Bicentenary (1815–2015) Events

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Charles Lyell: Principles of Geology: Being an Attempt to Explain the Former Changes of the Earth's Surface, by Reference to Causes Now in Operation London, 1830–1833

Charles Lyell: Principles of Geology: Being an Attempt to Explain the Former
Changes of the Earth’s Surface, by Reference to Causes Now in Operation
London, 1830–1833

TELEVISION:

Forbes: The History Channel Delves Into Einstein’s Brain

BBC Arts: Samuel Johnson Prize 2015: Steve Silberman

io9: It’s a Fine Line Between Historical Fact and Fiction on Manhattan

AHF: “Manhattan” Series 2, Episode 4: The Indispensable Man

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Youtube: The Carbon Arc Lamp

Youtube: CRASSH: Simon Schaffer – Imitation Games: Conspiratorial Sciences and Intelligent Machines

Youtube: The Geological Society: Apollo and the Geology of the Moon

Youtube: Ralph Baer and Bill Harrison Play Ping-Pong Video Game, 1969

Bridgeman Footage: Clip of the Week: ‘[There is] nowhere I would rather be than in my lab, staining my clothes and getting paid to play’ – Marie Curie

Youtube: Einstein’s Miracle Year: The Road to Relativity

Youtube: Diary of a Snakebite Death

RADIO:

PODCASTS:

Missed in History: Isaac Newton

Comparative Media Studies: MIT: Tom Levenson, Einstein, Mercury, and the Hunt for Vulcan

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

Society for the Social History of Medicine: Roy Porter Student Essay Prize

The Mindlin Foundation: Mindlin Science Communication Prize Deadline 15 November 2015

SocPhilSciPract: CfP: Graduate Journal in Hist/Phil/Soc of Science: Pulse

University of Leeds: Workshop 2016: Telecommunications expertise and technologies developed during the First World War

Johns Hopkins University: CfP: The Making of the Humanities V 5–7 October 2016

University of Cambridge: CRASSH: The Mater of Mimesis. Studies on mimesis and materials in nature, art and science 17–18 December 2015

LSE: The UK and European Conference on Foundations of Physics will take place this year on 16-18 July 2016

Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology Halle/Saale Germany: CfP: Dispersion and Impact in the Indian Ocean World: 23–24 September 2016

BSHS: Call for Nominations: The BSHS John Pickstone Prize

John V Pickstone  Source: Wikimedia Commons

John V Pickstone
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Prague: Pariah sciences. Episteme, Power and Legitimization of Knowledge, from Animal Electricity to Low-Energy Nuclear Reactions. Symposium at the 7th International Conference of the European Society for the History of Science 22-24 September 2016

City University of New York: Earth and Environmental Scienvces: Fall 2015 Colloquium Schedule

Calgary Alberta: CfP: Canadian Society for the History and Philosophy of Science (CSHPS) annual conference part of the Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences meeting 28–30 May 2016

ESRC: CfP: Dietary Innovation and Disease in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Venice 8–10 June 2016

University of Wuppertal: Workshop: Jesuit early modern science in a digital perspective 26–27 November 2016

Birkbeck College: CfP: After the End of Disease 26–27 May 2016

Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences: Workshop: History of Scientific Publication 3–4 December 2015

University of Winchester: CfP: Death, Art and Anatomy Conference 3–6 June 2016

Salle des Actes de la faculté de Pharmacie, Paris: Journée d’études: Nicolas Lémery (1645-1715), un savant en son siècle 18 Novembre 2015

L’Université de Sherbrooke: Appel à communications: L’histoire extra-muros : des frontières qui s’élargissent. Regards croisés sur les approches émergentes et l’interdisciplinarité dans la pratique historique 25–26 Février 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

University of Exeter: Associate Research Fellow The Medical World of Early Modern England, Ireland and Wales c. 1500–1750

Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia: Three-Year Post-doc fellowship on Vernacular Astronomy and Meteorology in Renaissance Italy

LMU Munich: The Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy (MCMP) invites applications for Visiting Fellowships and Research Group Fellowships

London School of Tropical Hygiene and Medicine: Research Fellow

The Bodleian Library: Visiting Fellowships

University of Leeds: New Postdoctoral Position: Cultures of the Book

University of London: Institute of Historical Research (IHR) Librarian

Wellcome Trust: Special Collections manager X2 Deadline 11 November

University of Leeds: Men, Women and Care: Applications open for 2 ERC funded PhD studentships

H-Sci-Med-Tech: Travel Grants: Duke University’s History of Medicine Collection

Historic Britain: Assistant Science Advisor

Open University: History of Medicine PhD programme 2016

Universal Short Tittle Catalogue: PhD Studentship History of the Book

 

 

 

 


Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #18

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #18

Monday 16 November 2015

EDITORIAL:

Another seven days have flown past and it’s time once again for Whewell’s Weekly your #histSTM links list bringing you all the histories of science, technology and medicine that we could ferret out over the last seven days from the far reaches of cyberspace.

On the ninth of November Google celebrated the 101st birthday of Hedy Lamarr with a Google Doodle. This led to others perpetuating what is unfortunately something of a myth considering her contribution to the history of technology. This can be seen in the headline of the Sydney Morning Herald article, Google Honours Hedy Lamarr, inventor of technology behind Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.

Now the technology behind Wi-Fi and Bluetooth is something known as frequency hopping and Hedy Lemarr was involved in the invention of one form of frequency hopping but it is not that used in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. During WWII Lemarr and the composer George Antheil filed a patent for a mechanical system of frequency hopping based on player piano rolls. However this was neither the first time that frequency hopping had been invented nor was the system suggested by Lemarr and Antheil ever actually put into practice.

The earliest known record of frequency hopping is from 1908 and the system was actively used by the German military during WWI. Several different patents for systems of frequency hopping were registered during the 1930s.

Hedy Lemarr was involved in the development and patenting of a system of frequency hopping but it is not the system used today in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. It is OK to point out that Hedy Lemarr was more than just a pretty face but it is bad history of technology to embroider the truth and make her seem more significant than she was.

Hedy Lamarr Publicity photo, c. 1940 Source: Wikimedia Commons

Hedy Lamarr Publicity photo, c. 1940
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Science Friday: The Beauty and Brains Behind ‘Hedy’s Folly’

 

The Sydney Morning Herald: Google Honours Hedy Lamarr, inventor of technology behind Wi-Fi and Bluetooth

Quotes of the week:

Font Quote

“I’m not being pedantic about vocabulary: Chemistry isn’t an unnatural thing happens in labs. All life is chemistry. It’s not a threat”. – Katie Mack (@AstroKatie)

“If you can’t say anything nice1

1Say it in a foot note” – Shit Academics Say (AcademicsSay)

“Computers make it easier to do a lot of things, but most of the things they make it easier to do don’t need to be done.” – Andy Rooney h/t @JohnDCook

“Thinking is hard work, and it opens you up to criticism.” – David Draper h/t @JohnDCook

“Maybe Hitler grew up to be so hateful and paranoid because of all those time travellers who tried to kill him as a baby”. – Adam Rex (@MrAdamRex )

TA Quote

“Contrary to the myth of science, facts are not autonomous. They gain meaning from [our interpretive] frameworks” – Tom Levenson h/t @beckyfh

“Does he believe he knows the difference?

Or

Does he know he believes they are different?” – G.H. Finn (@GanferHaarFinn)

“There ain’t no God, just to-do lists”. – Joshua P. Preston (@JPPreston)

“We are here on Earth to fart around, and don’t let anybody tell you different.” – Kurt Vonnegut

“I can kill for Myself just fine, thanks”. – @TheTweetOfGod

Axila Tilt

 

Birthday of the Week:

Born 14 November 1797 Charles Lyell

Charles Lyell at the British Association meeting in Glasgow 1840. Painting by Alexander Craig. Source: Wikimedia Commons

Charles Lyell at the British Association meeting in Glasgow 1840. Painting by Alexander Craig.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

History of Geology: 14 November 1797: Happy Birthday Charles Lyell

History of Geology: In Search of… the Sea Snake

Paige Fossil History: Charles Lyell & the First Neanderthal

The frontispiece from Elements of Geology Source: Wikimedia Commons

The frontispiece from Elements of Geology
Source: Wikimedia Commons

William Herschel born 15 November 1738

 

A portrait of William Herschel by William Artaud, 1820

A portrait of William Herschel by William Artaud, 1820

Ptak Science Books: First Light to Good Night – Putting a Telescope to Sleep

The British Museum: View of Herschel’s forty foot reflecting telescope

AN01377473_001_l

National Geographical Channel: Sky Full of Ghosts

20ft telescope from The Scientific Papers of Sir William Herschel (London, 1912), Royal Soc and RAS

20ft telescope from The Scientific Papers of Sir William Herschel (London, 1912), Royal Soc and RAS

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Yovisto: Edmond Halley besides the Eponymous Comet

History Today: Science and Superstition: A Landmark Witch Trial

Teyler’s Museum: ‘s Gravesande’s ring & ball 1774

AFR Weekend: 100 years later, Einstein’s theory of relativity stands strong

KXLF.com: Albert Einstein’s colossal mistake

Princeton University: Princeton celebrates 100 years of Einstein’s theory of general relativity

Linn’s Stamp: Born Nov 9: Benjamin Banneker

benjamin-banneker-black-heritage

National Geographic: Einstein’s Magnum Opus

Atlas Obscura: Yerkes Observatory

Yovisto: Hermann Weyl – between Pure Mathematics and Theoretical Physics

World Digital Library: Newly Compiled Pocket Astrological Calendar

The Irish Times: Einstein and a scientific milestone

APS News: Einstein’s House in Bern: Joint EPS-APS Historic Site

Shapell: I have just completed the most splendid work of my life, Einstein says

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Hans Bethe’s Interview (1982)

Atlas Obscura: The Forgotten Kaleidoscope Craze in Victorian England

A portrait of Sir David Brewster, inventor of the kaleidoscope. (Photo: Public Domain/WikiCommons)

A portrait of Sir David Brewster, inventor of the kaleidoscope. (Photo: Public Domain/WikiCommons)

Universe Today: Who Was Sir Isaac Newton?

Gizmodo: The Real-Life Scientific Dilemma Behind the Latest Episode of Manhattan

Tech Insider: Here’s how Albert Einstein destroyed the planet Vulcan

Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog: When did the Allies know there wasn’t a German bomb?

AHF: Philip Abelson

The Mountain Ear: Great Lawyers in History: Edwin Hubble

 

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

Christie’s The Art People: MARTINES, Joan (actif vers1556-1591), attribué à. Carte portulan de la côte atlantique de l’Amérique du Sud Messine : c1570-1591.

TeleGeography: Submarine Cable Map 2015

Atlas Obscura: America Got Her Name From This 1507 Map

Yovisto: Dr. Livingstone, I presume?

Library of Congress: James Wilson: America’s First Globemaker

Wilson’s three inch terrestrial globe, 182-. Geography & Map Division, Library of Congress.

Wilson’s three inch terrestrial globe, 182-. Geography & Map Division, Library of Congress.

Slate Vault: Maps Tracking Levels of Poverty in Victorian London, Block by Block

Hyperallergic: Why Cannibals Were on Every 16th-Century Map of the New World

 

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Medievalists.net: Top 10 Medical Advances from the Middle Ages

Migraine Histories: Finding the Patients in the Notes

Wellcome Library: Speaking of Trotula

An image of ‘Trotula’ from a 14th-century French encyclopedia; the caption translates: ‘How the woman teaches the clerk the secrets of nature’. Rennes, Bibliothèque municipale, MS. 593 (produced 1303), folio 532r. Image credit: Bibliothèque virtuelle des manuscrits médiévaux. © 2013 Institut de recherche et d’histoire des textes.

An image of ‘Trotula’ from a 14th-century French encyclopedia; the caption translates: ‘How the woman teaches the clerk the secrets of nature’. Rennes, Bibliothèque municipale, MS. 593 (produced 1303), folio 532r. Image credit: Bibliothèque virtuelle des manuscrits médiévaux. © 2013 Institut de recherche et d’histoire des textes.

Academia: Who/What is “Trotula”?

Early Modern Medicine: Flesh and Spirit

Thomas Morris: Medicine or marinade?

Remedia: Surgery for Desperadoes

Yovisto: Sir James Young Simpson and the Chloroform

Sir James Young Simpson, 1st Baronet (1811-1870)

Sir James Young Simpson, 1st Baronet (1811-1870)

Thomas Morris: The port-wine enema

Thomas Morris: The owl-eyed girl

Christie’s The Art People: ROESSLIN, Eucharius (d.1526). Der Swangern Frauwen und Hebammen Rosegarten. Strassburg: Martinus Flach iunior, correctore Joanne Adelpho physico, 1513.

woodlibrarymuseum.org: An Account of the First Use of Sulphuric Ether (pdf)

Royal Museums Greenwich: Plagues

Torontoist: Historicist: Body Snatchers, Grave Robbers, and Night Ghouls

The second-floor dissecting room of the Toronto School of Medicine’s Richmond Street building, showing: (1) Dr. John King, (2) Dr. George De Grassi, (3) Tom Hays, a lecturer at the school, (4) Old Ned, the janitor of the dissecting room, (5) Dr. W.W. [Billy] Francis of Toronto. Bernard Joseph Gloster, “Toronto School of Medicine, dissecting room, Richmond St. W., north side, between Yonge & Bay Sts.; interior, showing staff, 1856. Toronto Public Library, B 10-19a.

The second-floor dissecting room of the Toronto School of Medicine’s Richmond Street building, showing: (1) Dr. John King, (2) Dr. George De Grassi, (3) Tom Hays, a lecturer at the school, (4) Old Ned, the janitor of the dissecting room, (5) Dr. W.W. [Billy] Francis of Toronto. Bernard Joseph Gloster, “Toronto School of Medicine, dissecting room, Richmond St. W., north side, between Yonge & Bay Sts.; interior, showing staff, 1856. Toronto Public Library, B 10-19a.

TECHNOLOGY:

Motherboard: Celebrate the Saturn V’s Birthday by Watching the Largest Rocket in History Fly

Open Cultures: Download 10,000 of the first recordings of Music Ever Made, Courtesy of the UCSB Cylinder Audio Archive

ccrma.stanford.com: Cacophony or harmony? Multivocal logics and technology licensing by the Stanford University Department of Music (pdf)

Smithsonian.com: Divers Discover 102-Year-Old Shipwreck in Lake Huron

The Guardian: Betamax is dead, long live VHS

The Public Domain Review: The Telephonoscope (1879)

22922848315_df8612cdd1_o

Yovisto: Fred Cohen and the First Computer Virus

 

Yovisto: The Publication of the First Web Page

Conciatore: Neri’s Other Rubino

Open Culture: The Interior of the Hindenburg Revealed in 1930s Color Photos: Inside the Ill-Fated Airship

Ptak Science Books: On the Dreadful Nature of Unseen Point-Blank Racism

Scottish Engineering Hall of Fame: Sir George Bruce (c1550–1625), pioneering engineer who created a sophisticated offshore mining enterprise in the 16th century

Chemical Heritage Magazine: Artificial Clouds and Inflammable Air: The Science and Spectacle of the First Balloon Flights, 1783

An 18th-century hydrogen filled balloon takes off. (Library of Congress)

An 18th-century hydrogen filled balloon takes off. (Library of Congress)

Yovisto: Jacques Charles and the Hydrogen Balloon

Ptak Science Books: Great Cross Section of the HMS “Repulse”, 1939

The Washington Post: How Nazi scientists and their wind tunnels ended up in D.C.’s suburbs

Computer History Museum: 1971 – Microprocessor Integrates CPU Function onto a Single Chip

A Covent Garden Gilflurt’s Guide to Life: Where did Robert Fulton go?

Library of Congress: “What’s this Gadget?”: Solving Mystery Photos

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Notches: Stalling Civil Rights: Conservative Sexual Thought has been in the Toilet Since the 1940s

Science League of America: Evolution for John Doe, Part 3

Yovisto: Robert Morison and the Classification of Plants

Robert_Morison1

Plaeophile: Voyage of the Beagle (Non-fiction fan fiction)

Embryo Project: Wilhelm Johannsen’s Genotype-Phenotype Distinction

The Recipe Project: The Exotic Taste of Rice

Notches: Homophile Priests, LGBT Rights, and Scottish Churches 1967–1986

AMNH: How to Experiment Like Darwin

Natural History Museum: Alfred Russel Wallace (1823–1913)

pipra-manakins-wallace-full-width

Natural History Museum: Wallace Letters Online

Famous Scientists: Evolutionary Theories Before Darwin:

Social Evolution Forum: Shopping For a Von Humboldt Bust

Independent: Classroom posters get a design makeover: The one-man mission to transform the walls of our schools

CHEMISTRY:

Historical Notes: History of Medicine Collection spotlight: Lavoisier’s “Elements of Chemistry”

lavoisier-2

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Hisiheyah Arts: GIF Icons of women in science

tumblr_nwe7ldIfNc1thyvq2o2_1280

Conciatore: Benedetto Vanda

Ada Lovelavce: Celebrating 200 years of a computer visionary: Somerville, science and Wikipedia

Medievalists.net: Why the Scientific Revolution Did Not Take Place in China – or Didn’t It?

Social History of Medicine: Volume 28 Issue 4 November 2015 Contents

The Recipes Project: Leftovers: Cooking, Blogging, and Studying History from Old Recipes

The Guardian: On the Origin of Species voted most influential academic book in history

The H-Word: How do we decide which academic book is the ‘most influential’ ever written?

A classic on undergraduate reading lists long before the upstart ‘Origin’ was even published... Photograph: Jim Sugar/Corbis

A classic on undergraduate reading lists long before the upstart ‘Origin’ was even published… Photograph: Jim Sugar/Corbis

The Atlantic: Science Doesn’t Work the Way You Might Think: Not Even for Einstein

Chicago Journals: Osiris Vol. 30, No. 1, 2015 Scientific Masculinities Contents

Taylor And Francis Online: History of Science Free Access Articles

The Guardian: Don’t be a conference troll: a guide to asking good questions

E-International Relations: Interview – John R. Mitchell (environmental historian)

Tropics of Meta: Atlanta Loses Its Greatest Listener: Cliff Kuhn, 1952–2015 Executive Director of the Oral History Association

Technology Spectator: How computers broke science

Forum for History of Human Science: Website

Medievalists.net: Medieval and Renaissance Book Production

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Hans Holbein and the Nürnberg–Ingolstadt–Vienna Renaissance mathematical nexus

Nicholas Kratzer, 1528 painting by Hans Holbein the Younger Source: Wikimedia Commons

Nicholas Kratzer, 1528 painting by Hans Holbein the Younger
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Medievalists.net: Five Medieval Chronicles that you can read translated online

Taming the American Idol: 95 Theses on Innovation

Dana Research Centre and Library: Opened 9 November 2015 The Library offers 18 reading desks and around 5,500 volumes of books and recent journals in the history and biography of science, technology and medicine and in museology. 165 Queens Gate, London SW7 5HD

Medievalists.net: The Medieval Magazine: Animals in the Middle Ages (Issue 141)

The #EnvHist Weekly

Skulls in the Stars: “Science Chamber of Horrors” talk at the Schiele Museum

DSI: Database of Scientific Illustrators 1450–1950

History Buff: When Does Science Begin? A Conversation with David Wootton

Reader Project in the History of Science—Survey: Help us choose the 10 most influential articles in ‪#HistSTM during the last 25 years

ESOTERIC:

Conciatore: A Dominican Connection

20th-century photograph of the old distillery at S.M. Novella.

20th-century photograph of the old distillery at S.M. Novella.

BOOK REVIEWS:

Science Book a Day: A is for Arsenic: The Poisons of Agatha Christie

The Bookseller: Slack wins biennial Samuel Pepys Award

The Space Review: Kepler and the Universe

Chemistry World: Pyrite: a natural history of fool’s gold

ars technica: Scientific Method/Science & Exploration: The messy reality of science revealed by the long hunt for a missing planet

9780812998986

The Guardian: NeuroTribes: by Steve Silberman review – an enlightened take on autism and difference

Nature: History of science: Trial by gender

The Friends of Charles Darwin: The Invention of Science

The Guardian: The Invention of Nature: The Adventures of Alexander von Humboldt, the Lost Hero of Science

The Dispersal of Darwin: Origins: The Scientific Story of Creation

The Dispersal of Darwin: Evolution: The Whole Story

 

NEW BOOKS:

Biographile: That Time Einstein Debunked Vulcan, a Planet That Never Existed

The Public Domain Review: Selected Essays, Vol II

University of Chicago Press: Groovy Science: Knowledge, Innovation, and American Counterculture

Historiens de la santé: The Corrigible and the Incorrigible: Science, Medicine, and the Convict in 20th Century Germany

9780472119653

Palgrave: Marine Insurance Origins and Institutions, 1300–1850

Yale University Press: Science Blogging: The Essential Guide

John Allen Paulos: A Numerate Life

 

ART & EXHIBITIONS

The New York Review of Books: Amazing Building Adventures

Ashmolean: Power and Protection: Islamic Art and the Supernatural 20 October 2016–15 January 2017

Power-and-Protection

The Guardian: Sex and the city: 1660s London brought to life at National Maritime Museum

CLOSING SOON: Royal Society: Seeing closer: 350 years of microscope

Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Runs until 31 January 2016

CLOSING SOON: University of Dundee: A History of Nearly Everything Runs until 28 November 2015

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs until 21 February 2016

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age Runs until 13 March 2016

Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, & Saturday

The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York: The Luxury of Time: European Clocks and Watches 16 November 2015–27 March 2016

Clockmaker: Ferdinand Berthoud (French, 1727–1807); Case maker: Balthazar Lieutaud (French, ca. 1720–1780, master 1749). Longcase astronomical regulator (detail), ca. 1768–70. Case: oak veneered with ebony and brass, with gilt-bronze mounts; Dial: white enamel; Movement: gilded brass and steel; Height: 90.5 in. (229.9 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, (1982.60.50).

Clockmaker: Ferdinand Berthoud (French, 1727–1807); Case maker: Balthazar Lieutaud (French, ca. 1720–1780, master 1749). Longcase astronomical regulator (detail), ca. 1768–70. Case: oak veneered with ebony and brass, with gilt-bronze mounts; Dial: white enamel; Movement: gilded brass and steel; Height: 90.5 in. (229.9 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, (1982.60.50).

Royal Museums Greenwich: Guiding Lights: 500 years of Trinity House and safety at sea Runs till 4 January 2016

Bethlem Museum of the Mind:

THEATRE & OPERA & FILMS:

Houston Press: An Unsung Female Astronomer Gets Her Due in Main Street Theater’s Stirring Silent Sky

A galaxy of possibilities. Pin Lim/Forest Photography

A galaxy of possibilities.
Pin Lim/Forest Photography

Berkeley City Club: Ada and the memory machine Runs till 22 November 2015

Wonders & Marvels: The Black Stork: A physician’s cinematic argument for eugenics

CLOSING VERY SOON: Noel Coward Theatre: Photograph51 Booking until 21 November 2015

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Booking to 18 June 2016

CLOSING VERY SOON: Blue Orange Theatre: Jekyll & Hyde 18-21 November 2015

EVENTS:

University of Manchester: Postgraduate taught courses open day 25 November 2015

BSHS: The History of Science Society presents Merchants of Doubt 2015 Elizabeth Paris Event Saturday, November 21 2015

University of Lincoln: MA Open Day School of History and Heritage 8 December 2015

British Library: Eccles Centre: The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt’s New World 18 November 2015

Natural History Museum: BBC Radio 4: Natural Histories The Big Story Hintze Hall 27 November 2015

Litteraturhuset i Bergen: Talk: Philip Ball The history of invisibility 28 November 2015

CHF: Not Just Fun and Games? STEM, Toys, and Gender 19 November 2015

Museum of Natural History, Oxford: The Oxford Dodo: Culture at the Crossroads 18 November 2015

Royal Society: Unifying physics and technology in light of Maxwell’s equations 16-17 November 2015

Royal Institution: The Tsar’s cup 27 November 2015

Bethlem Museum of the Mind: Explore Your Archive from 18 November 2015

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Woodcut, The Physician, Hans Holbein the Younger, Dance of Death, 1538

Woodcut, The Physician, Hans Holbein the Younger, Dance of Death, 1538

 

TELEVISION:

AHF: “Manhattan” Season 2, Episode 5: Separation Anxiety

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Vimeo: The Plague – Dr Stanley B. Burns

Youtube: Gresham College: The Scientific Life of Ada Lovelace – Professor Ursula Martin

Youtube: Gresham College: Hanna Neumann: A Mathematician in Difficult Times – Dr Peter Neumann

Vimeo: The Legend of Mendeleev’s Dream

Vimeo: Mendeleev’s Chemical Solitaire

Youtube: Armillary Sphere animation

Youtube: Amazing piece of metal (speculum)

Youtube: Brian Greene Explains That Whole General Relativity Thing to Stephen Colbert

 

RADIO:

The Sloane Letters Blog: Sloane becomes a BBC Radio 4 Natural History Hero

PODCASTS:

History Today: A year in medieval England (with lots on Trotula)

Bottle Rocket Science: Startup Geometry Podcast EP 104: Renaissance Mathematicus Thony Christie

History of Philosophy without any gaps: Animal, Vegetable, Mineral: Albert the Great’s Natural Philosophy

Environmental History Resources: Religion and the Origins of American Environmentalism

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

St Anne’s College, Oxford: CfP: Medicine and Modernity in the Long Nineteenth Century 10–11 September 2016

BSHS: Ayrton Prize

Hertha Ayrton Source: Wikimedia Commons

Hertha Ayrton
Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Courtauld Institute of Art: CfP: Placing Prints: New Developments in the Study of Print 1400–1800 12–13 February 2016

University of Cambridge: CfP: Treasuries of Knowledge: Collecting and Transmitting Information in the Early Modern Period 8 April 2016

British Society for Literature and Science: CfP: Annual Conference 2016 University of Birmingham 7–9 April 2016

Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI): Final CFP: “The History of Science and Contemporary Scientific Realism” Conference 19-21 February 2016

University of Canterbury New Zealand: CfP: Histories of Forensic Psychology and Forensic Psychiatry 17–18 February 2016

Society for the History of Chemistry: CfP: Annual Meeting Singapore 2016

BSHS: The BSHS John Pickstone Prize Nominations Open

John Pickstone Source: Wikimedia Commons

John Pickstone
Source: Wikimedia Commons

University of Leeds: Workshop: Electrifying the country house 1 February 2016

University of Cambridge: Registration open for BSHS Postgraduate Conference 6–8 January 2016

McMaster University: Hannah History of Medicine Speaker Series 2015–2016 Schedule

LOOKING FOR WORK:

University of Cambridge: Isaac Newton Trust Research Fellowship 2016

TU Eindhoven: Assistant Professor in the History of Technology

Royal Society: Public Engagement Officer & Public Engagement Intern

The entrance to the Royal Society in Carlton House Terrace, London

The entrance to the Royal Society in Carlton House Terrace, London

University of Leeds: Postdoctoral Research Fellow – Men, Women and Care

University of Aberystwyth: Postdoctoral Research Assistant (‘Unsettling Science Stories’)

Annapolis: The Third Biennial Early-Career Conference for Historians of the Physical Sciences 6–10 April 2016

 

 

 

 

 


Whewell’s Gazette: Year2, Vol. #19

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #19

Monday 23 November 2015

EDITORIAL:

The overly warm autumn weather has disappeared overnight and the first signs of winter are poking their nose around the door, so it’s time to curl up warm inside and enjoy the latest edition of Whewell’s Gazette the weekly #histSTM links list bursting at the seams, as always, with the collective wisdom of the Internet on the histories of science, technology and medicine from the last seven days.

In the last two weeks of November exactly one hundred years ago, in 1915, the German physicist, Albert Einstein put the finishing touches to the theory that would elevate him from being one of the leading European scientists to the status of a twentieth-century icon, the General Theory of Relativity. The last weeks have all seen a fair number of reports, essay and blog posts on the theory and its creator but I thought we could bring this week’s crop to the fore and honour the great man here at Whewell’s Gazette.

Albert Einstein during a lecture in Vienna in 1921 by F Schmutzer Source: Wikimedia Commons

Albert Einstein during a lecture in Vienna in 1921 by F Schmutzer
Source: Wikimedia Commons

We celebrate the centenary of this milestone in the history of physics at a time when the chorus of critics is growing louder and louder with the cries of “was Einstein wrong?” It is the inability of researchers to find a way of combing the general theory of relativity with that other great pillar of twentieth-century physics, that Einstein helped to found, the quantum theory that has led to this question. Many of those who pose it seem to do so with a certain sense of schadenfreude, as if they hope to see Albert pushed from his pedestal.

If the general theory of relativity comes to be replaced by a new ‘better’ theory combining gravity with quantum theory, as it probably will, just as Einstein’s own theory of gravity toppled that of Newton, it won’t do anything to change the enormity of Einstein’s achievement in 1915. Historian of science, should they or indeed the world still exist, will celebrate the bicentenary of this theory just as fulsomely in 2115.

Tech Times: Theory of General Relativity Marks 100th Year: Origins, Political Connections and Other Facts About Einstein’s Theory

Nature: Special: General Relativity at 100

arkansasonline.com: Einstein’s century-old theory stands strong

Einstein Papers: Einstein telling David Hilbert that he had used the nascent general relativity to quantitatively describe the anomalous precession of Mercury 18 November 1915

AHF: Albert Einstein

Brain Pickings: Einstein on the Common Language of Science in a Rare 1941 Recording

Dispatch-Argus: 100 years later, Einstein’s theory stands strong

Science Museum: The past, present and future of general relativity

The New York Times: General Relativities Big Year?

The New Yorker: Albert Einstein’s Sci-Fi Stories

Republican Herald: Century later, relativity still stands strong

Quotes of the week:

Eddington Quote

“Don’t just do something, stand there and think!” – Liam Heneghan (@DublinSoil)

“A university professor should “lead you to the fountain of knowledge”, but “whether you drink deeply or only gargle is entirely up to you””. – @GrrlScientist

“In a singing competition between Yoda and Steve Winwood, Steve win would”. – You can call me Q (@QuintinForbes)

“Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free. Unless they’re darker than, say, beige.”- Statue of Liberty. – @TheTweetOfGod

“People really hate it when you point out that their rhetorical moves don’t advance their argument”. – Jonathan Dresner (@jondresner)

“Don’t discuss infinity with a mathematician. You’ll never hear the end of it”. – Laura Lang (@MathsforGrownups)

“Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?” — George Carlin h/t @berfois

“Is the cup half-full, or half-empty? Either way, it’s hemlock”. – Damon Young (@damonayoung)

“Let us not, in the eagerness of our haste to educate, forget all the aims of education” – William Godwin h/t @douglassilas

“Just noticed that business books are next to books on potty training in Dewey decimal classification”. – John D. Cook (@JohnDCook)

“It may be said that the entire Renaissance was in Galileo’s library & more importantly in his Dialogue.” – Paula Findlen at HSS 2015 h/t @bhgross

“…when did the history of science society become the history of the scientific book society?” – Paula Findlen at HSS 2015 h/t @elizabeththeyale

“Philosophers often make better coffee than sense”. – Nigel Warburton (@philosophybites)

“Historians of science are not made, they are improvised.” – Robert Fox, Sarton Medalist. h/t @ColdWarScience

Q: “Build a better mousetrap, and the world will beat a path to your door”

A: “Build a better fence, and you can stop them” – Jon Agar (@jon_agar)

“Just don’t think there is a good reason to write ‘quinquennially’ instead of ‘every five years’”. – Dolly Jørgensen (@DollyJørgensen)

Birthday of the Week:

Edwin Hubble born 20 November 1889

Edwin Hubble, doing what he loved best at Mount Wilson Observatory

Edwin Hubble, doing what he loved best at Mount Wilson Observatory

ESA Space Science: 20 November

cosmology.carrnegiescience.edu: 1929: Edwin Hubble Discovers the Universe is Expanding

CUQpoiCVAAA1HRO

Popular Science: The 11 Most Important Cats of Science 2 of 12 Astronomy Cat

Wallifaction: Happy birthday to Edwin Hubble

Edwin Hubble! Seen here in 1923 at a Carnegie solar eclipse expedition to Point Loma, CA.

Edwin Hubble! Seen here in 1923 at a Carnegie solar eclipse expedition to Point Loma, CA.

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE

University of Roehampton: Hearth Tax discovery by Roehampton historians may illuminate Isaac Newton’s life story

AMNH: Shelf Life: Episode Five: How to Time Travel to a Star

Voices of the Manhattan Project: General Leslie Groves’ Interview – Part 10

AIP: Eugene Wigner

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Dorothy McKibbin’s Interview (1979)

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Evelyne Litz’s Interview

Yovisto: Eugene Wigner and the Structure of the Atomic Nucleus

The Guidon: Manila Observatory celebrates 150th anniversary

AHF: George Kistiakowsky

Pat’s Blog: The analemma is Gone, Oh How I Miss it

solar analemma

UCL: STS: Occasional papers: Huang, Hsiang-Fu (ed.) Ouranologia: an Annotated Edition of a Lenten Lecture on Astronomy with Critical Introduction (free pdf)

Ptak Science Books: Astronomy Board Games, 1661 & 1804

Ptak Science Books: Graphs of Astronomical Discoveries

Ptak Science Books: An Unusual Set of Astronomical Images

AHF: “Hanford’s Pioneers” Tour Launches

Kaleidoscope: Science and Invention: How Did the Ancient Chinese Measure Time?

how_did_the_ancient_chinese_measure_timef909427af8f54017b05d

The Guardian: Maxwell’s Equations: 150 years of light

The Independent: The end of an odyssey – Homer’s epic is finally pinned down

AHF: Soviet Hydrogen Bomb Progam

Teyler’s Museum: Tellurium, George Adams, London

Tor.com: Utopian Mars: From Aleriel to The Martian

The Nature of Reality: Schrödinger’s Cat Lives On (Or Not) at the Age of 80

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

British Library: Maps and views blog: A Glance – from a Safe Distance – at the Human Monsters on Pierre Desceliers’ World Map of 1550

Mammoth Tales: The White Elephant of Rucheni

Desceliers Arctic elephant. North is at the bottom of the page.

Desceliers Arctic elephant. North is at the bottom of the page.

Atlas Obscura: Hand-Drawn Maps That Jump Into the Geopolitical Fray

Royal Museums Greenwich: Christopher Columbus

Atlas Obscura: The Delights and Perils of Navigating New York City with a Guidebook from 1899

Dr. Caitlin R. Green: Some interesting early maps of Lincolnshire

It’s About Time: 1587 Sir Walter Raleigh & Roanoke Island, North Carolina

This illustration is a detail from a map in the 1590 edition of Thomas Hariot’s Briefe and True Account of the New Found Land of Virginia.

This illustration is a detail from a map in the 1590 edition of Thomas Hariot’s Briefe and True Account of the New Found Land of Virginia.

It’s About Time: 1590 John White’s Return to Roanoke – Where all had vanished

It’s About Time: 1586 Ralph Lane’s Report on the Colony of Roanoke

BBC News: Stark images of Shackleton’s struggle

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Iridology, a pseudomedical practice, involves reading the patient's iris for diagnosis  h/t @sunfilter

Iridology, a pseudomedical practice, involves reading the patient’s iris for diagnosis
h/t @sunfilter

 Thomas Morris: The eye-brush

Perceptions of Pregnancy: It’s all in the breasts: pregnancy aphorisms in the Hippocratic Corpus

Le Huffington Post: Portrait de médicin: Wilder Graves Penfield

The Victorianist: BAVS Postgraduates: Reading for Abortions in the Victorian Novel

Forbes: Here’s How Corsets Deformed the Skeletons of Victorian Women

From “Physiology for Young People” p. 84. Fig. 11.A purports to show the natural position of internal organs. B, when deformed by tight lacing of a corset. In this way the liver and the stomach have been forced downward, as seen in the cut. (Public domain image via wikimedia commons.)

From “Physiology for Young People” p. 84. Fig. 11.A purports to show the natural position of internal organs. B, when deformed by tight lacing of a corset. In this way the liver and the stomach have been forced downward, as seen in the cut. (Public domain image via wikimedia commons.)

Devient Maternity: ‘For shipping his corpse which was becoming very loathsome and nauseous’. The provision of care for the poor, sick and dying in the eighteenth-century

Haverford College News: Studying Historical “Madness”

 

AEON: Better Babies

Gizmodo: The Secret WWII Club That Healed Burned Pilots and Revolutionized Plastic Surgery

Nursing Clio: The History of a Wrist: When Historians Fall Over

The History Company: The Wee Glasgow women and the birth of Caesarian

M Library Blog: A New Acquisition: A Japanese Illustrated Book on Surgery

Woodcut from Irako Mitsuaki. Geka kinmō zui (Kyoto: Ebisuya Ichiemon, 1809)

Woodcut from Irako Mitsuaki. Geka kinmō zui (Kyoto: Ebisuya Ichiemon, 1809)

Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow: The Girton and Newnham Unit of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals in World War One

Thomas Morris: Pipe dreams

The Atlantic: Impregnated by a speeding Bullet, and Other Tall Tales

Notches: Bad for the Soul, Good for the Body: Religion, Medicine and Masturbation in the Middle Ages

Thomas Morris: In praise of temperance

Medievalists.net: The Sick and the Dead: Medieval Concepts of Illness and Spinal Disability

TECHNOLOGY:

The Ladybird Story of Radio (1968) knew about David Edward Hughes and e-m waves but didn't quite get his name right. h/t Iwan Rhys Morus

The Ladybird Story of Radio (1968) knew about David Edward Hughes and e-m waves but didn’t quite get his name right. h/t Iwan Rhys Morus

 Conciatore: Manganese Overload

The Ejection Site: 46.2Gs!!! The Story of John Paul Stapp “The Fastest Man On Earth”

Improbable Research: The Fastest Man on Earth (Part 2 of 4)

MAA 100: Mathematical Treasure: Polar Planimeter Invented by Jacob Amsler

The National Archives: ‘All change!’ on Britain’s railways

1812 The first effective locomotive-powered railway

1812 The first effective locomotive-powered railway

Yovisto: The X-43A and the Scramjet Technology

Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum: The Tizard Mission – 75 Years of Anglo-American Technical Alliance

The Public Domain Revue: Colour Wheels, Charts, and Tables Through History

Two Nerdy History Girls: The Amazing Félix Nadar

Nadar Self-Portrait in Balloon

Nadar Self-Portrait in Balloon

Yovisto: Doug Engelbart and the Computer Mouse

The Guardian: Barry Cooper obituary

The TZranscontinental Railroad: Time Standardization

The National Valve Museum: Website

Dolly Jørgensen: The Metamorphosis of Ajax, jakes, and early modern urban sanitation

Medievalists.net: Guns in Scotland: the manufacture and use of guns and their influence on warfare from the fourteenth century to c. 1625

Phys.org: What toilets and sewers tell us about ancient Roman sanitation

Ruin of a second-century public toilet in Roman Ostia. Credit: Fr Lawrence Lew, OP, CC BY-NC-ND

Ruin of a second-century public toilet in Roman Ostia. Credit: Fr Lawrence Lew, OP, CC BY-NC-ND

Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum: Ascension of a Montgolfier Balloon

The Conversation: Building Hitler’s supergun: the plot to destroy London and why it failed

Graphic Arts Collection: The Principles of Static and Friction

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Making Science Public: Moderation impossible? Climate change, alarmism and rhetorical entrenchment

Making Science Public: Climate realism: What does it mean?

Occam’s Corner: Beard science: an examination of the power (and hazards) of Movember

The Dallas Morning News: Nearly pristine mammoth skeleton showcased at Perot Museum

Jae S. Lee/Staff Photographer Ellie May is showcased as if she is floating above the ground, in a similar position to the way she was found. The Columbian mammoth skeleton is about 80 percent or 85 percent intact and an estimated 40,000 years old.

Jae S. Lee/Staff Photographer
Ellie May is showcased as if she is floating above the ground, in a similar position to the way she was found. The Columbian mammoth skeleton is about 80 percent or 85 percent intact and an estimated 40,000 years old.

Gizmodo: Half the World’s Natural History Specimens Might Have the Wrong Name

Notches: Rape and the Sexual Politics of Homosexuality: The U.S. Military Occupation of Okinawa, 1955-56

NYAM: Extra, Extra, Get Your New Banana!

Yale Climate Connection: NYC Climate Museum

Inside Climate News: Climate Scientist Michael Mann: Exxon Story ‘Confirmed Things We Long Suspected’

Academia: Breaking down the body and putting it back: displaying knowledge in the ‘Francisc I. Rainer anthropological collection

Storia della Geologia: Storia della mineralogia – I primi passi

Atlas Obscura: Meet the Midwestern Pilots Who Risk Their Lives to Change the Weather

BHL: Travels in Southern Africa: William John Burchell

"A view in the town of Litakun." Engraved from a drawing by William John Burchell. Travels in the Interior of Southern Africa. v. 2 (1824). http://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/48905971. Digitized by: University of Pretoria.

“A view in the town of Litakun.” Engraved from a drawing by William John Burchell. Travels in the Interior of Southern Africa. v. 2 (1824). http://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/48905971. Digitized by: University of Pretoria.

Forbes: Half The World’s Museum Specimens are Wrongly Labeled, but Who is to Blame?

Open Sky: American Meteorological Society Oral History Project

Science League of America: Evolution for John Doe, Part 4

Niche: Workers as Commodities: The Case of Asbestos, Quebec

Jonathan Saha: Paratextual Pachyderms

lifeofelephant00eardrich_0052

NCSE: Excerpt Voyage of the Beagle: The Illustrated Edition

Geschichte der Geologie: Kunst & Geologie: Die Magie des Karfunkelsteins

Making Science Public: The book of life: Reading, writing and editing

BGS Geoheritage – images from the collections: Calx carbonata (calcite) from British mineralogy by James Sowerby 1802–1817

 

CHEMISTRY:

Yovisto: Nicolas Lemery and the Acid-Base Chemistry

Gizmodo: Badass Historical Chemists: The Woman Behind Antoine Lavoisier

Portrait of M. and Mme Lavoisier, by Jacques-Louis David, 1788 (Metropolitan Museum) Source: Wikimedia Commons

Portrait of M. and Mme Lavoisier, by Jacques-Louis David, 1788 (Metropolitan Museum)
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Nature: thesis: Hard-luck Scheele

Situating Chemistry: Situating Chemistry Database 1760–1840

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Yovisto: Albertus Magnus and the Merit of Personal Observation

Wellcome Trust: Researcher Spotlight: Louise Powell

BBC: Culture: Did Dickens invent time travel?

-273.15°C: Eminent Interview

The Bigger Picture: Looking Smithson’s Gift Horse in the Mouth

Edge Effects: Improving the Conversational Geography of Environmental Conferences

Science Museum Group Journal: Issue 4

Wikimedia Commons: Hooke’s Micrographia Diagrams from the National Library of Wales

Irish Philosophy: The “Incomparable Lady Ranelagh”

Katherine Jones, Lady Ranelagh: portrait in Lismore Castle Picture courtesy of Michelle DiMeo

Katherine Jones, Lady Ranelagh: portrait in Lismore Castle
Picture courtesy of Michelle DiMeo

The Harvard Crimson: A Forgotten Field

DSI: Database of Scientific Illustrators 1450–1950

IsisCB Explore: An open access discovery service for the history of science

Science Notes: November 20 in Science History

Science Notes: November 21 in Science History

Science Notes: November 22 in Science History

Society for the Social History of Medicine: The Gazette

Society for Renaissance Studies: Remembering Lisa Jardine

Professor Lisa Jardine in 2015, portrait from the Royal Society Source: Wikimedia Commons

Professor Lisa Jardine in 2015, portrait from the Royal Society
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Nicholson’s Journal: Website

The #EnvHist Weekly

NYAM: Discover the Past Support the Future

Metascience: Vol.24, Issue 3 Contents

Academia: Scientific Celebrity: The Paradoxical Case of Emil du Bois-Reymond

ESOTERIC:

Conciatore: Alchemist Cardinal

The Recipes Project: The Curious Case of the Homunculus, and the Allegorical Recipe

6859587740_ee3f6bb363_o-296x300

Conciatore: The Paracelsans

The Truth Garden: Odd Truths: The alchemical life of glassmaker Antonio Neri

BOOK REVIEWS:

Wonder of Words: The Hunt For Vulcan

Chad Comello: The Hunt for Vulcan

Boston Globe: How Einstein ended hunt for planet that never was

Contagions: The Black Death in the Ottoman Empire and Ragusan Republic

Nature: Books in Brief: Spooky Action at a Distance, Ecology or Catastrophe: The Life of Murray Bookchin etc.

Science Museum Group Journal: The thrilling adventures of Lovelace and Babbage: the (mostly) true story of the first computer, by Sydney Padua

The Early Modern Intelligencer: The Royal Touch in Early Modern England: Politics, Medicine and Sin

9780861933372

idées.fr Le discours de la semence À propos de : L’usage du sexe. Lettres au Dr Tissot, auteur de L’Onanisme (1760). Essai historiographique et texte transcrit par Patrick Singy

Science Book a Day: What Galileo Saw: Imagining the Scientific Revolution

History Today: Books of the Year 2015

New Books in Science, Technology, and Society: Inside the Machine: Art and Invention in the Electronic Age

The Page 99 Test: Melinda Baldwin’s “Making Nature”

Women’s History Association of Ireland: Aphrodisiacs, fertility and medicine in early modern England.

The New York Times: ‘London Fog: The Biography,’ by Christine L. Corton

Central London at night, 1936. Credit Lacey/General Photographic Agency, via Getty Images

Central London at night, 1936. Credit Lacey/General Photographic Agency, via Getty Images

Book Q&As with Deborah Kalb: Q&A with Paul Halpern

NEW BOOKS:

Pool of London Press: The Mapmakers’ World

9781910860007

The Public Domain Review: Selected Essays, Vol. II

Historiens de la santé: Malades, soignants, hôpitaux, représentations en Roussillon, Languedoc & Provence

Johns Hopkins University Press: Alfred Wegener: Science, Exploration, and the Theory of Continental Drift

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Culture 24: A magical glimpse into the Tudor imagination: Lost library of John Dee to be revealed

Royal College of Physicians: Scholar, courtier, magician: the lost library of John Dee 18 January 2016–29 July 2016

Royal Museums Greenwich: Samuel Pepys: Plague, Fire, Revolution exhibition 20 November 2015–28 March 2016

Painting of Samuel Pepys by John Hayls Source: Wikimedia Commons

Painting of Samuel Pepys by John Hayls
Source: Wikimedia Commons

J D Davies: Pepys Show and Tell

Londonist: Largest Ever Pepys Exhibition Comes to Greenwich

Heinz Nixdorf Museums Forum: Paderborn, Germany: IT began with Ada. Women in Computer History 2 September 2015–10 July 2016

Explore Brooklyn: The Morbid Anatomy Museum: how to get there, what to do, where to go after

Metropolitan Museum of Art: The Luxury of Time: European Clocks and Watches

Hyperallergergic: Celestial Art and Science in Albrecht Dürer’s 1515 Star Charts

ActiveHistory.ca: Science, Technology and Gender in Canada: An AcitveHistory.ca Exhibit in Collaboration with the Canadian Science and Technology Museum

Royal Society: Seeing closer: 350 years of microscope 17 December 2015

Hooke's microscope, from an engraving in Micrographia. Source: Wikimedia Commons

Hooke’s microscope, from an engraving in Micrographia.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Runs until 31 January 2016

LAST CHANCE TO SEE: University of Dundee: A History of Nearly Everything Runs until 28 November 2015

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs until 21 February 2016

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age Runs until 13 March 2016

Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, & Saturday

Guiding Lights: 500 years of Trinity House and safety at sea Runs till 4 January 2016

Southbank Centre: Faraday’s synaptic gap Runs till 10 January 2016

Hunterian Museum: Designing Bodies: Models of human anatomy from 1945 to now 24 November 2015–20 February 2016

THEATRE, OPERA AND FILMS:

The Dream Team: Surgeon to the Dead The Old Operating Theatre London 10-12 & 15-17 December 2015

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Booking to 18 June 2016

EVENTS:

Institute of Historical Research: British Maritime History Seminar: Drawing and Photography in the History of Astronomy 24 November 2015

The Royal Society: Lecture: Lifting the lid – the Royal Society since 1960 10 December 2015

Salle des Fêtes, Hôpital civil, Strasbourg: Colloque: Retour sur le genre des biopics de grands scientifiques : Pasteur, Pavlov, Koch, Ehrlich 23 novembre 2015

Wellcome Library: History of Pre-Modern Medicine Seminar: Humanist self-fashioning and ordinary medical practice. The Bohemian physician Georg Handsch (1529–c. 1578) and his notebooks 24 November 2015

medhumlabmanchester: Medicine in Art Society Launch Event Whitworth Art Gallery 26 November 2015

mia-flyer-01Gresham College: Was Einstein Right? 24 November 2015

Diseases of Modern Life: Seminar: Radical Requiems: The return of the past in British Agriculture, 1850–1950 St Anne’s College Oxford 25 November 2015

Morbid Anatomy: Upcoming Events

Natural History Museum: After Hours Lates 27 November 2015

Royal Society: Life through a lens: Celebrating science photography 26 November 2015

Wellcome Collection: Crucial Interventions with Richard Barnett 26 November 2015

Royal Institution: The Tsar’s cup 27 November 2015

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Norbert Wiener by David Levine, New York Review of Books

Norbert Wiener by David Levine, New York Review of Books

TELEVISION:

BBC Four: Timeshift: How Britain Won the Space Race: The Story of Bernard Lovell and Jodrell Bank

Lovell Telescope, Jodrell Bank Observatory Source: Wikimedia Commons

Lovell Telescope, Jodrell Bank Observatory
Source: Wikimedia Commons

io9: On Manhattan, Terrible Things Happen When You “Wake The Dragon”

BFI Southbank: There is a curated selection of clips from TV programmes on the Bomb, computing, DNA and space, culminating in a complete showing of a 1959 programme about supersonic flight. Together, this is the essence of how TV saw science 50 years ago. 26 November 2015

Channel 4: Building Hitler’s Supergun

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Youtube: THUNK – 79: Science, Pseudoscience, & the Demarcation Problem

RADIO:

BBC Radio 4: Self Drives: Maxwell’s Equations

PODCASTS:

BBC Global News Podcast: Challenges of curating natural science collections from 23 mins

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

Royal Society: Notes and Records: Announcing the 4th Notes and Records Essay Award

H-Physical Sciences: CFP: The Third Biannual Early-Career Conference for Historians of the Physical Sciences

University of Edinburgh: Sixth International Conference on Integrated History and Philosophy of Science (in collaboration with the UK Integrated History and Philosophy of Science) 3-5 July 2016

University of Amsterdam & Utrecht University: CFP: Connecting Collections XVII Universeum Network Meeting 9-11 July 2016

The Bernard S. Finn IEEE History Prize 2016: The prize is awarded annually to the best paper in the history of electrotechnology—power, electronics, telecommunications, and computer science—published during the preceding year Deadline 15 December 2015

All Souls College, Oxford: Workshop: Charles Hutton (1737–1823): being mathematical in the Georgian period 17–18 December 2015

Portrait of Charles Hutton (1737–1823), English mathematician Source: Wikimedia Common

Portrait of Charles Hutton (1737–1823), English mathematician
Source: Wikimedia Common

University of Leiden: CfP: Gender, Power and Materiality in Early Modern Europe 1500–1800 7-9 April 20916

Stony Brook University: Periods and Waves: A Conference on Sound and History 29–30 April 2016

University of Leuven: CfP: Ancient Medicine 30–31 August 2016

Charles Schmitt Prize 2016: Submissions will be accepted in any area of intellectual history, broadly construed, 1500 to the present Deadline 31 December 2015

University of Cambridge: CfP: BSHS Postgraduate Conference 2016 6–8 January

Edmonton, Alberta, Canada: CfP: Eighth Joint Meeting of the BSHS, CSHPS, and HSS, 22-25 June 2016

University of Kent: CfP: Medicine in its Place: Situating Medicine in Historical Context 7–10 July 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

University of Liverpool: The University of Liverpool is planning to support a Medical Humanities University Award application to the Wellcome Trust and is seeking expressions of interest from dynamic and enthusiastic candidates with a strong research track record in this area.

Queen Mary University of London: Postgraduate Research Studentships

Canadian Association for the History of Nursing: Margaret M. Allemang Scholarship for graduate students

British Library: Curator, Map Collection

Royal Signals Museum: Museum Technical Curator

 

 


Whewell’s Gazette: Year2, Vol. #20

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #20

Monday 30 November 2015

EDITORIAL:

Whewell’s Gazette your weekly #histSTM links list bringing you all that we could gather together of the histories of science, technology and medicine from the four corners of the Internet over the last seven days cruises into December.

For the second week running we feature Einstein and his General Theory of Relativity, this time celebrating its official one-hundredth birthday. The current (understandable) dominance in the #histsci news of Einstein at the moment leads to thoughts of the Einstein-Currie syndrome, phenomenon or problem as it is variously known. This is the fact that Einstein and Currie are so well known that other important scientists tend to disappear in their shadows. The same phenomenon occurs with Galileo and Newton in the seventeenth century. In fact there is an excellent book by Lesley Murdin titled Under Newton’s Shadow that highlights the other seventeenth English astronomers who were unfortunate enough to be Newton’s contemporaries.

A second unfortunate phenomenon resulting from the dominance in #histSTM of a handful of big names are the articles with titles like “the most important scientist you’ve never heard of!” These are particularly prevalent amongst those trying to promote the role of women in #histSTM. In principle the idea is good but unfortunately the authors almost always choose one of a group of names of women scientist who are in the meantime very well known indeed. A good example this week is an article to be found in our technology rubric, There’s a Navy Destroyer & a Tech Conference Named After This Person But You’ve Probably Never Heard of Her, which is an article about Grace Hopper. Now anybody who is remotely interested in the history of computers and computer science, who doesn’t know about Grace Hopper has being living under a stone. Grace Hopper is one of the most well known computer scientists in the world.

This is just one example and I could go on to list quite a lot more and I think we need a change in the way we approach the subject. Instead of writing the two-hundredth article about Grace Hopper, Lise Meitner, Jocelyn Bell Burnell or whoever we should concentrate on making the many not quite as famous women in #histSTM better known and showing that the spread is much wider than just a few star names.

That this is possible is excellently demonstrated by blogs/websites such as TrowelBlazers or Lady Science. A good example of this by a non-women-specialist blog in this week’s new post at Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog, Women, Minorities and the Manhattan Project. These historians are showing the way. Let’s get away from emphasising the same small handful of star names and start looking at the underbelly and bringing the not quite as famous to the fore.

Quotes of the week:

Bose Quote

We humans have not been around long enough yet to see the trees get really angry. – Liam Heneghan (@DublinSoil)

Henry Moseley

Should have died cosily

At home aged 93, Nobel laureate, former PRS

And not in that mess. – James Sumner (@JamesBSumner)

“History of science became legend, legend became myth, and some prior work that should not have been forgotten was lost.” – Jeremy Yoder (@JBYoder)

“A creationist commenter gets to the heart of the problem: “I would rather believe and be wrong, than not believe and be right.”” – Richard Carter (@friendsofdarwin)

Miller Quote

“John Oliver: “There was only one time in US history when refugees actually did wipe everyone out—and we’ll be celebrating it on Thursday.”” – h/t @Pogue

“I’ve sorted all my Richard Dawkins books in condescending order”. – Paraic O’Donnell (@paraicodonnell)

Scared of clocks:

Hates a young boy:

Very well educated but weirdly obsessive:

Richard Dawkins is Captain Hook – Clee ((@jmclee)

“Ignorance is not so incurable as error.” George Berkeley (1724) h/t @MichelleDiMeo

‘The first act of compassion is to relieve the fool of his folly’ Robert Grosseteste h/t @mcleish_t

“Time Doesn’t Exist Clocks Exist” – Philosophical Graffiti h/t @williamcrawley

“Tang alchemists accidentally invented a primitive form of gunpowder while trying to create an elixir of youth. Ironic”. – Jill Levine (@jilldlevine)

“Chimps are our closest relatives, and yet they never send us Christmas cards. – Chris Addison” h/t @DarwinMonkey

“Dear world, I’d like to unsubscribe from your mailing list. Thanks”. – Finn Arne Jørgensen (@finnarne)

“Actually Wittgenstein is the name of the philosopher not the monster”. – James (@ApathTea)

“I have been trying to think the Unthinkable. But it turns out you can’t”. – @historyscientis

PHILOSOPHY  h/t @replicakill

PHILOSOPHY
h/t @replicakill

Birthday of the Week:

Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity born 25 November 1915

 

Spacetime curvature schematic Source: Wikipedia Commons

Spacetime curvature schematic
Source: Wikipedia Commons

The New Yorker: The Space Doctor’s Big Idea

The New York Times: A Century Ago, Einstein’s Theory of Relativity Changed Everything

Huff Post Science: The Blog: Gaga for Gravitation

Forbes: General Relativity and the ‘Lone Genius’ Model of Science

The Washington Post: Einstein’s General Relativity at 100: Put that in your pipe and smoke it

The New York Times: Albert Einstein and Relativity in the Pages of The Times

Articles in The Times from Nov. 10, 1919, left; Nov. 16, 1919, center; and Dec. 3, 1919.

Articles in The Times from Nov. 10, 1919, left; Nov. 16, 1919, center; and Dec. 3, 1919.

Science Museum: The past, present and future of general relativity

In the Dark: 100 Years of General Relativity

SpaceWatchtower: Centennial: Einstein’s General Theory of Gravity

Scientific American: Einstein’s Unfinished Dream: Marrying Relativity to the Quantum World

BBC: Does Einstein’s general theory of relativity still mater?

BBC: What is Albert Einstein’s Theory of General Relativity?

Science Daily: What Did Einstein Mean By ‘Curved’ Spacetime?

National Science Foundation: Albert Einstein, in his own words

Albert Einstein developed the theories of special and general relativity. Picture from 1921. Source: Wikimedia Commons

Albert Einstein developed the theories of special and general relativity. Picture from 1921.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Economist: General Relativity at 100

Youtube: BackstromGroup: Happy Thanksgiving & Happy 100th Anniversary

Youtube: Einstein 100 – Theory of General Relativity

ESA: Lisa Pathfinder: 100 Years of General Relativity

NASA illustration of LISA, taken from http://lisa.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/lisa-waves.html.

NASA illustration of LISA, taken from http://lisa.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/lisa-waves.html.

Perimeter Institute: General Relativity from A to Z

BBC Radio 4: In Our Time: Relativity

AMNH: General Relativity

Popular Science: General Relativity: 100 Years Old and Still Full of Surprises

Scientific America: 100 Years of General Relativity: Scientific American Special Issue

Slate: On the Anniversary of Two Scientific Revolutions

BuzzFeed: 14 Rare Photos of Albert Einstein

Here he is having a picnic in the woods near Oslo, 1920. Albert Einstein Archives / Princeton University Press

Here he is having a picnic in the woods near Oslo, 1920.
Albert Einstein Archives / Princeton University Press

Princeton University Press: Thanks Einstein: Alice Calaprice on the man behind the myth

Princeton University Press: Blog: Was Einstein the First to Discover General Relativity?

Open Culture: Albert Einstein On God: “Nothing More Than the Expression and Product of Human Weakness”

The Guardian: My hero: Albert Einstein by Graham Farmelo

Nature: History: Einstein was no lone genius

 Marcel Grossmann (left) and Michele Besso (right), university friends of Albert Einstein (centre), both made important contributions to general relativity. Grossmann, Einstein: ETH-Bibliothek Zürich/Bildarchiv; Besso: Besso Family/AIP Emilio Segre Visual Archives


Marcel Grossmann (left) and Michele Besso (right), university friends of Albert Einstein (centre), both made important contributions to general relativity.
Grossmann, Einstein: ETH-Bibliothek Zürich/Bildarchiv; Besso: Besso Family/AIP Emilio Segre Visual Archives

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Yovisto: Alfonso from Spain and the Alfonsine Tables

Yovisto: Johannes van de Waals – A Pioneer of the Molecular Sciences

BackRe(Action): Dear Dr B: Can you think of a single advancement in theoretical physics, other than speculation, since the early 1980s?

AHF: Herbert York

True Anomalies: The Meteorite Crater that Wasn’t: Reflections on SPECTRE

Smithsonian.com: How NASA’s Flight Plan Described the Apollo 11 Moon Landing

The Somnium Project: Johannes Kepler: Somnium (The Dream)

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Source: Wikimedia Commons

Alembic Rare Books: Bringing Some Culture to the Physicists: Nina Byers & Richard Feynman

Smithsonia.com: The World’s First Nuclear Reactor was Built in a Squash Court

JHI Blog: The “Conquest of the Sun” and Ideas About Energy

Ri-Science: Charte der Gebirge Des Mondes, 1878

AHF: William “Deak” Parsons

AHF: Moving Forward – 1941

Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog: Women, minorities, and the Manhattan Project

A relatively young Katharine (“Kay”) Way, one of the many female scientists of the Manhattan Project, and one of the rare few scientists whose work took her to all of the major Manhattan Project sites. Source: Emilio Segrè Visual Archives.

A relatively young Katharine (“Kay”) Way, one of the many female scientists of the Manhattan Project, and one of the rare few scientists whose work took her to all of the major Manhattan Project sites. Source: Emilio Segrè Visual Archives.

BBC: Jocelyn Bell Burnell

The Washington Post: A ground zero forgotten

EXPLORATION, CARTOGRAPHY AND NAVIGATION:

Medievalists.net: The Use of Lead and Line by Early Navigators in the North Sea

MBS Birmingham: Amateur gentlemen, Everest, and the Science of Foie Gras

L0035747 Tabloid medicine chest used on 1933 Mount Everest Expedition Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

L0035747 Tabloid medicine chest used on 1933 Mount Everest Expedition
Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

New South Wales: State Library: Discover Collection: In search of rich lands: The Dutch

Icelandic Saga Map: Mapping the Icelandic Sagas

Boston 1775: Mapping Out a Map-Filled Visit to Boston

The Recipes Project: A Recipe for Teaching Atlantic World History: Food and the Columbian Exchange

Polly Platt, Map sampler (1809), Made in Dutchess County, Pleasant Valley, New York, United States, Purchase, Frank P. Stetz Bequest, in loving memory of David Stewart Hull, 2012, 2012.64, Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Polly Platt, Map sampler (1809), Made in Dutchess County, Pleasant Valley, New York, United States, Purchase, Frank P. Stetz Bequest, in loving memory of David Stewart Hull, 2012, 2012.64, Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Instagram: Embroidered Globe by Lydia Satterthwaite, 1817

British Library: Maps and views blog: Magnificent Maps of New York

National Library of Scotland: Blaeu Atlas Maior, 1662-5

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Thomas Morris: Bleeding you well

Neuroscientifically Challenged: History of Neuroscience: The mystery of trepanation

Archaeology: Paleo-dentistry

Collectors Weekly: War and Prosthetics: How Veterans Fought for the Perfect Limb

Left, this Civil War era portrait shows a veteran with a typical wood and leather prosthetic leg. Image courtesy the National Museum of Health and Medicine. Right, this Anglesey-style wooden leg was produced in Britain around 1901, and features a jointed knee and ankle and a spring-fitted heel. Image courtesy of the Science Museum / SSPL.

Left, this Civil War era portrait shows a veteran with a typical wood and leather prosthetic leg. Image courtesy the National Museum of Health and Medicine. Right, this Anglesey-style wooden leg was produced in Britain around 1901, and features a jointed knee and ankle and a spring-fitted heel. Image courtesy of the Science Museum / SSPL.

The Recipes Project: Van Helmont’s Recipes

Early Modern Medicine: Understanding Anger

University of Glasgow: UofG shines light on Erskine archive

Freud Quotes: 1938: Sigmund Freud Arrives in London as Refugee

Nursing Clio: Nursing Thanksgiving

Thomas Morris: Struck dumb

The Guardian: Man stole brains from medical museum and put them on eBay

The Walrus: Doctors Without Science: A brief history of quackery, from leeches to ostrich eggs

1 An arsenic bottle. 2 Eighteenth-century European engraving of Egyptian bloodletting. 3 A 1930s bag advertising purgative medicine. 4 Lobotomy instruments.

1 An arsenic bottle. 2 Eighteenth-century European engraving of Egyptian bloodletting. 3 A 1930s bag advertising purgative medicine. 4 Lobotomy instruments.

The Chirurgeon’s Apprentice: Hold the Butter! A Brief History of Gorging

University of Toronto: PhD Thesis: From the Hands of Quacks: Aural Surgery, Deafness, and the Making of a Surgical Specialty in 19th Century London by Jaipreet Virdi-Dhesi Free online as pdf

Thomas Morris: Nothing to worry about

The Public Domain Review: The Science of Life and Death in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein

Dittrick Medical History Center: Todd’s Head Spanner 1930

History Extra: Your 60-second guide to the Black Death

TECHNOLOGY:

Conciatore: Lead Crystal

 

99% Invisible: Episode 157: Devil’s Rope

Barbs Courtesy of The Devil’s Rope Museum

Barbs
Courtesy of The Devil’s Rope Museum

Medium: Clipping the Devil’s Rope

Science at Play: Fingerprinter

ReadThink: There’s a Navy Destroyer & a Tech Conference Named After This Person But You’ve Probably Never Heard of Her

Atlas Obscura: The Telharmonium was the Spotify of 1906

Historically Speaking: Desperately Seeking Ernest

Ptak Science Books: Gear, Teeth, Minie Bullets, Cloth Bindings (1864)

Source: Ptak Science Books

Source: Ptak Science Books

PRI: When Ireland gathered around ‘the Wireless’ in the dark, one boy saw the light

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Atlas Obscura: See a 400-Year-Old Book Made Entirely from Feathers

History of Geology Group: A contemporary William Smith map

NCSE: The Plane Truth at Last Free online web and ebook

Notches: Histories of Sexualities in Central and Eastern Europe

British Library: Discovering Literature: Romantics and Victorians: Darwin and the theory of evolution

The Telegraph: First picture of young Charles Darwin on HMS Beagle reveals shipmate squabbles

Charles Darwin on board the Beagle, painted off the coast of Argentina on 24th September, 1832 Photo: Sotheby's

Charles Darwin on board the Beagle, painted off the coast of Argentina on 24th September, 1832 Photo: Sotheby’s

artlyst: Charles Darwin Watercolour Painted On the Ship Beagle Discovered

The Guardian: Unique watercolour of Darwin on HMS Beagle tipped to fetch upwards of £50,000 at auction

History: This Day in History: Origin of Species is published

abc.net: News: London skeletons reveal British capital’s 2,000-year history as ethnic melting pot

Niche: “Two chemical works behind him, and a soap factory in front”: Living and Working in London’s Industrial Marshlands

The Walrus: The Roughneck Diaries

Colossal: Art Meets Cartography: The 15,000-Year History of a River in Oregon Rendered in Data

Naturalis Historia: Dinosaurs, Dragons and Ken Ham: The Literal Reality of Mythological Creatures

A 40 million year old whale fossil from “whale valley” in Egypt not far from Cairo. Here hundreds of whale fossils lie exposed in this wind eroded valley. These whales where large headed toothed whales that are not alive today.  Many of these would have been exposed for ancient Egyptians to see and wonder what animal they were associated with.  (AFP/File/Cris Bouroncle)

A 40 million year old whale fossil from “whale valley” in Egypt not far from Cairo. Here hundreds of whale fossils lie exposed in this wind eroded valley. These whales where large headed toothed whales that are not alive today. Many of these would have been exposed for ancient Egyptians to see and wonder what animal they were associated with. (AFP/File/Cris Bouroncle)

SNAP.PA: The history of climate change summed up in 10 key dates

Palaeoblog: Born This Day: Dunkinfield Henry Scott

Thinking Like a Mountain: The Decline of Natural History & the Rise of Biology in 19thc Britain

CHEMISTRY:

Chemistry World: Six of the best from Stella

National Geographic: An 80-Year-Old Prank Revealed, Hiding in the Periodic Table!

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

JHI Blog: Hellenism and the Materiality of Greek Books in Renaissance Italy

A copy of the Anthologia Graeca (1494) printed by Lorenzo de Alopa in 1494. Notice the raised bands on the spine, non-projecting endbands, and how the bookblock is smaller than the boards.

A copy of the Anthologia Graeca (1494) printed by Lorenzo de Alopa in 1494. Notice the raised bands on the spine, non-projecting endbands, and how the bookblock is smaller than the boards.

Science Museum: Volunteering for the Cosmonauts exhibition

The Guardian: Scientists finally get under the skin of a 13th century publishing mystery

Phy.org: Getting under the skin of a medieval mystery

University of York: Getting under the skin of a Medieval mystery

University of Cambridge Department of History and Philosophy of Science: John Forrester 25/08/1949–24/11/2015

John Forrester 25/08/1949–24/11/2015

John Forrester 25/08/1949–24/11/2015

University of Cambridge Department of History and Philosophy of Science: Obituary John Forrester (25 August 1949–24 November 2015)

U.S. National Library of Medicine: Images from the History of Medicine

History of the Human Sciences: December 2015; 28 (5) Visibility matters: Diagrammatic Renderings of Human Evolution and Diversity in Physical, Serological and Molecular Anthropology: Table of Contents

The #EnvHist Weekly

The Telegraph: Duncan White, Catherine Nixey and Thomas Morris [historian of medicine] win 2015 Jerwood Awards

History of Psychiatry: December 2015: 26 (4) Table of Contents

The Vintage Scientific Instruments of Brown University: We’re looking for old scientific instruments at Brown!

Smithsonian Science News: Smithsonian Libraries’ Rare Texts Include Early Superstars of Science

ESOTERIC:

Conciatore: The Sincerest Form of Flattery

Conciatore: Veins of the Earth

Antonio Neri, "The Mineral Gold" Neri 1598-2000 (Ferguson 67), f. 5r.

Antonio Neri, “The Mineral Gold”
Neri 1598-2000 (Ferguson 67), f. 5r.

BOOK REVIEWS:

Nature: Books in Brief: Thunder and Lightning: Weather Past, Present and Future; The Orange Trees of Marrakesh: Ibn Khaldun and the Science of Man etc.

New Scientist: How a creationist instinct stops us seeing evolution everywhere

Science Book a Day: The Man Who Flattened the Earth: Maupertuis and the Sciences in the Enlightenment

man-who-flattened-the-earth

Science Book a Day: My Sister Rosalind Franklin: A Family Memoir

The Independent: Christmas 2015: The best 6 nature books

The Guardian: The Invention of Science: A New History of the Scientific Revolution by David Wootton review – a big bang moment

The Wall Street Journal: The Shape of Obsession (Google title then click on first link to surmount paywall!)

American Scientist: SCIENTISTS AT WAR: The Ethics of Cold War Weapons Research.

American Scientist: In Defence of Pure Mathematics

NEW BOOKS:

Cork University Press: The Booles & The Hintons9781782051855-2T

 

Ashgate: Geography, Technology and Instruments of Exploration

Amazon: Deadly Victorian Remedies

Hermann: La critique de la science depuis 1968

The MIT Press: Make It New: The History of Silicon Valley Design

ART & EXHIBITIONS:

The Guardian: My highlights: The Samuel Pepys: Plague, Fire, Revolution exhibition by Michael Prodger

Samuel Pepys by John Hayls, 1666. Illustration: courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, London

Samuel Pepys by John Hayls, 1666. Illustration: courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, London

Royal Museums Greenwich: Samuel Pepys Season 20 November 2015–28 March 2016

The Architects Newspaper: Not Dead Yet

The Mary Rose: ‘Ringing the Changes’: Mary Rose Museum to re-open in 2016 with unrestricted views of the ship

Science Museum: Leonardo da Vinci: The Mechanics of Genius 10 February 2016–4 September 2016

Royal College of Surgeons: Designing Bodies 24 November 2015–20 February 2016

Nature: A view from the bridge: On Reflection: the art and neuroscience of mirrors

Royal Society: Seeing closer: 350 years of microscope Runs till 17 December 2015

Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Runs until 31 January 2016

DPLA: From Colonialism to Tourism: Maps in American Culture

"Folklore Music Map of the United States." Courtesy the David Rumsey Historical Map Collection.

“Folklore Music Map of the United States.” Courtesy the David Rumsey Historical Map Collection.

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs until 21 February 2016

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age Runs to 13 March 2016

Natural History Museum, London: Bauer Brothers art exhibition Runs till 26 February 2017

Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, & Saturday

Guiding Lights: 500 years of Trinity House and safety at sea Runs till 4 January 2016

Southbank Centre: Faraday’s synaptic gap Runs till 10 January 2016

Science Museum: Ada Lovelace Runs till 31 March 2016

Hunterian Museum: Designing Bodies: Models of human anatomy from 1945 to now 24 November 2015–20 February 2016

THEATRE, OPERA AND FILMS:

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Booking to 18 June 2016

Upcoming: The Old Operating Theatre: Surgeon to the Dead 10-12 & 15-17 December 2015

EVENTS:

The History of Science, Medicine, & Technology at Oxford University: Open Day 2 December 2015

National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin: Afternoon Lecture – Plant-hunters in Petticoats – a history of Irish women in botany 5 December 2015

Museum of the History of Science: Lightning Strikes! 5 December 2015

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Samuel Crompton Inventing the Spinning Mule by Alfred Walter Bayes, 1895 (c) Bolton Library & Museum Services, Bolton Council; Supplied by The Public Catalogue Foundation

Samuel Crompton Inventing the Spinning Mule by Alfred Walter Bayes, 1895
(c) Bolton Library & Museum Services, Bolton Council; Supplied by The Public Catalogue Foundation

TELEVISION:

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

AHF: Video from Manhattan Project Symposium Now Available

Youtube: Yale University: Becoming Darwin: History, Memory, and Biography, “Stories of a Scientific Life”

Youtube: AHF: Trinity Test Preparations

Youtube: Wellcome Collection: Tobacco resuscitation kit

Dispersal of Darwin: Janet Browne on becoming Darwin (3 lectures)

RADIO:

BBC Radio 4: Too Old to Be a Genius

BBC Radio 4: Self Drives: Maxwell’s Equations

James and Katherine Maxwell, 1869 Source: Wikimedia Commons

James and Katherine Maxwell, 1869
Source: Wikimedia Commons

 

PODCASTS:

Londonist Out Loud: Pepys Show

Soundcloud: AMSEOnline: Century of the Atom…told through the voices of scientists who created the nuclear age

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

HOPOS: CFP: International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science 11th International Congress Minneapolis 22-25 June 2016

World Association for the History of Veterinary Medicine: 2016 Young Scholars Award Competition: Best original essay on any topic of relevance to the history of the veterinary field

Barts Pathology Museum and the Hunterian Museum at the Royal College of Surgeons, London: CfP: Corpses, Cadavers and Catalogues: The Mobilities of Dead Bodies and Body Parts, Past and Present 17–18 May 2016

La Salle des Actes de la faculté de Pharmacie de Paris: Colloque: Nicolas Lémery (1645-1715), un savant en son siècle 9 Décembre 2015

St Anne’s College Oxford: CfP: Medicine and Modernity in the Long Nineteenth Century 10–11 September 2016

University of Cambridge: CRASSH: Digital Editing Now 7–9 January 2016

Birkbeck Early Modern Society: CfP: 9th Annual Student Conference Sensing the Early Modern 20 February 2016

Comitatus: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies: Vol. 47 (2016) Call for Papers

ICOHTEC: Maurice Dumas Prize

University of Durham: CfP: Interdisciplinary International Women’s Day Conference, Durham University, 8 March 2016 Re-Sounding Voices: Women, Silence and the Production of Knowledge

Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University: Symposium: Apps, Maps & Models: Digital Pedagogy and Research in Art History, Archaeology & Visual Studies 22 February 2016

Villa Vigoni (Italy): CfP: Pseudo-Paracelsus: Alchemy and Forgery in Early Modern Medicine and Natural Philosophy 25–28 July 2016

University of Oxford: St Cross College: Conference: Medieval Physics in Oxford 27 February 2016

University of Zurich: CfP: Objects of psychiatry: Between thing-making, reification & personhood 8–11 June 2016

Rijksmuseum Amsterdam: Symposium: Navies in Miniature 4–5 February 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

Society for the History of Technology: The Hindle Fellowship

University of Huddersfield: Research Assistant in Medieval and Early Modern Material Culture (1400–1700)

Yale University: Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library seeks Associate Director for Collections, Research & Education

University of Utrecht: PhD Candidate History of Art, Science and Technology

People’s History Museum: Archivist

University of Liverpool: History: Lecturer/Senior Lecturer – Medical Humanities

University of Glasgow: The 2016/17 round of Lord Kelvin/Adam Smith PhD Scholarships is open for applications until Friday 22 January 2016

University of Leeds: The School of Philosophy, Religion and History of Science at the University of Leeds is pleased to inform potential applicants for postgraduate study that it has available up to 18 fully-funded PhD scholarships for UK/EU students for 2016-17 entry.

University of Notre Dame: Two Postdoctoral Fellowships in History and/or Philosophy of Science

Universität zu Lübeck: Juniorprofessor W1 “Wissenschaftsgeschichte der Psychologie”

University of Kent: Postgraduate Funding

Chalmers University of Technology: PhD student position in History of Technology

 

 

 

 


Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #21

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #21

Monday 07 December 2015

EDITORIAL:

The season of Advent has started and Whewell’s Gazette the weekly #histSTM links list rolls relentlessly towards Christmas carrying with it, as always, a sledge full of the best history of science, technology and medicine that our ever assiduous elves could package up from the far flung corners of the Internet.

Our mailbox received a mysterious missive from one David Haden, which we reproduce below for all of our readers:

Dear Ghost,

 Be it advised that a fellow ghost has spirited together all the spectral

shades who name themselves ‘open access journals’.  Further, that this

fellow ghost has laboured for many years to seal each and every one of these

into a most marvellous spirit-bottle.  Said bottle may be obtained at

http://www.jurn.org/  The manner of uncorking is of the simplest, yet an

adept seeker may then command a performance of the most marvellous gyrations

and revelations.  Be pleased to note that no spirits are caused to be

summoned if they be weighed down in chains, or if they moan for payment, or

are of a false and predatory cast.

 Yours,

 David Haden.

If you follow the link you will be rewarded with a cornucopia of links to gladden the heart of every science fan.

Having no Advent calendar of our own we have stolen borrowed two excellent ones for your delectation. The first is from the Museum of the History of Science in Oxford and the second is from the Reading University Herbarium So get those chestnuts roasting, sit down under a sprig of holly and read your way through the first Advent edition of your favourite #histSTM gazette.

MHS Oxford Advent Calendar

 Day 1: Celestial Table Globe by Johannes Schöner, Nürnberg 1531

imu-media.php

 

Day 2: Cuff-Type Compound Microscope by Dollond, London c. 1761

Day 3: Pocket Horizontal Sundial, by Augustine Ryther, London, 1585

Day 4: Collection of Sterol Chemicals Belonging to Dorothy Hodgkin, c.1934

Day 5: Painting (Oil on Canvas, Framed) of Rudolph II and Tycho Brahe in Prague, by Edouard Ender, 1855

Day 6: Dr James’s Fever Powder Medicine, by R. James, Oxford c. 1770

Culham Research Group: Advent Botany

 Day 1: Balsam Fir – a popular Christmas tree in Canada

Day 2: Yule Log – a carbon neutral heat source?

Day 3: Galanthophilia

Galanthus reginae-olgae flowers in the autumn

Galanthus reginae-olgae flowers in the autumn

Day 4: Lore of Hazelnuts, Corylus avellana

Day 5: Walnuts

Day 6: White Cedar

Quotes of the week:

 Math with Bad Drawings: Report Cards for Famous Mathematicians

Go read them all!

Go read them all!

“Given ships or sails adapted to the breezes of heaven, there will be those who will not shrink from even that vast expanse.” – Johannes Kepler in a Letter to Galileo 1610 h/t @TychoGirl

“Apparently, if you take STEM & add the Art, Humanities, and Social Sciences, Performance…you get a STEAMSHIP”. – Patrick McCray (@LeapingRobot)

Steamship

“I don’t want to go to heaven. None of my friends are there.” – Oscar Wilde

“Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect.”― Mark Twain

A lunatic in Bedlam was asked how he came there. He answered, “The world said I was mad; I said the world was mad; and they outvoted me.” – @18thCenturyJoke

“I actually think that the difference between hallmark cards and “serious” euro-american ‪philosophy is solely stylistic”. – @replicakill

Shit Academics Say

Shit Academics Say

“Statistically, bouncy castles are more dangerous than sharks”. – Kylo Hill (@Sci_Phile)

“Mein Kampf is set to be re-published, although is still expected to be marginally less right wing than most Facebook posts about refugees”. – James Martin (@Pundamentalism)

“You’re Never Going To Kill Storytelling, It’s Built Into The Human Plan.” – Margaret Atwood h/t @JonathanGunson

“Whenever things sound easy, it turns out there’s one part you didn’t hear.” — Donald Westlake h/t @divbyzero

Calvin and Hobbes

Birthday of the Week:

John Ray was born on 29 November 1627

 

John Ray, by unknown artist. National Portrait Gallery Source: Wikimedia Commons

John Ray, by unknown artist. National Portrait Gallery
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Yovisto: John Ray and the Classification of Plants

The Renaissance Mathematicus: A boy from Essex who made good

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Venus Transit

Yovisto: Christian Doppler and the Doppler Effect

AHF: Isotope Separation Methods

Universe Today: Who is Stephen Hawking?

Slate: 60 Years Ago Today: The Day a Meteorite Hit Ann Hodges

True: An impact crater is also called an “astrobleme.” Getting a bruise from a meteorite would then be an astroblemish.

True: An impact crater is also called an “astrobleme.” Getting a bruise from a meteorite would then be an astroblemish.

Yovisto: Ernst Chladni – The Father of Acoustics

Atlas Obscura: A Short History of Martians

Discover: Probing Einstein’s Brain for Clues to His Genius

Yovisto: The Fist Self-Sustained Nuclear Reactor

The Somnium Project: New Pages: On Summoning Daemons & Dangers of Daemonic Space Travel

Taylor & Francis Online: Physics: Advances in optics in the medieval Islamic world (oa)

ESA: SOHO Celebrates 20 Years of Discoveries

University of Cambridge Digital Library: Philosophiæ naturalis principia mathematica

The Sydney Morning Herald: Molongo Observatory Synthesis Telescope celebrates 50 years with a relaunch

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Ruth Kerr Jakoby’s Interview

Muslim Heritage: The Astronomical Clock of Taqi Al-Din: Virtual Reconstruction

Skulls in the Stars: Marguerite O’Loghlin Crowe steps from the shadows

Marguerite O’Loghlin Crowe, from her later years in Florida. Via the George A. Smathers Libraries Digital Collections.

Marguerite O’Loghlin Crowe, from her later years in Florida. Via the George A. Smathers Libraries Digital Collections.

Graphic Arts: The Comet of 1789

Silicon Ireland: Did you know that an Irish scientist discovered why the sky is blue

Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum: Engineering Model, Lander, Mars, Pathfinder

Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog: Why spy?

Smithsonian.com: How Twitching Frog Legs Help Inspire ‘Frankenstein’

The Conversation: Meet the real Frankenstein: pioneering scientist who may have inspired Mary Shelly

AHF: Werner Heisenberg

AIP: George Uhlenbeck

Public Domain Review: Transit of Venus 1882

7341257008_70258dbdb9_o

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

Intelligent Life: Time Travel

Huffpost: Arts & Culture: They Don’t Make Maps Like this Anymore

British Library: Maps and views blog: The British Library Publishes War Office Archive Maps Online

M Library: Online Exhibits: Rediscovering the Jansson and Hondius Atlases of Henry Vignaud

Atlas Obscura: The Psychedelic Moon Maps of the 1970s

image

Progressive Geographies: Digital Map of the Roman Empire

Boston Globe: At BLP, sharp eye steers missing map home

Atlas Obscura: Found: A 17th Century Map Stolen from a Library by a Notorious Art Thief

Maui Time: Story of Hawaii Museum in Kahului adds new Japanese strategic maps from World War II

Fanny at 21,000 feetcourtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540

Fanny at 21,000 feetcourtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540

Science: 150-year-old map reveals that beaver dams can last centuries

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Thomas Morris: Is that it?

Freud Quotes: A Clinical Lesson at the Salpêtrière

André Brouillet's 1887 A Clinical Lesson at the Salpêtrière depicting a Charcot demonstration. Freud had a lithograph of this painting placed over the couch in his consulting rooms.

André Brouillet’s 1887 A Clinical Lesson at the Salpêtrière depicting a Charcot demonstration. Freud had a lithograph of this painting placed over the couch in his consulting rooms.

Motherboard: Switzerland Briefly Legalized LSD Therapy and Then Couldn’t Let It Go

Public Domain Review: Re-examining ‘the Elephant Man’

Yovisto: The Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Aids

 

Dr Jennifer Evans: Fabulous Facial Hair History

Recipes Project: Recipes to Entertain in an Exeter Cathedral Library Manuscript

Atlas Obscura: Objects of Intrigue: London’s Life-Saving Publicly Accessible Enema Kits

Dr Alun Withey: Healthy Beards? A ‘Decembeard’ Special

Yovisto: Christine Ladd-Franklin and the Theory of Colour Vision

Christine Ladd-Franklin Source: Wikimedia Commons

Christine Ladd-Franklin
Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Glasgow Story: RCPSG: Illustrations in the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow

History Today: The history of deafness is as old as humanity

Concocting History: Of mice and frogs

Yovisto: Christiaan Barnard and the First Heart Transplant

The Recipes Project: Wormy Beer and Wet Nursing in the Roman Empire

The H-Word: 54 years of the Pill (on the NHS), and how Birmingham women got it first

Atlas Obscura: The First Planned Parenthood Only Lasted for 10 Days but Started a Revolution

Conciatore: Royal Apothecary

Fresco, early 16th century speziale,Castello di  Issogne, lower Aosta Valley, Italy.

Fresco, early 16th century speziale,Castello di Issogne, lower Aosta Valley, Italy.

Reuters: Modern science detects disease in 400-year-old embalmed hearts

Thomas Morris: The case of the missing pen

Res Obscura: Why Did Seventeenth-Century Europeans Eat Mummies?

Thomas Morris: On leeches, and how to catch them

TECHNOLOGY:

 

Brian Eno

Brian Eno

Engineering and Technology History Wiki: John Fleming

Hackaday: The Antikythera Mechanism

Georgian Gentleman: The March of Intellect – another William Heath caricature…

Journal of Art in Society: Prussian Blue and Its Partner in Crime

Google.com: 1938–1945 The Women of Bletchley Park

West’s Meditations: Artillery in Melaka, 1511 CE

Hyperallergic: The 19th-Century Tomb That Inspired London’s Iconic Telephone Box

London telephone box and Eliza Soane’s tomb (all photos by the author for Hyperallergic unless otherwise noted)

London telephone box and Eliza Soane’s tomb (all photos by the author for Hyperallergic unless otherwise noted)

Collecting and Connecting: “Get Thee to a Nunnery”: Finding the History of Metallurgy in a Monastery

Conciatore: Yellow Glass

Yovisto: Merry Christmas or How the SMS was born

The Huntarian: Robert Stirling’s Model Air Engine

NMOC: Winter 1975/6 from the pages of Computer Weekly

Library of Congress: Flights of Fantasy and Fact: Man-made Wings in Literature and History

Lithograph of man who flies with wings attached to his tunic. From the Library of Congress Tissandier Collection.

Lithograph of man who flies with wings attached to his tunic. From the Library of Congress Tissandier Collection.

Google Patents: Space Vehicle

The New York Times: After 60 Years, B-52s Still Dominate U.S. Fleet

The New York Times: The Bullet That Changed History

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Yovisto: Pierre André Latrille – The Father of modern Entomology

UCL: Underwhelming Fossil Fish of the Month

Road to Paris: A very short history of climate change research

Paige Fossil History: Meet Mrs. Ples: 4 Facts about The Australopithecine Skull

Embryo Project: St. George Jackson Mivart (1827–1900)

The Friends of Charles Darwin: The great Darwin fossil hunt

AEON: Through a glass, sadly

A large travelling circus aquarium filled with sharks, alligators, seals, octopus, narwhal whale and a spouting sperm whale; lithograph, 1873. Photo by GraphicaArtis/Getty

A large travelling circus aquarium filled with sharks, alligators, seals, octopus, narwhal whale and a spouting sperm whale; lithograph, 1873. Photo by GraphicaArtis/Getty

Science Gossip: Decoration, Ornamentation, Illustration or why we classify on Science Gossip

The Sloane Letters Blog: Grading Sir Hans Sloane’s Research Paper

The Linnean Society: 1st December 2015: Alfred Russel Wallace Bronze arrives at the Linnean Society

Avacta Life Sciences: A History of Affinity Molecules – Infographic Poster

The Guardian: Fossils: Extinct thinking: was the hapless dodo really destined to die out?

PRI: What we can learn from the ancient Egyptian practice of beekeeping

Vintage Everyday: The Discovery of Tutankhamun in the 1920s in Color

29th November 1923, Tutankhamun's Tomb | Howard Carter (on the left) working with his friend and colleague Arthur Callender on wrapping one of two sentinel statues of Tutankhamun (Carter no. 22) found in the Antechamber, before their removal to the 'laboratory' set up in the tomb of Sethos II (KV 15). These statues had been placed either side of the sealed entrance to the Burial Chamber.

29th November 1923, Tutankhamun’s Tomb | Howard Carter (on the left) working with his friend and colleague Arthur Callender on wrapping one of two sentinel statues of Tutankhamun (Carter no. 22) found in the Antechamber, before their removal to the ‘laboratory’ set up in the tomb of Sethos II (KV 15). These statues had been placed either side of the sealed entrance to the Burial Chamber.

Making Science Public: Climate science and climate fiction: Alarmist, really?

Independent: Historic hunting ponds uncovered in Kent marshes

CHEMISTRY:

Victorian Web: The Chemistry of the Candle Percival Leigh and Charles Dickens

Yovisto: Ellen Swallow Richards and Home Economics

Piedmont College home economics lab circa 1909

Piedmont College home economics lab circa 1909

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

American Science: HSS 2015: A Roundtable Review

Anne Krook: Writing our history is part of our jobs

The Guardian: Science: Not just for scientists

The Guardian: Why the history of maths is also the history of art

 Reza Sarhangi (Iranian-born American, b. 1952) and Robert Fathauer (American, b. 1960), Būzjānī’s Heptagon, 2007. Digital print, 13 × 13 in. (33 × 33 cm). Courtesy of the artists.

Reza Sarhangi (Iranian-born American, b. 1952) and Robert Fathauer (American, b. 1960), Būzjānī’s Heptagon, 2007. Digital print, 13 × 13 in. (33 × 33 cm). Courtesy of the artists.

Science League of America: Say What? The Theory of the Terrible MinutePhysics Video

The Royal Society: The Repository: Hooke’s books and ‘the man who got everything wrong’

CHoM News: In Memory of Kathryn Hammond Baker

Source: CHoM News

Source: CHoM News

Sandwalk: Facts and theories of evolution according to Dawkins and Coyne

The #EnvHist Weekly

Blink: The Platonic Verses

Zoomorphic calligraphy Here script transforms into an elephant Courtesy Bibliodyssey

Zoomorphic calligraphy Here script transforms into an elephant Courtesy Bibliodyssey

The Forgotten Sciences: First Issue of “History of Humanities” is in Production

Smithsonian Libraries: Smithson’s Library

Bible, Archaeology, Travel with Luke Chandler: Walk through the British Museum without going to London

ESOTERIC:

Conciatore: The Knights

History Extra: What would your face and body have said about you in the 19th century

phrenology_quiz

distillatio: When did Medieval Europeans think that Hermes was alive? And a new question.

BOOK REVIEWS:

Quill & Pad: The Mastery of Time by Dominique Fléchon

The Dispersal of Darwin: Alfred Wegener: Science, Exploration, and the Theory of Continental Drift

Washington Post: Long before Pluto, a false planet confused scientists

The New York Times: ‘Map: Exploring the World,’ ‘The Curious Map Book’ and More

Science Book a Day: Spaceshots and Snapshots of Projects Mercury and Gemini: A Rare Photographic History

Notches: Found in Translation: How Sexual Debates Developed Across the Modern World

Screen-Shot-2015-11-04-at-7.43.46-AM

Public Books: The Inventor of Nature

Five Books: Matthew Cobb on the History of Science

Landscape Notes: A Natural History of English Gardening

Brain Pickings: Hidden Treasures: 10 Centuries of Visualising the Body in Rare Archival Images

Physics World: Top physics books 2015

History News Network: Herodotus Lives!

Geographical: The London County Council Bomb Damage Maps 1939–1945

NEW BOOKS:

Springer: The Lost Constellations: A History of Obsolete, Extinct, or Forgotten Star Lore

The Voorhes: Malformed: The forgotten Brains of Texas State Mental Hospital

Amazon: Time and a Place: An Environmental History of Prince Edward Island

Springer: The History of Physics in Cuba

NHM: Rare Treasures

Anita Guerrini: The Courtier’s Anatomists

screen-shot-2015-03-10-at-1-56-05-pm-2

NYAM: A Coloring Book from our Collections

The History Press: Edward Jenner: pocket Giants

Historiens de la santé: Charles Bell and the Anatomy of Reform

University of Pennsylvania Press: Sociable Knowledge: Natural History and the Nation in Early Modern Britain

Amazon: The Greatest Show in the Arctic: The American Exploration of Franz Josef Land, 1898–1905 (American Exploration and Travel Series)

ART & EXHIBITIONS

The Scotsman: Killer of an exhibition about deadliest plagues

1260996789

Wellcome Collection: States of Mind: Tracing the edges of consciousness

ICE: ICE Christmas Exhibition Past, Present and Future 4–18 December 2015

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs until 21 February 2016

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age

Royal Society: Seeing closer: 350 years of microscope Runs till 17 December 2015

Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Runs until 31 January 2016

Henry Moseley Source: Wikimedia Commons

Henry Moseley
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Guiding Lights: 500 years of Trinity House and safety at sea Runs till 4 January 2016

Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Meet Baby Every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, & Saturday

Southbank Centre: Faraday’s synaptic gap Runs till 10 January 2016

Science Museum: Leonardo da Vinci: The Mechanics of Genius 10 February 2016–4 September 2016

The Mary Rose: ‘Ringing the Changes’: Mary Rose Museum to re-open in 2016 with unrestricted views of the ship

Royal Museums Greenwich: Samuel Pepys Season 20 November 2015–28 March 2016

Royal College of Surgeons: Designing Bodies 24 November 2015–20 February 2016

Natural History Museum, London: Bauer Brothers art exhibition Runs till 26 February 2017

Science Museum: Ada Lovelace Runs till 31 March 2016

British Library: 20th Century Maps 4 November 2016–1 March 2017

Royal Pavilion, Brighton: Exotic Creatures 14 November 2015–28 February 2016

THEATRE, OPERA AND FILMS:

Chemistry World: Weapons of mass discussion

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Booking to 18 June 2016

Upcoming: The Old Operating Theatre: Surgeon to the Dead 10-12 & 15-17 December 2015

SpArC Theatre: Opéra National De Paris: La Damnation De Faust 17 December 2015

The Guardian: Tom Stoppard’s Hapgood comes in from the cold

 

 Lisa Dillon as Hapgood at Hampstead theatre. Photograph: Manuel Harlan

Lisa Dillon as Hapgood at Hampstead theatre. Photograph: Manuel Harlan

EVENTS:

Royal Society: Lifting the lid – the Royal Society since 1960 10 December 2015

Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford: Ada Lovelace Symposium 8–10 December 2015

Science Museum: In Conversation with Alexei Leonov 15 December 2015

CVioacnU8AAt7NE

Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institution: The Legacy of the Enlightenment 11 December 2015

Glam Café, Philadelphia: Building a Digital Repository from Scratch 8 December 2015

British Library: Medieval manuscripts blog: Postgraduate Open Day on our Pre-1600 Collections 1 February 2016

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Leonardo da Vinci

Leonardo da Vinci

TELEVISION:

io9: In This Week’s Manhattan, the Most Crucial Bomb Is the One That Doesn’t Go Off

AHF: Manhattan Season 2, Episode 8: Let’s Make a Deal

BBC: James Clerk Maxwell

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Astronomy Central: Great Astronomers from the Medieval Islamic World – Islamic Astronomers Documentary

Youtube: Gresham College: 1295: The Year of the Galleys – Dr Ian Friel FSA

Youtube: AHF: Dimas Chavez supports AHF!

Youtube: Pathe: Excavation (1957)

Youtube: Steps to Mass Flourishing Session 3

Youtube: Kepler’s Third Law of Motion (Astronomy)

Sploid: Gorgeous video shows just how incredible the Apollo missions were

Youtube: Gresham College: Harnessing the Power of Chant – Professor Christopher Page

Youtube: Geological Society: Apollo and the Geology of the Moon

RADIO:

BBC Radio 4: The Beauty of Equations

BBC Radio 4: In Our Time: Voyages of Captain Cook

PODCASTS:

WUWM: Wisconsinite Henrietta Swan Leavitt’s Impact on Astronomy

Science & Religion Exploring the Spectrum: Science & Secularisation John Hedley-Brooke

 

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

Archives nationales Pierrefitte-sur-Seine: Colloque: Santé et environnement : Parcours et constructions historiques 9 et 10 décembre 2015

University of Galway: CfP: 6th International Conference on the Science of Computus in the Middle Ages

ESHS Prague: CfP: The Power of the Historiography of Science

SHOT: Dibner Award for Excellence in Museum Exhibits Deadline 15 December 2015

Boole/Shannon: Compute and Communicate Upcoming Evens 2016

St. Cross College, Oxford: One-Day Conference: Medieval Physics in Oxford 27 February 2016

merton-calculator

Birkbeck College: CfP: Sensing the Early Modern Birkbeck EMS’s 9th Annual Student conference 20 February 2015

Graz: 15th Annual STS Conference Graz 2016 Critical Issues in Science, Technology and Society Studies 9-10 May 2016

Royal Anthropological Institute: History of the RAI: 1871 to 1918 8–9 December 2015

University Portucalense, Portugal: CfP: History of Psychopathology and Psychotherapy: Iberoamerican Theories and Practices 4–6 May 2016

SHOT: CfP: Society for the History of Technology Annual Meeting – Singapore 22–26 June 2016

University of Birmingham: The EAHMH Bok award 201: Granted for best medical history monograph

CEU Summer University: Call for Applications: Cities and Science: Urban History and the History of Science in the Study of Early Modern and Modern Europe 1827 July 2016

H-Environment: CfP: Business and Environment in History Portland Oregon 28–30 2016

MPIWG: Art and Knowledge in Pre-Modern Europe Colloquia 2015/2016

Zooniverse: Help us expand our knowledge of historical star mapping by identifying constellations and marking stars in celestial maps from the Adler’s collection!

LOOKING FOR WORK:

London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine: Research Fellow on a project on sex, drugs and HIV/AIDS in prison since the 1980s

University of Edinburgh: Research Fellow position in Science, Technology and Innovation Studies

University of Edinburgh: Postdoctoral Research Fellow (Synthetic Yeast in Context)

Niels Bohr Archive, Copenhagen: Archivist

Cambridge: Lloyd-Dan David Research Fellowship at the Needham Research Institute and Darwin College Cambridge

University of Liverpool: 2 Stipendiary Graduate Teaching Fellowships

University of Pittsburgh: Center for Philosophy of Science: Visiting Fellows Program

University of Durham: PhD Position in Philosophy of Social Technology

LAHP: Apply for a Studentship

University of South Carolina: PhD positions in Philosophy

Birkbeck University of London: Senior Lecturer/Reader/Professor in the History and Theory of Photography/Digital Culture

 

 

 



Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #22

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #22

Monday 14 December 2015

EDITORIAL:

Running awfully late here is the latest edition of the weekly #histSTM links list Whewell’s Gazette bringing you all the fascinating posts, articles and other offerings in the histories of science, technology and medicine that our legions of Internet elves could find in the second week of advent.

In any given week the balance of the number of posts in the various rubrics in our humble Gazette varies, with sometimes Physics, Astronomy and Space Science dominating, as this week, or on other occasions the Earth Sciences or Technology having the most entries. However over time I have noticed that there are always relatively few posts on the history of chemistry. I don’t know whether this is due to a paucity of history of chemistry material on the web or whether I am just not catching enough of what is out there.

If you post on the history of chemistry or know somebody who does and the posts are failing to appear here on Whewell’s Gazette then please draw attention to this deficit in some way. Join Twitter and tip me off so that I follow you or send me an email with a list of your posts and links. I would like to see more history of chemistry here at the Gazette so make it your #histSTM charitable act for Christmas to draw my attention to all those post that I sure I’m missing.

MHS Oxford Advent Calendar

Day 7: Paper Astrolabe, by Johann Krabbe, German, 1583

Day 8: Diptych Dial, by Thomas Tucher, Nuremberg, c. 1620

Day 9: Mural Quadrant, by John Bird, London, 1773

Day 10: Parts of Difference Engine, by Charles Babbage, c. 1822-30

Day 11: Crescent Moon Amulet, Southern Italian

imu-media.php

Day 12: Astrolabe Quadrant, by Giovanni Antonio Magini, Italy, Late 16th Century

Day 13: Radio Valve R5V, by Marconi Osram Valve Co., London, c. 1923

Culham Research Group: Advent Calendar

Day 7: Saffron: A light in the darkness

Day 8: Wassailing

Day 9: Reindeer Moss

Looking festive and tasty! Cladonia rangiferina has been collected and vouchered in California only twice, in 1999 by Ronald and Judith Robertson, and in 1975 in Del Norte Co., in the Smith River canyon. The Robertsons collected Cladonia rangiferina once in Humboldt County in the remnant forest of Lanphere Dunes, a US Fish & Wildlife Refuge.

Looking festive and tasty! Cladonia rangiferina has been collected and vouchered in California only twice, in 1999 by Ronald and Judith Robertson, and in 1975 in Del Norte Co., in the Smith River canyon. The Robertsons collected Cladonia rangiferina once in Humboldt County in the remnant forest of Lanphere Dunes, a US Fish & Wildlife Refuge.

Day 10: Rice Pudding

Day 11: Sweet Chestnuts

Day 12: Anyone can grow paperwhites but their taxonomy is a different story

Day 13: Putting Christmas on the Map

Quotes of the week:

mathematician quote

“Digital information lasts forever or five years. Whichever comes first”. – RAND researcher Jeff Rothenberg h/t @johannaberg

“Anthropologists stand in the position of molecules of paint on a picture’s surface, striving to catch the artist’s design”—Pitt-Rivers h/t @ProfDanHicks

“For people writing about the topic—”interment” means burial. “Internment” means detaining a group of people”. – Laura (@ophiliacat)

Absent minded prof

“Parts of London are so radicalised that most of the atoms and molecules there have unpaired valency electrons”. – Peter Coles (@telescoper)

“The “Asian Values” trope as Orientalism appropriated by the Orientals”. – @struthious

“If I’m descended from my parents, why do I still have cousins?” Owain Griffiths (@OwainGriffiths)

Hoyle quote

“The essence of genius is to know what to overlook”. – William James

Study shows a result you like: “see, I base my views on science!”

 

Study shows a result you dislike: “I’ve got issues with their methodology” – Existential Comics (@existentialcomics)

Alice Quote

Birthdays of the Week:

 Grace Hopper born 10 December 1908

 Grace Murray Hopper at the UNIVAC keyboard, c. 1960. Credit: Unknown (Smithsonian Institution)


Grace Murray Hopper at the UNIVAC keyboard, c. 1960.
Credit: Unknown (Smithsonian Institution)

Yovisto: Grace Hopper and the Programming Languages

Annie Jump Cannon born 11 December 1863

tumblr_nz5gyjSngl1ry3nado1_500

Yovisto: Annie Jump Cannon and the Catalogue of Stars

sdsc.edu: Annie Jump Cannon Theorist of Star Spectra

Smithsonian Institute Archives: Annie Jump Cannon (1863–1941)

Linda Hall Library: Annie Jump Cannon

Gemma Frisius was born 9 December 1508

Gemma Frisius, Holzschnitt (17. Jh.) von Esme de Boulonois Source: Wikimedia Commons

Gemma Frisius, Holzschnitt (17. Jh.) von Esme de Boulonois
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Yovisto: The Most Accurate Instruments of Gemma Frisius

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Mapping the history of triangulation

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

 

Renowned quantum physicist Niels Bohr with acclaimed jazz trumpeter, composer and singer Louis Armstrong h/t Paul Halpern Source: Unknown

Renowned quantum physicist Niels Bohr with acclaimed jazz trumpeter, composer and singer Louis Armstrong h/t Paul Halpern
Source: Unknown

Yovisto: Arnold Sommerfeld and the Quantum Theory

Yovisto: Omar Khayyam – Mathematics and Poetry

Popular Science: A Brief History of Space Stations Before the ISS

arXiv.org: Early Telescopes and Ancient Scientific Instruments in the Paintings of Jan Brueghel the Elder (pdf)

Ptak Science Books: Found Poetry in the Sciences (1610 and 1698)

Sue Kientz: Spacecraft Galileo at Jupiter

Ipi.usra.edu: Probe Mission Successful

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Walter Goodman’s Interview

arXiv.org: A brief history of the multiverse (pdf)

BBC: Future: Eight objects that define the Soviet space race

Titov's movie camera

Titov’s movie camera

Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog: The story behind the IAEA’s atomic logo

March to the Moon: Gemini VII

Berliner Zeitung: Albert Einstein war in Berlin nur relative glücklich

World Socialist Web Site: 100 years of General Relativity – Part One

World Socialist Web Site: 100 years of General Relativity – Part Two

World Socialist Web Site: 100 years of General Relativity – Part Three

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Philip Abelson’s Interview (2002)

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Aristotle Killer of Science!

Atlas Obscura: Vintage Images of Canine Cosmonauts from the USSR

A matchbox label from 1959, showing a space dog flying to the Moon. (Photo: © FUEL Publishing/Marianne Van den Lemmer)

A matchbox label from 1959, showing a space dog flying to the Moon. (Photo: © FUEL Publishing/Marianne Van den Lemmer)

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Leona Marshall Libby’s Interview

AHF: Leo James Rainwater

The Conversation: The life-changing love of one of the 20th century’s greatest physicists

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Theodore Rockwell’s Interview

Yovisto: The Last Men on the Moon…so far

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Gabriel Bohnee’s Interview

Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog: The curious death of Oppenheimer’s mistress

Astronomy Now: Astronomers recall discovery of Phaethon – source of the Geminid meteors

AHF: Rotblat Account

CHF: Laws of Attraction

Open Mind: Kepler, the Father of Science Fiction

Tech Times: Black History Month: & Ways Albert Einstein Supported the Civil Rights Movement

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

British Library: Maps and views blog: Digitisation of the Klencke Atlas

Swann Auction Galleries: Maps & Atlases, Natural History & Color Plate Books, Featuring the Mapping of America

The American Military Pocket Atlas

The American Military Pocket Atlas

Peter S. Clarke: A Christmas Santa Map

Slate Vault: An Early-20th-Century British Map of the Global Drug Trade

Ptak Science Books: Bombing Britain, 1940 – a View of the Battle of Britain from Germany

The Bodleian’s Map Room Blog: Ships

IMG_0214-300x225

Giornalè Nuovo: A Map of Schlaraffenland

Stanford University Library: Adventures in oversized imaging: digitizing the Ōmi Kuni-ezu 近江國絵圖 Japanese Tax Map from 1837

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Thomas Morris: The man with the rubber jaw

The Conversation: Remind me again, what is thalidomide and how did it cause so much harm?

O Can You See?: Combating infectious disease and slaying the rubella dragon, 1969–1972

Atlas Obscura: Maps of 19th-Century New York’s Worst Nuisances

A "Sanitary and Social Chart" of New York's 4th Ward. (Photo: Courtesy the New York Academy of Medicine)

A “Sanitary and Social Chart” of New York’s 4th Ward. (Photo: Courtesy the New York Academy of Medicine)

BBC News: Cookbook features recipes to cure the plague

Royal Museums Greenwich: ‘In a most handsome and thriving condition’: Samuel Pepys’s Health

Thomas Morris: A bad use for good wine

John Rylands Library Special Collections Blog: A Doctor’s View of Industrial Manchester

Nursing Clio: Baby Parts for Sale – Old Tropes Revisited

Circulating Now: A Portrait of the Medical World of 1911

Silas Weir Mitchell

Silas Weir Mitchell

Thomas Morris: All hail the strawberry

Yovisto: Robert Koch and Tuberculosis

Thomas Morris: Somewhat silly in his manner

TECHNOLOGY:

Brown: Steward Delaney’s New Clock

Verso: Look>>A Historiscope

Forbes: This Week in Tech History: The Mother of All Demos

BBC News: Volunteers aid pioneering Edsac computer rebuild

Each of the 140 chassis that form Edsac takes upwards of 20 hours to build and test

Each of the 140 chassis that form Edsac takes upwards of 20 hours to build and test

The National Museum of Computing: Edshack: a workshop time capsule

Atlas Obscura: Soviet Scenesters Used X-Rays to Record Their Rock and Roll

Yovisto: Maria Telkes and the Power of the Sun

Yovisto: Guglielmo Marconi and his Magic Machine

Yovisto: My Hovercraft is full of Eels

MAA100: Mathematical Treasures: Early Calculating Machines

Leibnitzrechenmaschine

Leibnitzrechenmaschine

Ptak Science Books: A World Map of Heavy (1922)

A Wireless World: The origins of radio

Ptak Science Books: Balloons I Know But Do Not Love – Death From Above, Ads and Bombs

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Sometimes I'm asked what is the difference between a raven and a crow, well here it is. h/t @ravenstonetales

Sometimes I’m asked what is the difference between a raven and a crow, well here it is. h/t @ravenstonetales

Letters from Gondwana: The Bernissart Dinosaurs

Notches: Coming Oot! A Fabulous Gay History of Scotland

Hyperallergic: How Audubon Pranked a Fellow Naturalist with a Bulletproof Fish

The Dispersal of Darwin: Article: The London Baedeker for the Darwin enthusiast

The Dispersal of Darwin: Article: An Ottoman response to Darwinism: Ísmail Fennî on Islam and evolution

Atlas Obscura: The Ghost Forest of Christmas Past: How a Fungus Stole Roasted Chestnuts

Naturalis Historia: The Earth on Show: Encountering Lost Worlds Through Fossil Displays

A “Young Mammouth” unearthed by Charles Willson Peale on display at the Philadelphia museum in 1821.

A “Young Mammouth” unearthed by Charles Willson Peale on display at the Philadelphia museum in 1821.

National Geographic: Meet Grandfather Flash, the Pioneer of Wildlife Photography

Gizmodo: These Dogs are Honorary Geologists for their Early Exploration of Alaska

CHEMISTRY:

Yovisto: Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac and his Work on Gases

Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac

Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac

CHF: True Blue: DuPont and the Color Revolution

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Birkbeck: Early Modern History Website

Public Disability History: New blog

NYAM Library: Discover the Past Inform the Future

PISO_005

Early Modern Experimental Philosophy: The ESD in early modern Spain: taking stock

CIA: The Directorate of Science and Technology Historical Series: The Office of Scientific Intelligence, 1949–68

Conciatore: Francesco’s Studiolo

Conciatore: Neri’s Travels

Conciatore: Fall from Grace

The Recipes Project: First Monday Library Chat: The Library of the Royal College of Surgeons

PSA Women: Female-Authors-Only Philosophy of Science

OUP: The Monist: The History of Women’s Ideas Contents

University of Oxford: Research: Ursula Martin

Irish Philosophy: Frozen in Time: the Edward Worth Library

The Edward Worth Library (c) Irish Philosophy (CC BY)

The Edward Worth Library
(c) Irish Philosophy (CC BY)

AEON: What if?

PhilSci Archive: An Archive for Preprints in Philosophy of Science

The New York Times: Amir Aczel, Author of Scientific Cliffhanger, Dies at 65

The Economist: In search of serendipity

Yovisto: Melvil Dewey and the Dewey Decimal System

Scistarter: Purposeful Gaming: Help improve access to historic biodiversity texts!

Age of Revolutions: A HistorioBLOG

Lisa Tenzin-Dolma: Interview with Paul Halpern

Corpus Newtonicum: Isaac Newton moves to Oxford

#EnvHist Weekly

AEON: Why physics needs art to help picture the universe

header_0328p_duomo6_b

CUP: Medical History Vol. 60 Issue 01: Contents

Motherboard: Ada Lovelace and the Impossible Expectations We Have of Women in STEM

Chicago Journals: Osiris Vol. 30, No. 1 Scientific Masculinities Contents

ESOTERIC:

distillatio: How widespread were alchemical books in Britain in Medieval times and who owned them?

The Recipes Project: Temporality in John Dauntesey’s Recipe Book (1652–1683)

The Historical Medical Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, Manuscript MSS 2/0070-01 (Signature Page), Photo included with permission.

The Historical Medical Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, Manuscript MSS 2/0070-01 (Signature Page), Photo included with permission.

Spacewatchtower: 50th Anniversary: Kecksburg, Pa. “UFO” Incident

The Public Domain Review: Worlds Without End

Detail from a depiction of thought-transference, the man behind dictating the movement of the other, from Magnetismus und Hypnotismus (1895) by Gustav Wilhelm Gessmann

Detail from a depiction of thought-transference, the man behind dictating the movement of the other, from Magnetismus und Hypnotismus (1895) by Gustav Wilhelm Gessmann

BOOK REVIEWS:

Brain Pickings: Alexander von Humboldt and the Invention of Nature: How One of the Last True Polymaths Pioneered the Cosmos of Connections

MedHum Monday Book Review: Riotous Flesh

Popular Science: Kepler and the Universe

41aq068xqbl._sx322_bo1204203200__0

Brain Pickings: The Physicist and the Philosopher: Einstein, Bergson, and the Debate That Changed Our Understanding of Time

Sun News Miami: Celestial Cartography

New Statesman: A true scientific revolution: the triumph of mathematicians over philosophers

Reviews in History: To Explain the World: the discovery of Modern Science

Nature: Books in Brief: Tunnel Vision: The Rise and Fall of the Superconducting Super Collider, The Hunt for Vulcan…

NEW BOOKS:

Plagrave: Technology, Self-Fashioning and Politeness in Eighteenth-Century Britain

The Dispersal of Darwin: The Paradox of Evolution: The Strange Relationship Between Natural Selection and Reproduction

Amazon: More Passion for Science: Journeys into the Unknown

Wiley: A Companion to Intellectual History

The Dispersal of Darwin: Darwin’s Sciences

1444330357

The University of Chicago Press: Foucault and Beyond

The Dispersal of Darwin: The Story of Life in 25 Fossils

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Royal Geographical Society: Enduring Eye: The Antarctic Legacy of Sir Ernest Shackleton and Frank Hurley 21 November 2015–28 February 2016

ICE: ICE Christmas Exhibition Past, Present and Future 4–18 December 2015

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs until 21 February 2016

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age

Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Runs until 31 January 2016

Guiding Lights: 500 years of Trinity House and safety at sea Runs till 4 January 2016

Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Meet Baby Every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, & Saturday

Southbank Centre: Faraday’s synaptic gap Runs till 10 January 2016

Science Museum: Leonardo da Vinci: The Mechanics of Genius 10 February 2016–4 September 2016

The Mary Rose: ‘Ringing the Changes’: Mary Rose Museum to re-open in 2016 with unrestricted views of the ship

Royal Museums Greenwich: Samuel Pepys Season 20 November 2015–28 March 2016

Royal College of Surgeons: Designing Bodies 24 November 2015–20 February 2016

Muslim Heritage: Allah’s Automata – A Review of the Exhibition

automata02

Natural History Museum, London: Bauer Brothers art exhibition Runs till 26 February 2017

Science Museum: Ada Lovelace Runs till 31 March 2016

British Library: 20th Century Maps 4 November 2016–1 March 2017

Royal Pavilion, Brighton: Exotic Creatures 14 November 2015–28 February 2016

National Maritime Museum: Samuel Pepys: Plague, Fire, Revolution

Bethlem Museum of the Mind: The art of Bedlam: Richard Dadd

Oxford University Museum of Natural History: Handwritten in Stone: How William Smith and his maps changed geology

THEATRE, OPERA AND FILMS:

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Booking to 18 June 2016

Upcoming: The Old Operating Theatre: Surgeon to the Dead 10-12 & 15-17 December 2015

SpArC Theatre: Opéra National De Paris: La Damnation De Faust 17 December 2015

EVENTS:

Chelsea Physic Garden: Round Table Discussion: Dark brilliance: Agatha Christie, poisonous plants and murder mysteries 2 February 2016

Royal Astronomical Society: RAS Public Lecture: 100th Anniversary of the election of Women to the RAS Fellowship 12 January 2016

Science Museum: Symposium: Revealing the Cosmonaut 5 February 2016

Event ad

British Library: Medieval manuscripts blog: Postgraduate Open Day on our Pre-1600 Collections 1 February 2016

Royal Institution: Christmas Lecture 2015

A Forgotten Hero – Now Remembered: Dr John Rae (LRCSEd): Arctic Explorer 

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Dr William Gilberd 1540-1603 showing his Experiment on Electricity to Queen Elizabeth I and her Court by Arthur Ackland Hunt

Dr William Gilberd 1540-1603 showing his Experiment on Electricity to Queen Elizabeth I and her Court by Arthur Ackland Hunt

 

TELEVISION:

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Atlas Obscura: 100 Wonders: The Desertron

Centre for Global Health Histories: Youtube Channel

The New York Times: Animated Life: Mary Leakey

RADIO:

BBC World Service: Discovery: Humboldt – the Inventor of Nature

The Guardian: Occam’s Corner: Will Self’s forceful search for the genius behind a scientific giant

BBC Radio 4: Self Drives: Maxwell’s Equations

PODCASTS:

Mosaic: The ingenuity of Gordon Vaughan

Soundcloud: John Aubrey, My Own Life by Ruth Scurr – audio extracts

John Aubrey. Source: Wikimedia Commons

John Aubrey.
Source: Wikimedia Commons

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

British Museum: CfP: Objectively Speaking 4 April 2016

Graz, Austria; CfP: STS Conference: The Role of Webvideos in Science and Research Communication 9–19 May 2016

UCL: CfP: Science/Technology/Security: Challenges to global governance? 20–21 June 2016

University of Edinburgh: Science, Technology and Innovation Studies Seminar Series, Semester Two 2015-16

Sam Houston State University: CfP: The 8th Annual Medicine and the Humanities and Social Sciences Conference 17–18 March 2016

H/SOZ/KULT: Playing with Materials and Technology. 7th Symposium on Playing with Technology – Part of the 43rd Symposium of the Internationl Committeee for the History of Technology 2016 Porto 26 July–30 July 2016

Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin: Workshop: From Knowledge to Profit? Scientific Institutions and the Commercialization of Science 10–12 October 2016

Dresden Summer – International Academy for the Arts: Collecting: 27 August – 03rd September 2016

University of Durham: Workshop: The Graphic Evidence of Childhood, 1760–1914 15 April 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

British Library: Curator of Medieval Historical Manuscripts 1100–1500

University of Freiburg: Chair for Science and Technology Studies: Wissenschaftliche(r) Mitarbeiterin/Mitarbeiter (Assistant Professor Equivalent)

University of Kent: Centre for the History of Science: Postgrad funding

University of Swansea: Fees Only PhD Studentship: Mapping the Historic Landscape Character of the South Wales Region

Mississippi State University: History of Modern Europe and Science/Technology/and/or Medicine

University of Oxford: Faculty of Theology and Religion: Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship 2016

University of Notre Dame: History and Philosophy of Science Program Two Postdoctoral Positions

MIT: Calling all Science Journalists: Applications for 1016-17 KSJ Fellowships Open January 11

Durham University: Centre for Nineteenth-Century Studies: Leverhulme Early Career Fellowships

Trinity College Dublin: Ussher Assistant Professor in Environmental History

Drexel University College of Medicine: Summer Research Fellowship: History of Women in Medicine

 

 

 


Whewell’s Gazette: year 2, Vol. #23

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #23

Monday 21 December 2015

EDITORIAL:

Christmas is coming and the goose is getting fat and here is a fat edition of Whewell’s Gazette your weekly #histSTM links list bringing you all the best of the histories of science, technology and medicine from the Internet over the last seven days, to give you something to read whilst you’re trying to digest all of that food you’ve stuffed in over Christmas.

Most of the celebrations at this time of year are actually not connected with the birth of Christ but with the Winter Solstice, which this year is on the 22 December. On this day the sun reaches the southern most point on its yearly journey over the Tropic of Capricorn, turns (the word tropic derives from the Greek topikos meaning ‘of or pertaining to a turn’) and starts its long trek back up to the north bringing first spring and then summer to the northern climes and leaving those in the south their winter.

wintersolstice

Solstice is a more better day to celebrate than 25 December or 1 January being a natural end and beginning to the annual solar cycle, so all of the owls here at Whewell’s Gazette wish all of our readers all the best for the holiday season and look forward to greeting you again after this years Christmas weekend.

Owl

MHS Oxford Advent Calendar

Day 14: Marble Copy of John Dee’s 1582 Holy Table, English, Mid C.17th

Day 15: Gelatine Print of Henry Moseley, Balliol-Trinity Labs, Oxford,1910

Day 16: Exploding Horizontal Cannon Dial, English?, c.1900

Day 17: Astrolabe, by Muhammad Muqim, Lahore, 1641/2

imu-media.php

Day 18: Instruction Booklet For Aircraft Wireless Telephone Transmitter

Day 19: Armillary Orrery, by Richard Glynne, London, c. 1710-30

Day 20: “Chemical Magic” Chemistry Set, by F. Kingsley, London, c. 1920

Culham Research Group: Advent Calendar

Day 14: the Olive

Day 15: Mahleb

Day 16: Straw or Hay, which will make Dr M’s day?

Loose stacked hay built around a central pole, Romania

Loose stacked hay built around a central pole, Romania

Day 17: Sgan t’sek

Day 18: The Tangerine – Just Like a Virgin

Day 19: Popcorn tree decorations

Day 20: Sugar

Quotes of the week:

Merry X-mas

“We all dance to a mysterious tune, intoned in the distance by an invisible player”. – Albert Einstein h/t @phalpern

“To fathom hell or soar angelic

Just take a pinch of psychedelic.” – Adam Lagerqvist (@adamlagerqvist)

Banker

This is my favorite Hindi curse: “Why are boring me with all this useless narrative?” – Gabriel Finkelstein (@gabridli)

“We become what we pay attention to, so we must be careful what we pay attention to.” – Kurt Vonngut

Kim Robinson

Joseph Stalin and Keith Richards

were born on Dec. 18th.

Can you guess which one

was born 137yrs ago? – @Marcywords2

Planck quote

Men: Not ALL men.

Men to their daughters: Yes, all men. Every single one of them. – @ChiefElk

Birthday of the Week:

 Gabrielle Émilie Le Tonnelier de Breteuil, Marquise du Châtelet born 17 December 1706

Gabrielle Émilie Le Tonnelier de Breteuil, marquise du Châtelet  Portrait by Maurice Quentin de La Tour Source: Wikimedia Commons

Gabrielle Émilie Le Tonnelier de Breteuil, marquise du Châtelet
Portrait by Maurice Quentin de La Tour
Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Renaissance Mathematicus: A feminist Newtonian

Yovisto: A great man whose only fault was being a woman – Émilie du Châtelet

Tycho Brahe Born 14 December 1546

Tycho Brahe (1596) Artist unknown Source: Wikimedia Commons

Tycho Brahe (1596) Artist unknown
Source: Wikimedia Commons

 The Renaissance Mathematicus: Financing Tycho’s little piece of heaven

Yovisto: Tycho Brahe – The Man with the Golden Nose

Bildgeist: Tycho Brahe, Astronomical Instruments (1598)

The Royal Library: Astronomiæ instauratæ mechanica

esa: space for europe: 14 December

British Museum: Effigies Tychonis Brahe

Star Child: Tycho Brahe

BibliOdyssey: Tycho Mechanica

Humphy Davy born 17 December 1778

Sir Humphry Davy, Bt by Thomas Phillips Source: Wikimedia Commons

Sir Humphry Davy, Bt
by Thomas Phillips
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Chemical Heritage Magazine: Science and Celebrity: Humphry Davy’s Rising

A Covent Garden Gilflurt’s Guide to Life: The Invention of the Davy Lamp

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

JJ Tho

Yovisto: Max Planck and the Quantum Theory

History Extra: Life of the Week: Albert Einstein

Muslim Heritage: The Armillary Sphere: A Concentration of Knowledge in Islamic Astronomy

AIP: N. G. Basov

Yovisto: Nikolay Basov and the Development of the Maser and Laser

Museum Victoria Collections: Great Melbourne Telescope

Erection of Great Melbourne Telescope, 1869 Source: Museum Victoria This image is: Public Domain

Erection of Great Melbourne Telescope, 1869
Source: Museum Victoria
This image is: Public Domain

3 Quarks Daily: Maxwell and the Mathematics of Metaphor

Atlas Obscura: Leiden Observatory

Leaping Robot: Astronomers and the Art of Reconciliation

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Carl Higby’s Interview

Somnuium Project: Project the First Interactive Rudolphine (Under Construction)

The Saturday Evening Post: “Imagination Is More Important than Knowledge”

AHF: Nuclear Reactors

Living in the Chinese Cosmos: The Chinese Cosmos: Basic Concepts

The Yinyang Symbol Diagram of the Supreme Ultimate, from the Compendium of Diagrams (detail), 1623 Zhang Huang (1527-1608)

The Yinyang Symbol
Diagram of the Supreme Ultimate, from the Compendium of Diagrams (detail), 1623
Zhang Huang (1527-1608)

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Franklin Mattias’s Interview

collections.ucolick.org: The Lick Observatory: Historical Collections

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Mensis or menstruation?

Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum: Communications Satellite, SCORE

The Renaissance Mathematicus: The greatest villain in the history of science?

Andreas Ostinater by Georg Pencz Source: Wikimedia Commons

Andreas Ostinater by Georg Pencz
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Alex Wellerstein: The Secrets Patents for the Atomic Bomb

AIP: David Bohm

AHF: Espionage

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

Yovisto: Amundsen’s South Pole Expedition

Library of Congress: Putting Boston on the Map: Land Reclamation and the Growth of a City

Atlas Obscura: Maps of the World’s Most Cursed Destinations

Nuuk Marluk: Inuit Cartography

In English, the caption reads: "Kuniit's three wooden (tree) maps show the journey from Sermiligaaq to Kangertittivatsiaq. Map to the right shows the islands along the coast, while the map in the middle shows the mainland and is read from one side of the block around to the other. Map to the left shows the peninsula between the fjords Sermiligaaq and Kangertivartikajik." From "Topografisk Atlas Grønland", published by Det Kongeglige Danske Geografiske Selskab, 2000 (pg 171).

In English, the caption reads: “Kuniit’s three wooden (tree) maps show the journey from Sermiligaaq to Kangertittivatsiaq. Map to the right shows the islands along the coast, while the map in the middle shows the mainland and is read from one side of the block around to the other. Map to the left shows the peninsula between the fjords Sermiligaaq and Kangertivartikajik.” From “Topografisk Atlas Grønland”, published by Det Kongeglige Danske Geografiske Selskab, 2000 (pg 171).

Atlas Obscura: The Hidden Bolts That Drive Manhattan’s Infrastructure Nerds Nuts

Atlas Obscura: How the World Looked When Jesus was Born According to Roman Geographers

The Tablet: The Priest who Mapped the World

Haaretz: Old Maps of Jerusalem Combine the Sacred With the Realistic

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Thomas Morris: There was an old woman who swallowed a fork…

The Kansas City Star: Kansas City’s nuclear legacy trails weapon makers and their families

Fugitive Leaves: Letting Fall Grains of Sand or Pins into a Glass: Finding the Poetry of René Laennec at the Historical Medical Library

The Champlain Society: Performing Blindness: A Postcard of the Taylor Concert Company, c1910, and the Canadian History of Disability

Taylor-Concert-Co-postcard-scan

Med. Hist: Digitisation, Big Data, and the Future of the Medical Humanities

Yovisto: Niels Ryberg Finsen and the Phototherapy

The Recipes Project: Van Helmont on the Plague Again!

Thomas Morris: A beetle in the bladder

Wellcome Library Blog: A gift for Disability History Month

Thomas Morris: Death by Christmas dinner

History of Medicine in Ireland: Medical Practitioners in Early Modern Irish Wills

Res Obscura: The Alchemy of Madness: Understanding a Seventeenth-Century “Brain Scan”

"Le Médecin guérissant Phantasie," Mattheus Greuter, 1620 (Bibliothèque nationale de France).

“Le Médecin guérissant Phantasie,” Mattheus Greuter, 1620 (Bibliothèque nationale de France).

Irish Philosophy: Frozen in Time the Edward Worth Library

The Guardian: Britain’s teeth aren’t that bad – but what do you know of their rotten history?

Atlas Obscura: Peek Inside the Grisly, Salacious Case Files of NYC’S Head Coroner in the Early 1900s

Emory News Center: Vaccines in U.S. have complex history, says Emory expert

TECHNOLOGY:

Yovisto: Hans von Ohain and the Jet Engine

Los Angeles Times: Weekend: Looking at aerospace’s place in history

Conciatore: Glass Beads

Six-layer glass chevron trade beads (photo attr. unknown)

Six-layer glass chevron trade beads
(photo attr. unknown)

Conciatore: Roasting the Frit

Conciatore: Neri the Scholar

Historic England: Navel and Maritime Military Heritage

Medievalists.net: Food and technology – Cooking utensils and food processing in medieval Norway

Wired: The Secret History of World War II-Era Drones

Yovisto: The Wright Brothers Invented the Aviation Age

Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum: 1903 Wright Flyer

http___airandspace.si.edu_webimages_collections_full_A19610048000CP15.jpg

Ptak Science Books: The Horizontal Section of the Deep Dark (1887)

Smithsonian.com: Did John Deere’s Best Invention Spark a Revolution or an Environmental Disaster?

Engineering and Technology History Wiki: Edwin H. Armstrong

columbia.edu: History of Science, Mathematics, Technology, #171

264

Attack: The World’s Most Desirable (and Valuable) Electronic Music Gear

Ptak Science Books: Blowing Up Hell(gate), 1876

distillatio: Using Oak Galls to dye wool

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Geologists

Yovisto: Sir William Hamilton and the Volcanoes

rs21: A homosexual Christmas in 1905 Berlin

Slate Vault: Poe’s Only Bestseller as a Living Author Was This Schoolbook About Seashells

conchologistsfir00poeed_0007

A Lance Eye View: Alfred Russel Wallace

Yovisto: Margaret Mead and Modern Anthropology

Yovisto: Alexander Ross Clarke and the true Shape of the Earth

The New York Times: Evelyn Witkin and the Road to DNA Enlightenment

Imperial Weather: New Paper: meteorology as an imperial science

Forbes: How Creationism Has Evolved Since The Dover Trial

Public Domain Review: The Snowflake Man of Vermont

Bentley Snowflake

Bentley Snowflake

The New Yorker: Humboldt’s Gift

Heavenfield: The Bavarians from the Ground Up

umich.edu: Obituary: Jack McIntosh

Biodiversity Library: BHL Isn’t Just for Biologists

ars technica: Scientific Method/Science & Exploration: An evolutionary analysis of anti-evolution legislation

BioLogos: The First Major Evolution Controversy in America

CHEMISTRY:

Yorkshire Evening Post: Leeds scientists who discovered the atomic world to be honoured 100years after 1915 discovery

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Harold Urey’s Interview

CHF: Harold C. Urey: Science, Religion, and Cold War Chemistry

After helping create the atom bomb as part of the Manhattan Project, Harold Urey focused on uncovering the age and origins of Earth and the solar system. In this 1951 photo Urey inspects a 'fossilized thermometer' of belemnite (a prehistoric squid-shaped creature). Urey used information from these fossils to estimate the temperature of oceans from as far back as 100 million years. (USC Digital Library)

After helping create the atom bomb as part of the Manhattan Project, Harold Urey focused on uncovering the age and origins of Earth and the solar system. In this 1951 photo Urey inspects a ‘fossilized thermometer’ of belemnite (a prehistoric squid-shaped creature). Urey used information from these fossils to estimate the temperature of oceans from as far back as 100 million years. (USC Digital Library)

Research Gate: The discovery of the periodic table as a case of simultaneous discovery

newser: A Sophomoric Prank Lurks on the Periodic Table

Chemical Heritage Magazine: Not-So-Great Moments in Chemical Safety

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Ether Wave Propaganda: Against Methodology by Cryptic Aphorism

Nautilus: Living in the Long: Art & Engineering Peers Into Our Future

University of Zurich: Corpus Corporum

Royal Museums Greenwich: Samuel Pepys and the Royal Society

Lady Science: Issue 15: Gender in the Mid-Century Kitchen

JHI Blog: Thinking About Knowledge in Motion and Social Engagement at HSS

Sandwalk: Did Michael Behe say that astrology was scientific in Kitzmiller v. Dover?

Ptak Science Books: Table of the Compass of Voices and Instruments (1814)

HuffPost Science: Blog: What Science Is – and How and Why It Works

Histoire, médicine et santé n° 7: New Issue

Commission for the History and Philosophy of Computing: Special Issue HPL on History and Philosophy of Computing Contents

Museums Association: Report finds lack of diversity in curators at Major Partner Museums

h-madness: Obituary: Gerald N. Grob (1931–2015)

635858802429544084-grobcr

Recipes Project: Searching for Recipes: A Glimpse of Early Modern Upper Class Life

Warburg Institute News: Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize 2016 awarded to Professor Dr Dag Nikolaus Hasse, an Alumnus of the Warburg Institute

The Ordered Universe Project: Generating sounds: help us write our next paper!

OUP Blog: Eric Scerri: A new philosophy of science

The #EnvHist Weekly

Inside MHS Oxford: Christmas has come early for MHS!

homunculus: Talking about talking about history

December HPS&ST Note: is on the web

Capitalism’s Cradle: AI and the Problem of Ideology

The Ordered Universe Project: Unity in Diversity

Medievalists.net: The Medieval Magazine: The Top 50 Medieval Books of 2015 (Issue 46)

The Public Domain Review: Japanese Prints of Western Inventors, Artists and Scholars

The Englishman Watt wanted to make a steam engine. He spent so much time on it that he upset his aunt. Finally, however, he was successful.

The Englishman Watt wanted to make a steam engine. He spent so much time on it that he upset his aunt. Finally, however, he was successful.

ESOTERIC:

Correspondence: Volume 3 (2015) Contents

Chemical Heritage Magazine: The Secrets of Alchemy

Detail from The Alchemist. Francois-Marius Granet, 19th century. (Gift of Roy Eddleman, CHF Collections/Will Brown)

Detail from The Alchemist. Francois-Marius Granet, 19th century. (Gift of Roy Eddleman, CHF Collections/Will Brown)

BOOK REVIEWS:

Science Book a Day: Remaking the John: The Invention and Reinvention of the Toilet

idées.fr: Cette médicine qu’on dit « parallèle »

Nature: the view from the bridge: The top 20: a year of reading immersively

Science Book a Day: Life on a Young Planet: The First Three Billion Years of Evolution on Earth

Some Beans: The Invention of Nature by Andrea Wolf

Symmetry: Physics books of 2015

Science Book a Day: The Triumph of Seeds: How Grains, Nuts, Kernels, Pulses, and Pips Conquered the Plant Kingdom and Shaped Human History

triumph-of-seeds

Cambridge News: Cambridge historian Ruth Scurr on her Costa Awards-shortlisted book, John Aubrey: My Own Life

Brain Pickings: Buckminster Fuller’s Manifesto for the Genius of Generalities

idées.fr: Le corps de la science

Diebedra.de Prof Alan Turing decoded

Science Book a Day: Inventions That Could Have Changed the World… But Didn’t!

NEW BOOKS:

Historiens de la santé: Contagious Communities: Medicine, Migration, and the NHS in Post War Britain

OUP: The History of Chemistry: A Very Short Introduction

OUP: Essays in the Philosophy of Chemistry

Amazon: Science and Empire: Knowledge and Networks of Science across the British Empire, 1800–1970

MIT Press: Anachronic Renaissance

Historiens de la santé: Révélations: Iconographie de la Salpêtrière. Paris, 1875–1918

Amberley Publishing: Historical Falconry

516RvKSmyRL._SX346_BO1,204,203,200_

Palgrave: Why We Need the Humanities

University of Chicago Press: Life Atomic: A History of Radioisotopes in Science and Medicine

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Oxford Thinking: ‘Dear Harry…’ An exhibition of a scientist lost to war

Royal College of Physicians: Scholar, courtier, magician: the lost library of John Dee 18 January–29 July 2016

Royal Geographical Society: Enduring Eye: The Antarctic Legacy of Sir Ernest Shackleton and Frank Hurley 21 November 2015–28 February 2016

ICE: ICE Christmas Exhibition Past, Present and Future 4–18 December 2015

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs until 21 February 2016

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age

ImageHandler.ashx

Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Runs until 31 January 2016

Guiding Lights: 500 years of Trinity House and safety at sea Runs till 4 January 2016

Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Meet Baby Every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, & Saturday

Southbank Centre: Faraday’s synaptic gap Runs till 10 January 2016

Science Museum: Leonardo da Vinci: The Mechanics of Genius 10 February 2016–4 September 2016

The Mary Rose: ‘Ringing the Changes’: Mary Rose Museum to re-open in 2016 with unrestricted views of the ship

Royal Museums Greenwich: Samuel Pepys Season 20 November 2015–28 March 2016

Royal College of Surgeons: Designing Bodies 24 November 2015–20 February 2016

Natural History Museum, London: Bauer Brothers art exhibition Runs till 26 February 2017

bauer-exhibition-birds

Science Museum: Ada Lovelace Runs till 31 March 2016

British Library: 20th Century Maps 4 November 2016–1 March 2017

Royal Pavilion, Brighton: Exotic Creatures 14 November 2015–28 February 2016

National Maritime Museum: Samuel Pepys: Plague, Fire, Revolution Runs till 28 March 2016

Bethlem Museum of the Mind: The art of Bedlam: Richard Dadd Runs till 6 February 2016

Oxford University Museum of Natural History: Handwritten in Stone: How William Smith and his maps changed geology Runs to 31 January 2016

National Library of Scotland: Plague! A cultural history of contagious diseases in Scotland Runs till 29 May 2016

THEATRE, OPERA AND FILMS:

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Booking to 18 June 2016

EVENTS:

EconoTimes: Historymiami Museum to Host Largest Map Fair in the Western Hemisphere for 23rd Year 5–7 February 2016

Dittrick Museum: Book Signing, Death’s Summer Coat 20 January 2016

11th Cambridge Wellcome Lecture in the History of Medicine: Michael Stolberg: Curing Diseases and Exchanging Knowledge: Sixteenth-Century Physicians and Their Female Patients 14 January 2016

Schwetzingen: Astronomie-Tagung: Von Venus-Transit zum Schwarzen Loch 19 März 2016

Chelsea Physic Garden: Round Table Discussion: Dark brilliance: Agatha Christie, poisonous plants and murder mysteries 2 February 2016

Event ad

Royal Astronomical Society: RAS Public Lecture: 100th Anniversary of the election of Women to the RAS Fellowship 12 January 2016

Science Museum: Symposium: Revealing the Cosmonaut 5 February 2016

British Library: Medieval manuscripts blog: Postgraduate Open Day on our Pre-1600 Collections 1 February 2016

Royal Institution: Christmas Lecture 2015

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Louis Pasteur (1885), by A. Edelfeldt

Louis Pasteur (1885), by A. Edelfeldt

TELEVISION:

io9: The Inside Story of Manhattan, the Best TY Show You Haven’t Been Watching

inpiwlyvtcjaq2yolvf2

National Trust for Historical Preservation: Trinity Test, Gadget, Spies: What’s True in Season 2 of Manhattan?

Je Suis, Ergo Sum: Gone fission: WGN’s Manhattan brings something new into the world

SLIDE SHOW:

Scientific American: Aviation in 1913: Images from Scientific American’s Archives [Slide Show]

VIDEOS:

Youtube: God, Science and Atheism

Youtube: Globus Weigla

Youtube: Steps to Flourishing Sessions 3: Anton Howes present his thesis

Youtube: Fighting Firedamp – The Lamp that Saved 1,000 Lives

 

RADIO:

PODCASTS:

npr: ‘Map’ Is An Exquisite Record of the Miles – And The Millennia

9780714869445_custom-31db5d6691d3420fa55b89a2bc27bf63b4f0de8d-s400-c85

Virginia Campbell MD: Matthew Cobb on “Life’s Great Secret”

Science Friday: Do Scientists Have the Duty to Speak Out?

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

University of Durham: Workshop: The Graphic Evidence of Childhood, 1760–1914 15 April 2016 (N.B several #histsci papers)

German Historical Institute Paris: CfP: Masculinity(/ies) – Femininity(/ies) in the Middle Ages 2–3 March 2016

Notches Blog: Call for Submissions: The History of Venereal Disease Deadline 15 January 2016

University of Vienna: CfP: Claiming authority, producing standards: The IAEA and the history of radiation protection

Rowan University, Glassboro, NJ: CfP: Society for Philosophy of Science in Practice (SPSP) Sixth Conference 17–19 June 2016

Joint conference of the Society for Social Studies of Science (4S) and European Association for the Study of Science and Technology (EASST). CfP: What is a Problem? Problematic Ecologies, Methodologies and Ontologies in Techno-science and Beyond Barcelona 31 August–3 September 2016

Institute of Historical Research: University of London: CfP: International Postgraduate Port and Maritime History Conference 14–15 April 2016

University of Shanghai: CfP: International Health Organizations (IHOs): People, politics and practices in historical perspective 21–24 April 2016

University of Bucharest: Institute of Research in the Humanities: An Interdisciplinary Master class on the Nature and Status of Principles in Western Thought 15–18 March 2016

Barts Pathology Museum and the Hunterian Museum at the Royal College of Surgeons, London: Call for participation: Corpses, Cadavers and Catalogues: The Mobilities of Dead Bodies and Body Parts, Past and Present 17–18 May 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

H-Sci-Med-Tech: Summer Research Fellowships: History of Women in Medicine

University of Twente: Two Assistant Professors Philosophy of Science

Pembroke College Cambridge: Abdullah Al-Mubarak Research Fellowship in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies

QMUL: Three new Wellcome funded PhD Studentships in History of Emotions

University of Cambridge: UL in Philosophy of Life Sciences

University of Cambridge: UL in Science, Technology, and Medicine before 1800

University of Southern California: One Year Mellon Sawyer Postdoctoral Fellowship Visual History: The Past in Images

University of Notre Dame: Two Postdoctoral Fellowships in History and/or Philosophy of Science

University of Glasgow: The Leverhulme Trust: “Collections” Scholarships

Brunel University London: The Leverhulme Trust – Early Careers Fellowships

UCL: CELL: Research Assistant

BSHS: Part-time BSHS Intern

CHF: Fellowships

ChoM News: 2016–17 Women in Medicine Fellowship: Application Period Open

LMU Munich: 10 Postdoctoral Research Fellowships

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Whewell’s Gazete: Year2, Vol. #24

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #24

Monday 28 December 2015

EDITORIAL:

Christmas has come and gone but here comes the next edition of the weekly #histSTM links list, Whewell’s Gazette, to chase away those post Christmas blues by bringing you the best of the histories of science, technology and medicine that found its way into the Internet over the last seven days.

25 December, Christmas Day saw the anniversary of Isaac Newton’s birth, or did it? Many people, including myself, posted various things on the Internet in celebration of the day but a small minority of spoilsports posted on Twitter and Facebook that it wasn’t Newton’s birthday because of the calendar reform. In reality in our times Newton’s ‘real’ birthday falls on 4 January. If you’re confused you can read the grisly details in an old blog post of mine, Calendrical confusion or just when did Newton die? Despite the title it also deals with the date of Newton’s birth.

Now as I’ve written more than once in the past, Newton was born on Christmas Day in his own time and celebrated his birthday eighty-four years long on Christmas day and so I think, although it is calendrically wrong, it is somehow more apposite to celebrate his birthday on Christmas Day than on 4 January. So despite the spoilsports I for one shall continue to do so.

Interestingly 27 December saw the anniversary of Johannes Kepler’s birth with an equally large number of people throughout the Internet celebrating the fact. However nobody pointed out the fact that his birthdate is old style i.e. according to the Julian Calendar and therefore we should wait until 6 January before celebrating! One rule for Isaac and another for Johannes it would appear.

MHS Oxford Advent Calendar

Day 21: ‘Tower’ Table Clock, by ‘HP’ or ‘HR’, German, 17th Century

Day 22: Microscope Slides in Small Cardboard Box

Day 23: Dissecting Microscope, by E. Leitz, Wetzlar, c.1900-25imu-media.php

Day 24: Globe Clock and Sundial, Dial by Ulrich Schniep, French and Germany, 16th Century

Culham Research Group: Advent Calendar

Day 21: Winter Mint

Day 22: Healing Christmas: Cinnamon

Day 23: Night of the Radishes

Rabanos2014_027ab

Day 24: King Protea

After the twenty-four days of Advent we of course have the twelve days of Christmas

12 Days of Royal Museums Christmas

christmas 1

 

Royal College of Physicians Twelve days of Christmas

1513197_10151798152302721_657761975_n

The Recipes Project: Happy Holidays

 The book of household management by Mrs Beeton Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

The book of household management by Mrs Beeton
Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

Quotes of the week:

Hypothesis: many people confuse their hypotheses with the truth. – Liam Heneghan (@DublinSoil)

Wright brothers quote

“A small error at the beginning of something is a great one at the end” – Thomas Aquinas h/t @JohnAllenPaulos

A little nonsense now and then, is cherished by the wisest men. — Roald Dahl h/t @berfois

“There is no such thing as an empty space or an empty time… In fact, try as we may to make a silence, we cannot.” – John Cage h/t @t3dy

pythag quote

“Discretion, like the hole in a doughnut, does not exist except as an area left open by a surrounding belt of restriction.”—R. Dworkin h/t @GuyLongworth

“Asked what Walter Benjamin means when he says that capitalism is a religion, a student answered with one word: Christmas”. – Jan Mieszkowski (@janmpdx)

“A gingerbread man sits inside a gingerbread house. Is the house made of flesh? Or is he made of house? He screams, for he does not know”. – Kris Wilson (@TheKrisWilson)

Kepler quote

“Science knows no country because knowledge belongs to humanity, and is the torch which illuminates the world.” – Louis Pasteur h/t @embryoproject

Birthday of the Week:

The Transistor was born 23 December 1947

Transistor

Wired: Dec. 23, 1947: Transistor Opens Door to Digital Future

Youtube: AT&T Archives: Genesis of the Transistor

Yovisto: The Birth of the Transistor

Canada Science and Technology Museums: Transistor

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

AIP: Bryce DeWitt and Cecile DeWitt-Morette

AIP: Ira Sprague Bowen

Cosmos: Celebrating James Maxwell the father of light

Mathematician and poet James Clerk Maxwell. CREDIT: SPL/ GETTY IMAGES/ (BACKGROUND) SOLA

Mathematician and poet James Clerk Maxwell.
CREDIT: SPL/ GETTY IMAGES/ (BACKGROUND) SOLA

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Roger Fulling’s Interview

NASA: Apollo 8

Fourier’s Heat Conduction Equation: History, Influence, and Connections

The Conversation: What can science tell us about the Star of Bethlehem?

Science Alert: Can astronomy explain the Biblical Star of Bethlehem?

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Christmas Trilogy Part 1: The famous witty Mrs Barton

Catherine Barton, Isaac Newton's half-niece Source: Wikimedia Commons

Catherine Barton, Isaac Newton’s half-niece
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Leicester Mercury: Barwell meteorite: 50th anniversary of the day it fell to earth

NASA: Johannes Kepler

Brown: Ladd Observatory Blog: The Boston Time-Ball

AHF: Emilio Segrè

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

Atlas Obscura: Northeasterners Were Always Snobs – And These Maps Prove It

Geographical: On This Day: 1915, Shackleton marches on Christmas Day

Royal Geographical Society (with IBG)

Royal Geographical Society (with IBG)

World Digital Library: Mappamundi

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Spitalfields Life: Phil Maxwell at the London Hospital

Shakespeare & Beyond: The Four Humors: Eating in the Renaissance

Humors-graphic-654x1024

Royal College of Physicians: Robert Willan and the history of dermatology

A Covent Garden Gilflurt’s Guide to Life: Sir Percivall Pott: A Doctor from Threadneedle Street

The Chirugeon’s Apprentice: Not Just For Kissing: Medicinal Uses of Mistletoe (Past & Present)

Wellcome Library: Edward Jenner: pamphleteer

RCS Bulletin: The compassionate surgeon: Lessons from the past

Thomas Morris: The perils of Christmas pudding

Ingoldsby-Xmas-pudding

The Recipes Project: Gluttony and “Surfeit” in Early Modern Europe

Slate: The Death of Jacqueline Smith

Thomas Morris: The hidden dangers of a Victorian Christmas

Quartz: Thank Columbus! The true story of how syphilis spread to Europe

Thomas Morris: A Victorian hospital Christmas

Medical Daily: Mad Scientists: 6 Scientists Who Were Dismissed as Crazy, Only to be Proven Right Years Later

Ptak Science Books: A Plate Full of Eyes (1851)6a00d83542d51e69e201b7c7c4f859970b-500wi

 

The Daily Beast: The Nixon-Masked Man Who Helped End Homosexuality as a Disease

Embryo Project: The Pasteur Institute (1887– )

TECHNOLOGY:

Conciatotre: The Rise and Fall

Conciatore: Fake Pearls

Johannes Vermeer "Girl with a pearl earring" (1665-6)

Johannes Vermeer
“Girl with a pearl earring” (1665-6)

History Matters: The End of Coal: An Industry Out of Time

Motherboard: The Primitive Streetlights That Predicted Electronic Music in 1899

 

The National Museum of American History: Aaron Cane Torsion Pendulum Clock

Wired: Dec. 22, 1882: Looking at Christmas in a New Light

Today in Science: The First Electric Christmas Tree Lights

Photo taken on 25 Dec 1882 showing Edward H. Johnson's Christmas tree with strings of electric lamps.

Photo taken on 25 Dec 1882 showing Edward H. Johnson’s Christmas tree with strings of electric lamps.

Yovisto: The World’s Fastest Aircraft – Lockheed SR-71

Yovisto: James Rumsey’s Steam Boat

Chemical Heritage Magazine: Celluloid: The Eternal Substitute

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Christmas Trilogy Part 2: Understanding the Analytical Engine

Trial model of a part of the Analytical Engine, built by Babbage, as displayed at the Science Museum (London) Source: Wikimedia Commons

Trial model of a part of the Analytical Engine, built by Babbage, as displayed at the Science Museum (London)
Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Christmas Trilogy Part 3: Roll out the barrel

ASME: Radio City Music Hall Hydraulically Actuated Stage 1932

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

Embryo Project: Petr Alekseevich Kropotkin (1842–1921)

The Public Domain Review: Robin Redbreast (1907)

Colorized_Robin_Drawing

Yovisto: Jean-Henri Fabre – The Virgil of Insects

Science League of America: “Not Proved and Not Provable”

The East End: Charles Jamrach

The Atlantic: The Forgotten Father of Environmentalism

BHL: Tired of Poinsettias? Bah, Humbug! Then into the Smithsonian Library

Smithsonian.com: How Joel Poinsett, the Namesake for the Poinsettia, Played a Role in Creating the Smithsonian

John Roberts Poinsett (1779-1851) (Library of Congress) Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/a-smithsonian-holiday-story-joel-poinsett-and-the-poinsettia-3081111/#kwHjAGbYLCyYWvVv.99 Give the gift of Smithsonian magazine for only $12! http://bit.ly/1cGUiGv Follow us: @SmithsonianMag on Twitter

John Roberts Poinsett (1779-1851) (Library of Congress)

 

jamescungureanu: Newcomb and the Christian Evolutionists

Motherboard: The Eight Best Extinct Species Discovered in 2015

Medievalists.net: Medieval Beekeeping

The New York Times: The Subway Garnet

Atlas Obscura: 9 Beautiful Portraits of Rescued Owls

The cover of Leila Jeffreys new book Bird Love, published by Abrams.

The cover of Leila Jeffreys new book Bird Love, published by Abrams.

Science at Play: Sciencecraft Mineralogy Outfit No. 510, c. 1940

Medievalists.net: 10 Natural Disasters that Struck the Medieval World

CHEMISTRY:

AHF: Otto Hahn

Tyler’s Museum: Curie, Marie (Dutch)

Curie Chem

AHF: Marie Curie

CHF: Scientific Instrument Makes Leap from Lab to Historical Significance

Conciatore: Sal Ammoniac

CHF: Louis Pasteur

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

EME Calendar: A Calendar of Calls and Events about Early Modern Experimentation

Yovisto: Leopold von Ranke and the Science of History

Leopold von Ranke (1795 – 1886)

Leopold von Ranke
(1795 – 1886)

TPM Online: Biology vs Physics: Two Ways of Doing Science?

Academia: Scientific Celebrity: The Paradoxical Case of Emil du Bois-Reymond

The Guardian: Science and Christmas: a forgotten Victorian romance

Ancient Greek Philosopher: Against Empiricism: Galen’s Arguments

The Ordered Universe Project: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Materialism and the Value of Conscious Life

the scholarly kitchen: Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Our Story: Hamiltunes and the Burden of Founding Histories

digital.deutsches-museum.de: Gründungssammlung des Deutsches Museum

Pachs.net: News and Notes: Coastal Identities: Science Technology, Commerce and the State in American Seaports 1790–1850

Why Evolution is True: Kevin J Connolly (1936–2015)

209224a0

University of Oxford: 15cBookTrade

facebook: John Wesley Honors College: 2015 Aldergate Prize Awarded to Australian Laureate Fellow

Epistemocritique: Belles lettres, science et littérature

The New York Times: Robert Spitzer, Psychiatrist Who Set Rigorous Standards for Diagnosis, Dies at 83

Dr. Robert L. Spitzer was a major architect of the modern classification of mental illnesses in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Credit Alex di Suvero for The New York Times

Dr. Robert L. Spitzer was a major architect of the modern classification of mental illnesses in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Credit Alex di Suvero for The New York Times

History of Science: Carla Nappi: “Hey, historians of sci/med/tech: submit things to the History of Science journal! We’re looking for innovative, risk-taking work. Help push the field in new directions and send us your grooviness”

 

ESOTERIC:

Heterodoxology: Review symposium on “The Problem of Disenchantment”

BOOK REVIEWS:

The Guardian: Science and Nature: Observer Books of the Year 2015

Mad Art Lab: The Women in Science Reading List: The Twenty Best (and Four Not Best) Books to Read and Own

G19-DeBakcsy-300x300

New York Review of Books: Lead Poisoning: The Ignored Scandal

Science Book a Day: 10 Great Books on Climate Change Fiction

Science Book a Day: Why Things Break: Understanding the World by the Way It Comes Apart

The Boston Globe: ‘The Invention of Science by David Wooton (sic)

The Scientist: Capsule Reviews

Cosmos: Light from the East

NEW BOOKS:

Brill: Virtuoso by Nature: The Scientific Worlds of Francis Willughby FRS (1635–1672)

Francis Willughby 1635 – 1672 Source: Wikimedia Commons

Francis Willughby 1635 – 1672
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Margot Lee Shetterly: Hidden Figures: The African American Women Mathematicians Who Helped NASA and the United States Win the Space Race: An Untold Story

University of Pennsylvania Press: Thinking in Public: Strauss, Levinas, Arendt

The University of Chicago Press: Charles Bell and the Anatomy of Reform

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Royal College of Physicians: Scholar, courtier, magician: the lost library of John Dee 18 January–29 July 2016

Royal Geographical Society: Enduring Eye: The Antarctic Legacy of Sir Ernest Shackleton and Frank Hurley 21 November 2015–28 February 2016

Dogs watching Endurance in the final stages of its drift, shortly before it sank to the bottom of the Weddell Sea Source: Wikimedia Commons

Dogs watching Endurance in the final stages of its drift, shortly before it sank to the bottom of the Weddell Sea
Source: Wikimedia Commons

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs until 21 February 2016

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age

Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Runs until 31 January 2016

LAST CHANCE: Guiding Lights: 500 years of Trinity House and safety at sea Runs till 4 January 2016

Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Meet Baby Every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, & Saturday

Oxford University Museum of Natural History: Handwritten in Stone: How William Smith and his maps changed geology Runs to 31 January 2016

National Library of Scotland: Plague! A cultural history of contagious diseases in Scotland Runs till 29 May 2016

Royal Geographical Society: The Enduring Eye: The Antarctic Legacy of Sir Ernest Shackleton and Frank Hurley 21 November 2015 – 28 February 2016

Replica of the Small-Scale Experimental Machine (SSEM) at the Museum of Science and Industry in Castlefield, Manchester Source: Wikimedia Commons

Replica of the Small-Scale Experimental Machine (SSEM) at the Museum of Science and Industry in Castlefield, Manchester
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Southbank Centre: Faraday’s synaptic gap Runs till 10 January 2016

Science Museum: Leonardo da Vinci: The Mechanics of Genius 10 February 2016–4 September 2016

The Mary Rose: ‘Ringing the Changes’: Mary Rose Museum to re-open in 2016 with unrestricted views of the ship

Royal Museums Greenwich: Samuel Pepys Season 20 November 2015–28 March 2016

Royal College of Surgeons: Designing Bodies 24 November 2015–20 February 2016

Natural History Museum, London: Bauer Brothers art exhibition Runs till 26 February 2017

Science Museum: Ada Lovelace Runs till 31 March 2016

British Library: 20th Century Maps 4 November 2016–1 March 2017

Royal Pavilion, Brighton: Exotic Creatures 14 November 2015–28 February 2016

National Maritime Museum: Samuel Pepys: Plague, Fire, Revolution Runs till 28 March 2016

Bethlem Museum of the Mind: The art of Bedlam: Richard Dadd Runs till 6 February 2016

 

THEATRE, OPERA AND FILMS:

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Booking to 18 June 2016

EVENTS:

CRASSH: Cambridge: Symposium: Death and the Afterlife 22 January 2016

CRASSH: Cambridge: Workshop: Orientalism and its Institutions in the Nineteenth Century

EconoTimes: Historymiami Museum to Host Largest Map Fair in the Western Hemisphere for 23rd Year 5–7 February 2016

Cliva A. Burden 1 Thornton South Carolina

Cliva A. Burden 1 Thornton South Carolina

Dittrick Museum: Book Signing, Death’s Summer Coat 20 January 2016

11th Cambridge Wellcome Lecture in the History of Medicine: Michael Stolberg: Curing Diseases and Exchanging Knowledge: Sixteenth-Century Physicians and Their Female Patients 14 January 2016

Schwetzingen: Astronomie-Tagung: Von Venus-Transit zum Schwarzen Loch 19 März 2016

Chelsea Physic Garden: Round Table Discussion: Dark brilliance: Agatha Christie, poisonous plants and murder mysteries 2 February 2016

Royal Astronomical Society: RAS Public Lecture: 100th Anniversary of the election of Women to the RAS Fellowship 12 January 2016

Science Museum: Symposium: Revealing the Cosmonaut 5 February 2016

British Library: Medieval manuscripts blog: Postgraduate Open Day on our Pre-1600 Collections 1 February 2016

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Members of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters, painted by Peder Severin Krøyer Source: Wikimedia Commons

Members of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters, painted by Peder Severin Krøyer
Source: Wikimedia Commons

TELEVISION:

Royal Institution: Christmas Lecture 2015

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

FiveThirtyEightLife: The Queen of Code

Youtube: UCC Ireland: An Investigation of the Laws of Thought – George Boole

Youtube: NASA: Hidden Figures: The Female Mathematicians of NACA and NASA

CHF: Science at Play Shorts

Youtube: Space Debris: 1957–2015

RADIO:

BBC Radio 4: In Our Time: Michael Faraday

Michael Faraday by Thomas Phillips oil on canvas, 1841-1842  NPG Source: Wikimedia Commons

Michael Faraday by Thomas Phillips oil on canvas, 1841-1842 NPG
Source: Wikimedia Commons

PODCASTS:

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

University of Groningen: CfP: The Politics of Paper in the Early Modern World 9–10 June 2016

University of Groningen: Conference: Early Modern Women on Metaphysics, Religion and Science 21–23 March 2016

141118-header-thomas-750

Western University in London Ontario: CfP: 16th Annual Philosophy of Logic, Math and Physics Graduate Student Conference 910 June 2016

Durham University: Conference: Self-Commentary in Early Modern European Literature 26–27 February 2016

Barts Pathology Museum and the Hunterian Museum at the Royal College of Surgeons, London: CfP: Corpses, Cadavers and Catalogues: The Mobilities of Dead Bodies and Body Parts, Past and Present, 17–18 May 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

University of Kent: School of History: Postgraduate Funding

UCL: CELL: Research Assistant

University of Cambridge: UL in Science, Technology and Medicine before 1800

CHF: Fellowships 2016-17 Applications due by 15 January 2016

St. Cross College, Oxford: History and Philosophy of Physics Visiting Fellow

Universitat Pompeu Fabra: Post-Doctoral position “Juan de la Cierva”: History of Nuclear Energy and Society in Europe.

 

 

 


Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #25

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #25

Monday 04 December 2015

EDITORIAL:

Assuming you survived the artillery barrage and the alcohol excesses of the New year’s celebrations you now have before you the first 2016 edition of Whewell’s Gazette the weekly #histSTM links list, which continues to bring you are that we could find of the histories of science, technology and medicine over the last seven days throughout cyberspace.

Happy NY I

Strictly the New Year’s celebration welcoming the beginning of the year 2016 CE only apply to those whose lives are regulated by the arbitrary prescriptions of the Gregorian calendar, which like all calendars is merely a social convention.

Those who live according to the Jewish calendar are still in the middle of the year AM 5776 which will end at sunset on 2 October 2016 according to the Gregorian calendar. The year will also end around 2 October for those living according to the Islamic calendar but in their case it will be the end of the year 1437 AH. Persians and Afghanis who live according to the Solar Hijri calendar will celebrate the end of their year 1394 on 19 march 2016. The tradition Chinese New Year celebrating the beginning of year 33 in their 60-year cycle will be on 8 February 2016 according to the Gregorian calendar.

For those who prefer to mark the passing of time according to the four principal points of the solar year, vernal or spring equinox falls on 20 March 2016 and the autumnal equinox on 22 September. The summer solstice is on 20 June and the winter solstice is on 21 December.

Whichever calendar you follow and whenever your year begins and ends we hope you will continue to follow Whewell’s Gazette the whole year round.

Happy NY II

Quotes of the week:

 “The problem with the future is that is keeps turning into the present.” – Bill Watterson “Calvin & Hobbes”

Math with Bad Drawings: A Mathematician’s New Year’s Resolutions

mathematician-new-years-5

“I just read this on @‪TheAtlantic “There is just no acceptable level of any chemical to ingest, ever” and then my brain fell out of my ear”. – @Schrokit

“If history were taught in the form of stories, it would never be forgotten.”― Rudyard Kipling h/t @ESA_History

Jonathan Swift

Jonathan Swift

“Consider in last 10 seconds of 2015 – If earth´s age would be 1 year, written history of humankind would start at 23:59:46” – David Bressan (@David_Bressan)

“Smoking is a leading cause of statistics.” – Fletcher Knebel h/t @intmath

Death Quote

“Statistics means never having to say you’re certain”. – Murray Bourne (@intmath)

“I have not time nor Paper to describe this horrid spot of Hills, the like of which I never yet saw” – Halley unimpressed by Snowdonia. h/t @KateMorant

“Often history will work when nothing else will.” – J.H. Robinson (1863-1936) h/t @tabosaur

“…the pursuit of evidence is probably the most pressing moral imperative of our time.” – Alice Dreger (@AliceDreger)

“Anyone who finds “Lord of the Flies” incredible has not spent enough time in a British Isles’ secondary school”. – Liam Heneghan (@DublinSoil)

“Man produces evil as a bee produces honey…” William Golding (1965) h/t @DublinSoil

“What distinguishes humans from the rest of the animal kingdom is our capacity for hypocrisy”. – Peter Coles (@telescoper)

“I would like 2016 to be the year when people remembered that science is a method of investigation and NOT a belief system”. – John Cleese (@JohnCleese)

mistake quote

Birthday of the Week:

Ceres the asteroid discovered 1 January 1801

A view of Ceres in natural colour, pictured by the Dawn spacecraft in May 2015.

A view of Ceres in natural colour, pictured by the Dawn spacecraft in May 2015.

Motherboard: The 19th Century Space Controversy That Sparked a Planet Truther Movement

astropa.unipa.it: Bode’s Law and the Discovery of Ceres

The first element transmutation 3 January 1919 by Ernest Rutherford

Rutherford

AHF: Ernest Rutherford

 

Isaac Asimov celebrated his birth on 2 January 1920

Isaac Asimov celebrated his birth on 2 January 1920

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Royal Museums Greenwich: Conserving Galileo

AIP: Maarten Schmidt

MSFC history Office: “The Disney-Von Braun Collaboration and Its Influence on Space Exploration”

erittenhouse: The Art of Making Leyden Jars and Batteries According to Benjamin Franklin

AHF: Klaus Fuchs

Darin Hayton: Maria Wants Her Sextant Back

The first building completed at Vassar College was the observatory, long called the Maria Mitchell Observatory.

The first building completed at Vassar College was the observatory, long called the Maria Mitchell Observatory.

Cooper Hewitt: The Great Moon Hoax of 1835

Atlas Obscura: In 1844, the Philippines Skipped a Day, and it Took Decades for the Rest of the World to Notice

Perimeter Institute: Pioneering Women of Physics

The Renaissance Mathematicus: Just another day

APS: Historic Sites Initiative

BBC Future: How the most expensive structure in the world was built

The ISS may lack the drama of missions like Apollo 13, but that’s how mission control would prefer it (Credit: Nasa)

The ISS may lack the drama of missions like Apollo 13, but that’s how mission control would prefer it (Credit: Nasa)

New Historian: Demon Star Influenced Egyptian Calendars

Huff Post: The Blog: Peake and the Women that Science Forgot

AHF: John von Neumann

AHF: Jumbo

Atlas Obscura: Jantar Mantar

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

Cornell University Library: Division of Rare & Manuscript Collections: Persuasive Cartography

Barron Maps Blog: The persuasive power of maps – the Danzig Crisis & Nazi Propaganda map postcards, 1933–1939

Der-Korridor-als-Verwaltungszerstörer-German-Propaganda-postcard-c1933-5-01

Big Think: Is This Map Australia’s Clumsy Attempt at Fabricating a Japanese Invasion During WWII?

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Flemming #histmed quote

Thomas Morris: Sober up the nineteenth-century way

National Journal: That is the Brain that Shot President James Garfield: But why? A 135-year-old mystery

Chemical Heritage Magazine: Mummies and the Usefulness of Death

Atlas Obscura: The Toothbrush that Grows on Trees

Embryo Project: Test-Tube Baby

ODNB: Scarburgh, Sir Charles

The Victorianist: The ‘lady Doctor’ and the ‘helpless Native’: Constructing the Female Doctor/Patient Relationship in Nineteenth-Century India

Florence Dissent (From Indian Medical Record). Source: Library, Royal College of Surgeons of England

Florence Dissent (From Indian Medical Record). Source: Library, Royal College of Surgeons of England

Ptak Science Books: The Leech Explorers of 1833

Thomas Morris: The child that cried in the womb

Advances in the History of Psychology: Special Issue on Cinema and Neuroscience

Greg Jenner: How did women deal with their periods? The history of Menstruation

Advances in the History of Psychology: The Pasteur Institute and the Study of the Animal Mind

Vesalius Census: New Blog

Vesalius Census: Bibliography as Search Engine

Thomas Morris: Death from too much pie

Wellcome Library: The ‘disease woman’ of the Wellcome Apocalypse

Source: Wellcome Library

Source: Wellcome Library

PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases: The 1899 United States Kissing Bug Epidemic

Thomas Morris: Impaled on a stake

British Library: Vesalius’s Anatomy

The Guardian: Opium-soaked tampons, voodoo elixirs and leeches: welcome to New Orleans’ Pharmacy Museum

CHF: Tryals and Tribulations: In 17th-century England, doctors battled illness and each other

TECHNOLOGY:

Ptak Science Books: Illustrating the Effect of Destructive Capacity: August, 1914

erittenhouse: The David H.H. Felix Collection and the Beginnings of the Smithsonian’s Museum of History of Technology

Corning Museum of Glass: Souvenirs and Mold-Blown Glass for the Marketplace

Techné: Reading Feynman Into Nanotechnology: A Text for a New Science (pdf)

Conciatore: Ultramarine Blue

Conciatore: Containing Hooke’s Tears

Glass drops or tears coated in glue, after detonation, (cross section is left) from Robert Hooke's Micrographia 1664, between p. 10, 11.

Glass drops or tears coated in glue,
after detonation, (cross section is left)
from Robert Hooke’s
Micrographia 1664, between p. 10, 11.

Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum: Rocket Engine, Liquid Fuel, R. Goddard

The Vault of the Atomic Space Age: The GE Performance Television

Newsworks: First flight or historic hop?

Mental Floss: The Theatrophone: The 19th-Century Version of Livestreaming

Ptak Science Books: Troncet’s Arithmograpphe, the “Instant Calculator” (1892)

Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum: Demonstrations in Europe

A refinement of the 1905 Flyer, the Wright Model A was flown on demonstration flights in Europe in 1908 and 1909. Source: Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum

A refinement of the 1905 Flyer, the Wright Model A was flown on demonstration flights in Europe in 1908 and 1909.
Source: Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum

Smithsonian.com: From Edison’s Light Bulb to the Ball in Time Square

The Telegraph: Robert Boyle’s prophetic scientific predictions from the 17th century go on display at the Royal Society

Canadian Science and Technology Museums: Collection Online: Cycle, stationary

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

American Scientist: Rereading Darwin

Medium: We’ve been talking about climate change for a long time

The Royal Society: Notes and Records: A Yankee at Oxford: John William Draper at the British Association for the Advancement of Science at Oxford, 30 June 1860

Portrait of John Draper engraved by John Sartain Source: Wikimedia Commons

Portrait of John Draper engraved by John Sartain
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Geschichte der Geologie: Vom Bergbau, Waldrodung und Umweltzerstörung

es.ucsc.edu: The Age of the Earth Debate (pdf)

The Public Domain Review: Sex and Science in Robert Thornton’s Temple of Flora

Georgian Gentleman: Saartjie Baartman – a reminder of a tragic life – and death – two hundred years ago

The Three Graces – A midget, the Hottentot Venus and an albino woman, shown courtesy of the British Museum

The Three Graces – A midget, the Hottentot Venus and an albino woman, shown courtesy of the British Museum

Science League of America: Absurdly Inadequate

Ptak Science Books: Antiquarian Comparative Analysis: Lakes, Islands, Mountains

Once Upon a Time…: A Dino-Lover’s Dream – 1853’s New Year’s Eve Dinner in Crystal Palace Park

Forbes: How to Celebrate the New Year Like a Victorian Paleontologist

Dinner in the Iguanodon Model, at the Crystal Palace, Sydenham, London Illustrated News, 7 January 1854 (image in public domain).

Dinner in the Iguanodon Model, at the Crystal Palace, Sydenham, London Illustrated News, 7 January 1854 (image in public domain).

Blink: Death of the floating world

Process: Has Environmental History Lost Its Way?

TrowellBlazers: TrowelBlazers 2015 Review

Geschichte der Geologie: Gottes Werk und Teufels Beitrag: Der Vulkan als Gott und Höllentor

CHEMISTRY:

Chemical Heritage Magazine: Cabinets for the Curious

Len Fisher: How Robert Boyle and I Became Chemists

Beautiful Chemistry.net: Beautiful Chemistry Instrument

Boyle's Vacuum Pump (1660) Reproduced based on Robert Boyle's book, New Experiments Physico-Mechanical, Touching the Spring of the Air, and Its Effects (1660).

Boyle’s Vacuum Pump (1660)
Reproduced based on Robert Boyle’s book, New Experiments Physico-Mechanical, Touching the Spring of the Air, and Its Effects (1660).

CHF: Robert Boyle

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Environmental History: Volume 21 Issue 1 January 2016 Table of Contents

eRittenhouse: Vol. 26 2015 Issue 74 Table of Contents

Brooklyn Magazine: From Bumper Cars to Torah Taxidermy: A Guide to 25 of Brooklyn’s Most Unusual Museums

The Morbid Anatomy Museum

The Morbid Anatomy Museum

American Panorama: An Atlas of United States History

Lady Science: Lady Science Reading List

Literacy of the Present: Living in the past: advice to a time traveller

Scientific American: Gone in 2015: Commemorating 10 Outstanding Women in Science

Aída Fernández Ríos GALICIAN ROYAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

Aída Fernández Ríos
GALICIAN ROYAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

Ether Wave Propaganda: The Empiricist Potential: EWP at 8

The #EnvHist Weekly

MHS Oxford: New on Instagram

New York Times: How to Cultivate the Art of Serendipity

ESOTERIC:

h/t Anna Resner (@AnnaNResner)

h/t Anna Resner (@AnnaNResner)

Conciatore: The Kabbalah

Mysterious Universe: Was John Dee’s Fascination With the Occult Driven by Espionage?

BOOK REVIEWS:

Science League of America: The Rocky Road to Acceptance, Part 1

Science League of America: The Rocky Road to Acceptance, Part 2

powell_cover

Science League of America: The Rocky Road to Acceptance, Part 3

Science League of America: The Rocky Road to Acceptance, Part 4

PLOS: Genetics: Women Don’t Give a Crap

Gizmodo: The Discovery of the Solar System Included Some Dead Ends In The Hunt for Vulcan

Granta: Best Book of 2003: The Curious Life of Robert Hooke

NEW BOOKS:

Routledge: Women and Gender in the Early Modern World

Penguin Random House: Magic in Islam

9780399176708

Springer: A History of Women Philosophers A.D. 500–1600

torriherridge.com: The World’s Smallest Mammoth

Palgrave: Conjuring Science: A History of Scientific Entertainment and Stage Magic in Modern France

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Inside MHS Oxford: What happens to loan objects?

New-York Historical Society: Silicon City: Computer History Made in New York 13 November 2015–17 April 2016

Two women wiring the right side of the ENIAC with a new program, ca. 1946. Courtesy US Army. Standing: Marlyn Wescoff, Crouching: Ruth Lichterman.

Two women wiring the right side of the ENIAC with a new program, ca. 1946. Courtesy US Army. Standing: Marlyn Wescoff, Crouching: Ruth Lichterman.

Royal College of Physicians: Scholar, courtier, magician: the lost library of John Dee 18 January–29 July 2016

Royal Geographical Society: Enduring Eye: The Antarctic Legacy of Sir Ernest Shackleton and Frank Hurley 21 November 2015–28 February 2016

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs until 21 February 2016

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age

Closing Soon: Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Runs until 31 January 2016

Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Meet Baby Every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, & Saturday

Last Chance: Southbank Centre: Faraday’s synaptic gap Runs till 10 January 2016

Science Museum: Leonardo da Vinci: The Mechanics of Genius 10 February 2016–4 September 2016

The Mary Rose: ‘Ringing the Changes’: Mary Rose Museum to re-open in 2016 with unrestricted views of the ship

The Hull of the Mary Rose in her drying out period

The Hull of the Mary Rose in her drying out period

Royal Museums Greenwich: Samuel Pepys Season 20 November 2015–28 March 2016

Royal College of Surgeons: Designing Bodies 24 November 2015–20 February 2016

Natural History Museum, London: Bauer Brothers art exhibition Runs till 26 February 2017

Science Museum: Ada Lovelace Runs till 31 March 2016

British Library: 20th Century Maps 4 November 2016–1 March 2017

Royal Pavilion, Brighton: Exotic Creatures 14 November 2015–28 February 2016

National Maritime Museum: Samuel Pepys: Plague, Fire, Revolution Runs till 28 March 2016

Bethlem Museum of the Mind: The art of Bedlam: Richard Dadd Runs till 6 February 2016

Closing Soon: Oxford University Museum of Natural History: Handwritten in Stone: How William Smith and his maps changed geology Runs to 31 January 2016

National Library of Scotland: Plague! A cultural history of contagious diseases in Scotland Runs till 29 May 2016

Royal Geographical Society: The Enduring Eye: The Antarctic Legacy of Sir Ernest Shackleton and Frank Hurley 21 November 2015 – 28 February 2016

THEATRE, OPERA AND FILMS:

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Booking to 18 June 2016

Royal Astronomical Society: “The Way to the Stars” – a dramatized celebration of the history of women astronomers leading up their admission as Fellows of the RAS in 1916 8 January 2016

EVENTS:

Gresham College: Lecture: Babbage and Lovelace 19 January 2016

CRASSH: Cambridge: Symposium: Death and the Afterlife 22 January 2016

CRASSH: Cambridge: Workshop: Orientalism and its Institutions in the Nineteenth Century 18 February 2016

EconoTimes: Historymiami Museum to Host Largest Map Fair in the Western Hemisphere for 23rd Year 5–7 February 2016

Dittrick Museum: Book Signing, Death’s Summer Coat 20 January 2016

11th Cambridge Wellcome Lecture in the History of Medicine: Michael Stolberg: Curing Diseases and Exchanging Knowledge: Sixteenth-Century Physicians and Their Female Patients 14 January 2016

Schwetzingen: Astronomie-Tagung: Von Venus-Transit zum Schwarzen Loch 19 März 2016

Chelsea Physic Garden: Round Table Discussion: Dark brilliance: Agatha Christie, poisonous plants and murder mysteries 2 February 2016

Royal Astronomical Society: RAS Public Lecture: 100th Anniversary of the election of Women to the RAS Fellowship 12 January 2016

Science Museum: Symposium: Revealing the Cosmonaut 5 February 2016

British Library: Medieval manuscripts blog: Postgraduate Open Day on our Pre-1600 Collections 1 February 2016

CHF: Science on Tap: Gas on Tap: Loony Gas and the History and Science of Gasoline 11 January 2016

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Michael Faraday at work in his laboratory in the basement of the Royal Institution in London. Painting by Harriet Moore Source: Wikimedia Commons

Michael Faraday at work in his laboratory in the basement of the Royal Institution in London. Painting by Harriet Moore
Source: Wikimedia Commons

TELEVISION:

Royal Institution: Christmas Lecture 2015

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Youtube: Electric Love

Vimeo: The Mystery of Matter: Other Discoverers of the Periodic Table

Science Friday: Diary of Snakebite Death

RADIO:

BBC World Service: Royal Institute Lectures 2015

BBC Radio 4: Science Stories: Submarine for a Stuart King

PODCASTS:

University of Oxford: Enchantress of Numbers or a mere debugger?: a brief history of cultural and academic understanding of Ada Lovelace

New Books in East Asia Studies: Rice: Global Networks and New Histories

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

Deutsches Bergbau-Museum Bochum: VDI Ausschuss Technikgeschichte: Objektgeschichte(n) Jahrestagung Bochum, 11.‐12. Februar 2016

Stevens Institute of Technology: The Maintainers: A Conference, April 8, 2016

Calgary, Alberta: 2nd Call for Abstracts: CSHPS Annual Conference Calgary 28-30 May 2016

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens: CfP: Music and the animal world in Hellenic and Roman antiquity 15 March 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

ChoM News: 2016-2017 Women in Medicine Fellowship: Application Period Open

Trinity College Dublin: Ussher Assistant Professor in Environmental History Since 1800

Amsterdam School for Heritage and Memory Studies: PhD Candidate

MHS Oxford: Team Leader, Move Project ­– MHS Project Assistant (2 posts) – Move Project

The Centre for the History of the Emotions at Queen Mary University of London: Three funded PhD studentships on ‘Living With Feeling’ project

University of Groningen: New MA Programme in Theory/history of Psychology

 

 

 


Whewell’s Gazette: Year 2, Vol. #26

$
0
0

Whewell’s Gazette

Your weekly digest of all the best of

Internet history of science, technology and medicine

Editor in Chief: The Ghost of William Whewell

Cornelis Bloemaert

Year 2, Volume #26

Monday 11 January 2016

EDITORIAL:

 Moving on into 2016 it’s time once again for Whewell’s Gazette your weekly #histSTM links list bringing all of the histories of science, technology and medicine that we could find in the infinite depths of cyberspace.

Science Show

This is the twenty-sixth edition of the second year of Whewell’s Gazette meaning the year is half full or half empty depending on your point of view. We view ourselves as part of the on going infinite science show.

Science Show 2

Quotes of the week:

“I would like 2016 to be the year in which people stop asserting that there is “a method” of science”. – Oliver Usher (@ojusher)

“Science is indeed merely a method of investigation. But it is the best one for answering many important questions”. – Christopher Chabris (@cfchabris)

“Repeat after me: pharma being shit does not mean magic beans cure cancer.” – Ben Goldacre (@bengoldacre)

“Man is a genius when he is dreaming”. — Akira Kurosawa h/t @berfois

“It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop”. – Confucius

“Plato is my friend—Aristotle is my friend—but my greatest friend is truth.” – Isaac Newton h/t @wordnik

“Someone who wants to learn logic from language is like an adult who wants to learn how to think from a child.”— Frege h/t @GuyLongworth

“On this day in 1961, Erwin Schrödinger may or may not have died. We’ll only know if we open his coffin and collapse the wave function”. – John J. McKay (@archymck)

“History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as farce.” – Karl Marx h/t @ferwen

“…it really pisses me off when people say “medieval” = synonym for crude, uncivilised, primitive. Use your eyes, people”. – Caroline Shenton (@dustshoveller)

“As Twitter awoke one morning from uneasy dreams, it found itself transformed into a gigantic Facebook”. – Elena Epaneshnik (@ElenaEpaneshnik)

“Alexander Pope thought that bad writing was a ‘morbid secretion from the brain’ … he might be right – at least on some writing days”. Andrea Wulf (@Andrea_Wulf)

“Historians don’t have the luxury to decide certain people out of existence.” – Paul Halliday h/t @jotis

“I don’t believe in the Malaria theory and doubt very much if there is any such thing a Malaria” – Henderson 1872 h/t @KewDC

“Hear hear. Philosophy of science has traditionally been too dominated by physicists”. – Philip Ball (@philipcball)

“Though better known for his work on philosophy, Karl Popper also pioneered the recreational use of Amyl Nitrate TrueFacts – Peter Coles (@telescoper)

“Synonym has no synonym. Anagram has no anagram. Onomatopoeia doesn’t sound like what it means. But portmanteau is a portmanteau. Phew”. – @WardQNormal

“The most important thing a University has to teach you is that no matter how much you know, it’s never enough”. – Peter Coles (@telescoper)

Ne’r marry one with a wey Beard,

He is of the fumbling Crew;

Of such I’ve oft times heard,

they little or nothing can do – 1685 h/t @DrAlun

Birthday of the Week:

Alfred Russel Wallace born 8 January 1823

Alfred Russel Wallace ca. 1895 Source: Wikimedia Commons

Alfred Russel Wallace ca. 1895
Source: Wikimedia Commons

 Yovisto: Alfred Russel Wallace and the Naturel Selection

The Alfred Russel Wallace Website: Biography of Wallace

BHL: Wallace, Darwin, and Evolution: The Real Story

Death of the Week:

Ernest Shackleton died 5 January 1922

 Enduring-Eye-RGS-5

UFunk: Enduring Eye – Exploring Antarctica in 1914 through fascinating photos

Royal Museums Greenwich: Sir Ernest Shackleton

The Public Domain Review: Ernest Shackleton on his south polar expedition (1910)

Enduring-Eye-RGS-6

Demonstration of the Week:

 Leon Foucault first demonstrated the turning earth 6 January 1851

Foucault's Pendulum in the Panthéon, Paris Source: Wikimedia Commons

Foucault’s Pendulum in the Panthéon, Paris
Source: Wikimedia Commons

 David Ellyard Discoveries: Leon Foucault and The Turning Earth

Space Watchtower: 165th Anniversary: Foucault Pendulum

Discovery of the Week:

The four largest moons of Jupiter were discovered 7 January (Galileo) 8 January (Simon Marius)

 

Jupiter and the Galilean Moons Source: Wikimedia Commons

Jupiter and the Galilean Moons
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Yovisto: Jupiter and the Galilean Moons

esa: space science: 7 January

Library University of Michigan: The Galileo Manuscript

The Renaissance Mathematicus: One day later

Simon Marius

Simon Marius

PHYSICS, ASTRONOMY & SPACE SCIENCE:

Encyclopædia Britannica: Wilhelm Beer

Science Museum: Sputnik – engineering a world first

Sputnik Source: Science Museum

Sputnik
Source: Science Museum

Voices of the Manhattan Project: James C. Hobb’s Interview

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Lee DuBridge’s Interview

CNN Style: Astronomical watches: The whole of the night sky, strapped to your wrist

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Roger Rasmussen’s Interview

Society for the History of Astronomy: SHA e-News: Volume 8, no.1, January 2016

AHF: Manhattan Project Spotlight: The Chrysler Corporation

aavso.org: Women in the History of Variable Star Astronomy (pdf)

Early photo of ‘Pickering's Harem’, as the group of women computers assembled by Harvard astronomer Edward Charles Pickering was dubbed. The group included Leavitt, Annie Jump Cannon, Williamina Fleming and Antonia Maury Source: Wikimedia Commons

Early photo of ‘Pickering’s Harem’, as the group of women computers assembled by Harvard astronomer Edward Charles Pickering was dubbed. The group included Leavitt, Annie Jump Cannon, Williamina Fleming and Antonia Maury
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Voices of the Manhattan Project: Siegfried Hecker’s Interview

Astronotes: Ancient Astronomy (part 1)

AIP: Bryce DeWitt and Cecile DeWitt-Morette

AHF: Computing and the Manhattan Project

Cooper Hewitt: Book, Atlas of the Celestial Heavens, 19th Century

Project Diana: The Men Who Shot The Moon

Postcard commemorating Project Diana. Image: US Army

Postcard commemorating Project Diana. Image: US Army

Motherboard: Seventy Years Ago, We Bounced Signals Off the Moon for the First Time

The New York Review of Books: Einstein: Right or Wrong

EXPLORATION and CARTOGRAPHY:

dsl.richmond.edu: American Panorama: An Atlas of United States History

Yovisto: William of Rubruck and his Adventurous Journey to Karakorum

Voyage of William of Rubruck in 1253 – 1255

Voyage of William of Rubruck in 1253 – 1255

The New York Times: Harvard’s Find of a Colonial Map of New Jersey Is a Reminder of Border Wars

Atlas Obscura: Captain Cook Monument

Center for Islamic Studies: Maps and Diagram

publicdomain.nypl.org: Navigating The Green Book

Bryars & Bryars: Kerry Lee Revisited: cartographer, commercial artist, socialist

Attractions of London, for Carr’s of Carlisle

Attractions of London, for Carr’s of Carlisle

MEDICINE & HEALTH:

Dr Alun Withey: Detoxing in History: the morning after the night before

History Today: Shameful Secrets: Male Sexual Health

Thomas Morris: Don’t mess with an electric eel

Atlas Obscura: Need a Chill Pill? Here’s a Recipe from the 19th Century

Vesalius Census: Warren, Vesalius and the Fine Arts

Vesalius Census: New Fabricas Found

NYAM: Counterfeiting Bodies:Examining the Work of Walther Ryff

Plate 1 of Ryff’s Des aller furtrefflichsten, hoechsten und adelichsten Gschoepffs aller Creaturen (1541).

Plate 1 of Ryff’s Des aller furtrefflichsten, hoechsten und adelichsten Gschoepffs aller Creaturen (1541).

Yovisto: Louis Braille and the Braille System

UW-Milwaukee Special Collections: The Braille World Book Encyclopedia

Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh: Scots abroad: medical influences in the 18th century

Thomas Morris: Unfortunate injury of the decade

The H-Word: The junior doctor’s strike – what really new about it?

A Covent Garden Gilflurt’s Guide to Life: A Gruesome Tale of Self-Surgery

General Claude Martin by Renaldi, 1794

General Claude Martin by Renaldi, 1794

Smithsonian Libraries: Unbound: Dr G.Zander’s Medico-Mechanical Gymnastics

Yovisto: Sir Percivall Pott and his Cancer Research

Zócalo Public Square: When California Sterilized 20,000 of Its Citizens

Darin Hayton: Death in the Archive

The Last Word on Nothing: The Wonderful World of Period Patents

US5158535-1-768x523

Joihn Rylands Library Special Collections Blog: History of Midwifery

Thomas Morris: The seven-foot tumour

Thomas Morris: Wine, the great healer

Smithsonian.com: Dr. Gustav Sander’s Victorian-Era Exercise Machines Makes the Bowflex Look Like Child’s Play

Thomas Morris: Dead or alive at will

binet.hypothesis.org: James McKeen Cattell

Gizmodo: Columbia Just Digitalized a Bestselling Anatomy Flipbook From the 1610s

TECHNOLOGY:

Conciatore: Thomas Hobbes on Glass

Conciatore: Torricelli and Glass

The Conversation: Mathematical Winters: Ada Lovelace 200 years on

George Boole 200: Timeline of Life Events

The New York Times: Untangling an Accounting Tool and an Ancient Incan Mystery

Patricia Landa, an archaeological conservator, painstakingly cleans and untangles the khipus at her house in Lima. Credit William Neuman/The New York Times

Patricia Landa, an archaeological conservator, painstakingly cleans and untangles the khipus at her house in Lima. Credit William Neuman/The New York Times

CHF: Up, Up and Away: The day a lead balloon flew

BBC: How Germany’s love of silence led to the first earplug

Yovisto: James Watt and the Steam Age Revolution

Academia: Hertha Marks Ayrton: An electric woman (pdf)

The Public Domain Review: Arabic Machine Manuscript

Yovisto: Ulman Stromer and the First Paper Mill North of the Alps

The Renaissance Mathematicus: How papermaking crossed the Alps

Ulman Stromer’s Paper-mill. (From Schedel’s Buch der Chroniken of 1493.)

Ulman Stromer’s Paper-mill. (From Schedel’s Buch der Chroniken of 1493.)

Distillations Blog: Schematic Wiring Diagram of the Basic Integrating Circuit

Open Culture: Meet the “Telharmonium,” the First Synthesizer (and Predecessor to Muzak), Invented in 1897

Hyperallergenic: An Arrow-Shooting Goddess from a Time When Clocks Were Entertainment

quiteirregular: “the use of the post-office is in her own hands” –Anthony Trollope, Pillar Boxes, and Love Letters

Royal Museums Greenwich: A colourful history of the Queen’s House

 

Two Nerdy History Girls: Hackney Cab vs. Hackney Coach

Sotherby’s: A Medieval Revolving Bookmark, manuscript on vellum

Ptak Science Books: Dialing Remote Live Music – a Trip into the Future, 1892

History ASM: Why is the Flying Scotsman so Famous?

Yovisto: Jean-Pierre Blanchard crossed the English Channel in a Balloon

Smithsonian Air & Space: Across the Channel by Balloon

Crossing of the English Channel  by Blanchard and Jeffries

Crossing of the English Channel
by Blanchard and Jeffries

Open Culture: The Fascinating Story of How Delia Derbyshire Created the Original Doctor Who Theme

My medieval foundry: Making medieval bells – part 1 (A never ending series)

Yovisto: Joseph Weizenbaum and his famous Eliza

Icons of Progress: The Punched Card Tabulator

Computer History Museum: Making Sense of the Census: Hollerith’s Punched Card Solution

Two Nerdy History Girls: An 18thc Automaton Watch

The New Yorker: Through the Looking Glass

Medievalists.net: The Early Medieval Cutting Edge of Technology

Heroes of History: Margaret Hamilton – One Giant Leap for Womankind

The Atlantic: The Gift of the Daguerreotype

EARTH & LIFE SCIENCES:

National Geographic: The Time 19th Century Paleontologists Punched it Out

Science: Solving the mystery of dog domestication

Niche: The Otter-La Loutre: Top Five Articles of 2015

Notches: Truly Ugandan: Martyrs, Pope Francis, and the Question of Sexuality

RCPI Heritage Centre Blog: Meteorology, Medicine and Moore

John William Moore in 1887 (VM/1/2/M/19)

John William Moore in 1887 (VM/1/2/M/19)

AMNH: Trilobites and Horseshoe Crabs

Yovisto: Alfred Wegener and the Continental Drift

flickr: BHL: British beetles

Medievalists.net: The Kraken: when myth encounters science

Science League of America: Whence Hopeful Monsters?

Yovisto: Johan Christian Fabricius and his Classification System for Insects

npr: In ‘Heirloom Harvest,’ Old-School Portraits of Vegetable Treasures

Chemistry World: How the leopard got its spots

Data is nature: Thomas Sopwith’s Stratigraphic Models

04 Sopwith Model VII The surface denudation of mineral veins 1841

04 Sopwith Model VII The surface denudation of mineral veins 1841

Tripping from the Fall Line: On the origin of natural history: Steno’s modern, but forgotten philosophy of science

PhilSci Archive: The parallactic recognition of an evolutionary paradox (pdf)

Distillations Blog: Carl Akeley’s Striped Hyenas

Library of Congress: Charting the Gulf Stream

Atlas Obscura: The Exquisite 19th-Century Infographics That Explained the History of the Natural World

TrowelBlazers: Gertrude Caton Thompson

CHEMISTRY:

CHF: The Catalyst Series: Women in Chemistry: Stephanie Kwolek

Photograph of Stephanie Kwolek, taken at Spinning Elements, Chemical Heritage Foundation

Photograph of Stephanie Kwolek, taken at Spinning Elements, Chemical Heritage Foundation

Distillations Blog: The Chemistry of One Coat

Chemistry World: D’Alelio’s resins

The Conversation: The search for new elements on the periodic table started with a blast

META – HISTORIOGRAPHY, THEORY, RESOURCES and OTHER:

Daily Nous: Philosophers, Physicists, Others Win €2.5m to Study the Large Hadron Collider

The New York Society Library: New York Needs a History of Reading

The Recipes Project: Translating Recipes 13: recipes in Time and Space Part 2 – Between 2

The Recipes Project: Translating Recipes 13: recipes in Time and Space Part 8 – Between 3

Cambridge Journals Online: Medical History: Volume 60 Issue 1 Table of Contents

American Historical Association: Perspectives on History: Everything Has a History

Flat Hill: Other Humanities Subjects Lost Majors Too, but History Lost More

Faculty of Life Sciences UoM: Tuesday Feature episode 32: Liz Toon

Engineering and Technology History Wiki: Potential Historical Speakers

AEON: Epic Fails: Great theories can spend decades waiting for verification. Failed theories do too. Is there any way to tell them apart?

The Guardian: The problem with science journalism: we’ve forgotten that reality matters most

Conciatore: Michel Montaigne

Science Museum Group Journal: The Cosmonauts challenge

Cover of the associated publication Cosmonauts: birth of space age exhibition, Scala, 2014

Cover of the associated publication Cosmonauts: birth of space age exhibition, Scala, 2014

The New York Times: New York Public Library Invites a Deep Digital Dive

William White Papers: Journal of Inebriety

The Atlantic: A Brief History of Noise: From the big bang to cellphones

John Stewart: Converting Student’s History Essays into Wikipedia Articles

PLOS: one: Text Mining the History of Medicine

Max Planck Institute for the History of Science: Working Group: Working with Paper: Gender Practices in the History of Knowledge

BHL: BHL Receives 2015 Digitizing Hidden Special Collections and Archives Award for Field Notes Project

Darin Hayton: Isaac Newton Scientific Revolution Essay

The #EnvHist Weekly

The British Museum: Faith after the pharaohs: Egyptian papyri conservation

William Corbett’s Bookshop: browse the shelves of a seventeenth-century bookshop

University of Exeter: Hidden Florence revealed through new history tour App

ESOTERIC:

Alchemy Website: A modern alchemy hoax exposed

Ptak Science Books: Can You Find the Ancient Death Ray of Death? Symbolism in the Garden of Mathematical Sciences (ca. 1670)

Image: Metropolitan Museum of Art

Image: Metropolitan Museum of Art

Slate: A Short History of Martians

Atlas Obscura: Ritualistic Cat Torture Was Once a Form of Town Fun

distillatio: Sometimes I think people don’t know what Alchemy is, or else they don’t explain why they think there is alchemy in what they see

BOOK REVIEWS:

Andrea Wolf: The Invention of Nature: Winner of Costa Biography Award 2015

Some Beans: A History of the 20th Century in 100 Maps by Tim Bryars and Tom Harper

Notches: Out of the Union: An Interview with Miriam Frank

New Statesman: Magical thinking: the history of science, sorcery and the spiritual

41LhpjSf6JL._SX311_BO1,204,203,200_

Science Book a Day: Stiffs, Skulls & Skeletons: Medical Photography and Symbolism

Science Book a Day: Untamed: The Wild Life of Jane Goodall

NEW BOOKS:

Liverpool University Press: Manchester: Making a Modern City (incl. James B Sumner on #histSTM)

Boydell & Brewer: Aphrodisiacs, Fertility and Medicine in Early Modern England

Bloomsbury Publishing: British Nuclear Culture

9781441141330

NCSE: Evolution vs. Creationism: An Introduction, 2nd Edition

UCLA Newsroom: Philosopher Brian Copenhaver publishes two scholarly books on magic

ART & EXHIBITIONS

Horniman Museum & Gardens: London’s Urban Jungle Run until 21 February 2016

History Extra: In pictures: John Dee, the ‘Elizabethan 007’

Dulwich Picture Gallery: The Amazing World of M.C. Escher

Wellcome Trust: Wellcome Trust windows – featuring ‘Tools of the Trade’

Somerset House: Utopia 2016: A Year of Imagination and Possibility

New York Public Library: Printmaking Women: Three Centuries of Female Printmakers, 1570–1900

New-York Historical Society: Silicon City: Computer History Made in New York 13 November 2015–17 April 2016

Royal College of Physicians: Scholar, courtier, magician: the lost library of John Dee 18 January–29 July 2016

British Museum: The Asahi Shimbun Displays: Scanning Sobek: mummy of the crocodile god Room 3 10 December 2015–21 February 2016

CT scans of a mummified crocodile with mummified infant crocodiles on its back. From Kom Ombo, Egypt, 650–550 BC.

CT scans of a mummified crocodile with mummified infant crocodiles on its back. From Kom Ombo, Egypt, 650–550 BC.

The Huntarian: ‌The Kangaroo and the Moose Runs until 21 February 2016

Science Museum: Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age

Closing Soon: Museum of the History of Science: Henry Moseley: A Scientist Lost to War Runs until 31 January 2016

Museum of Science and Industry: Meet Baby Meet Baby Every Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, & Saturday

Science Museum: Leonardo da Vinci: The Mechanics of Genius 10 February 2016–4 September 2016

The Mary Rose: ‘Ringing the Changes’: Mary Rose Museum to re-open in 2016 with unrestricted views of the ship

Royal Museums Greenwich: Samuel Pepys Season 20 November 2015–28 March 2016

Royal College of Surgeons: Designing Bodies 24 November 2015–20 February 2016

Natural History Museum, London: Bauer Brothers art exhibition Runs till 26 February 2017

Royal Geographical Society: Enduring Eye: The Antarctic Legacy of Sir Ernest Shackleton and Frank Hurley 21 November 2015–28 February 2016

Enduring-Eye-RGS-14

Science Museum: Ada Lovelace Runs till 31 March 2016

British Library: 20th Century Maps 4 November 2016–1 March 2017

Royal Pavilion, Brighton: Exotic Creatures 14 November 2015–28 February 2016

National Maritime Museum: Samuel Pepys: Plague, Fire, Revolution Runs till 28 March 2016

Bethlem Museum of the Mind: The art of Bedlam: Richard Dadd Runs till 6 February 2016

Closing Soon: Oxford University Museum of Natural History: Handwritten in Stone: How William Smith and his maps changed geology Runs to 31 January 2016

National Library of Scotland: Plague! A cultural history of contagious diseases in Scotland Runs till 29 May 2016

Royal Geographical Society: The Enduring Eye: The Antarctic Legacy of Sir Ernest Shackleton and Frank Hurley 21 November 2015 – 28 February 2016

Science Museum: Churchill’s Scientists Runs till 1 March 2016

THEATRE, OPERA AND FILMS:

Gielgud Theatre: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Booking to 18 June 2016

The Cockpit – Theatre of Ideas: Jekyll and Hyde 13 January–6 February 2016

Group-Edit-Small

The Regal Theatre: The Trials of Galileo International Tour March 2014­–December 2017

New Diorama Theatre: Reptember Reloaded 10 January–1 February 2016

EVENTS:

King’s College London: Kass Lecture on the History of Medicine: On the Efficacy of Placebos: An Historian’s Perspective 18 January 2016

Warburg Institute: Maps and Society Lectures: Experiencing Early Lunar Maps through an Eighteenth-Century Collection 14 January 2016

UWTSD London Campus: The Study Day: Introduction to Egyptian Astronomy 6 February 2016

Dittrick Museum Blog: Conversations: Edge of Disaster – Vaccines and Epidemics 21 January 2016

UCL: Lecture: Henry Nicholls: The Galapagos. A Natural History 27 January 2016

The Washington Post: These are the most exciting museum happenings in 2016

Gresham College: Lecture: Babbage and Lovelace 19 January 2016

CRASSH: Cambridge: Symposium: Death and the Afterlife 22 January 2016

CRASSH: Cambridge: Workshop: Orientalism and its Institutions in the Nineteenth Century 18 February 2016

EconoTimes: Historymiami Museum to Host Largest Map Fair in the Western Hemisphere for 23rd Year 5–7 February 2016

Dittrick Museum: Book Signing, Death’s Summer Coat 20 January 2016

11th Cambridge Wellcome Lecture in the History of Medicine: Michael Stolberg: Curing Diseases and Exchanging Knowledge: Sixteenth-Century Physicians and Their Female Patients 14 January 2016

Schwetzingen: Astronomie-Tagung: Von Venus-Transit zum Schwarzen Loch 19 März 2016

Chelsea Physic Garden: Round Table Discussion: Dark brilliance: Agatha Christie, poisonous plants and murder mysteries 2 February 2016

Science Museum: Symposium: Revealing the Cosmonaut 5 February 2016

British Library: Medieval manuscripts blog: Postgraduate Open Day on our Pre-1600 Collections 1 February 2016

PAINTING OF THE WEEK:

Jan Brueghel the Elder repeatedly depicted telescopes: The Five Senses, 1617 – 1618, by two Flemish masters Jan Brueghel the Elder and Peter Paul Rubens.

Jan Brueghel the Elder repeatedly depicted telescopes:
The Five Senses, 1617 – 1618, by two Flemish masters Jan Brueghel the Elder and Peter Paul Rubens.

TELEVISION:

Notches: The Rejected: Homophile Activists in the Spotlight

SLIDE SHOW:

VIDEOS:

Youtube: Sci Fri: Things of Beauty: Scientific Instruments of Yore

Youtube: Big Old Lenses – Objectivity #51

Youtube: Numberphile: The iPhone of Slide Rules

Youtube: Natural History of Dinosaurs

Museo Galileo: Celestial Globe

Youtube: Bob Newhart – Herman Hollerith.wmv

Youtube: Fighting Firedamp – The Lamp that Saved 1,000 Lives

RADIO:

BBC Radio 4: Science Stories: Submarine for a Stuart King

BBC Radio 4: Front Row: Includes Andrea Wulf talking about her Alexander von Humboldt biography

PODCASTS:

The Telegraph: The best history podcasts

Advances in the History of Psychology: New Books in STS Podcast: Erik Linstrum on Ruling Minds

The Linnean Society: The Video Podcasts: James Sowerby: The Enlightenment’s natural historian

New Books in East Asian Studies: Tea in China: A Religious and Cultural History

University of Cambridge: CRASSH: Objects in Motion

CHF: Distillations: Episode 206: Is Space the Place? Trying to Save Humanity by Mining Asteroids

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

Notches: CfP: The History of Venereal Disease Deadline 15 January 2016

Society for Renaissance Studies: CfP: Writing Reformation Lives Wolfson College Oxford 27–28 June 2016

Canadian Society for the History of Medicine: CfP: A Palpable Thrill: An Introduction to Medical Humanities McMaster University 6–7 May 2016 Deadline 15 January 2016

Bryn Mawr College: CfP: Re:Humanities ’16: Bleeding Edge to Cutting Edge national digital humanities conference of, for, and by undergraduates 31 April–1 April 2016

Bruges: CfP: SCSC Conference: Jesuit Studies 18–20 August 2016

Queen Mary University, London: CfP: The Life of Testimony/Testimony of Lives – a life writing conference 5–6 May 2016

Cornell University: Inviting Historians of Science/Med/Tech to attend a “Boot Camp” for the History of Capitalism, July 10-23 2016 Deadline 15 January 2016

Medical History Society of New Jersey: Symposium: The Eugenics Movement in New Jersey: A Cautionary Tale 2 February 2016

University of Arizona, Tucson: CfP: Magic and Magicians in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Age 28 April–1 May 2016

University of St Andrews: CfP: Re//Generate Conference Materiality and the Afterlife of Things in the Middle Ages, 500–1500

MIHOS: CfP: Torricelli’s Opera Geometrica (1644)

University of Tartu: CfP: Nordic Network for Philosophy of Science: Fourth Annual Meeting

Dana Centre, Science Museum: CfP: Women Engineers in the Great War and after 23 April 2016

Annapolis: AIP Center for the History of Physics: CfP: The Third Biennial Early-Career Conference for Historians of the Physical Sciences 6–10 April 2016

ICOHTEC Congress Porto: CfP: Nuclear Fun? Banalization of Nuclear Technologies Through Displays 26–30 July 2016

University of Bucharest: An Interdisciplinary Master Class on the Nature of Principles in Western Thought 15–18 March 2016

Wellcome Library: History of Pre-Modern Medicine seminar series, Spring 2016

University of Groningen: Conference: Early Modern Women on Metaphysics, Religion and Science 21-23 March 2016

University of Strasbourg: Training Workshop: Revealing University Objects: From the Attic to the Public 23–27 May 2016

Max Planck Institute for the History of Science: CfP: From Knowledge to Profit? Scientific Institutions and the Commercialisation of Science 10–12 October 2016

Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy: Call for Submissions: Method, Science and Mathematics: Neo-Kantianism and Early Analytical Philosophy

University of Flensburg: The International History Philosophy and Science Teaching [IHPST]: 1st European Regional Conference 22-25 August 2016

University of Cardiff: BSPS Annual Conference 7–8 July 2016

University of Brussels: CfP: Appropriation of Isaac Newton’s thought ca. 1700–1750

Center for Philosophy of Science at Pittsburgh: Events

University of Birmingham: CfP: Teaching and Learning in the Middle Ages

New York University: Experimental Philosophy Through History 20 February 2016

LOOKING FOR WORK:

King’s College London: Georgian Papers Programme Fellowships

Wellcome Trust: Medical Humanities Advisor

UCL: CELL: Research Assistant

Queen Mary University London: Three Funded PhD Studentships: ‘Living With Feeling: Emotional Health in History, Philosophy, and Experience’. Deadline 31 January 2016

Herzog August Bibliothek, Wolfenbüttel: Research Fellowships 2017

CHF: Fellowship Applications 2016–2017 Deadline 15 January 2016

University of Liverpool: ESRC CASE Doctoral Award: Liverpool’s medical community since 1930: shaping knowledge and business networks

The Royal Society: Newton Mobility Grants

New England Regional Fellowship Consortium: Deadline 1 February 2016

New York Public Library: Head of Special Collections Cataloging

University of Strasbourg: Training Workshop: Revealing University Objects: From the Attics to the Public 23–27 May 2016

Advances in the History of Psychology: Neuro History Grants @ Osler Library

University of Leeds: Postgrad Leeds

 

 


Viewing all 200 articles
Browse latest View live