Conversations with Tyler - Patricia Fara on Newton, Scientific Progress, and the Benefits of Unhistoric Acts
Episode Date: February 24, 2021Patricia Fara is a historian of science at Cambridge University and well-known for her writings on women in science. Her forthcoming book, Life After Gravity: Isaac Newton's London Career, details th...e life of the titan of the so-called Scientific Revolution after his famous (though perhaps mythological) discovery under the apple tree. Her work emphasizes science as a long, continuous process composed of incremental contributions–in which women throughout history have taken a crucial part–rather than the sole province of a few monolithic innovators. Patricia joined Tyler to discuss why Newton left Cambridge to run The Royal Mint, why he was so productive during the Great Plague, why the "Scientific Revolution" should instead be understood as a gradual process, what the Antikythera device tells us about science in the ancient world, the influence of Erasmus Darwin on his grandson, why more people should know Dorothy Hodgkin, how George Eliot inspired her to commit unhistoric acts, why she opposes any kind of sex-segregated schooling, her early experience in a startup, what modern students of science can learn from studying Renaissance art, the reasons she considers Madame Lavoisier to be the greatest female science illustrator, the unusual work habit brought to her attention by house guests, the book of caricatures she'd like to write next, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded January 15th, 2021 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University,
bridging the gap between academic ideas and real-world problems.
Learn more at Mercadis.org.
And for more conversations, including videos, transcripts, and upcoming dates,
visit Conversationswithtyler.com.
Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
I'm very happy to be here today with Patricia Farah.
I've read and enjoyed all of her books.
She is a historian of science at Cambridge University.
Her next forthcoming book is called Life After Gravity, Isaac Newton's London career.
She's also well known for her writings on women in science,
and she appears often on BBC, typically on topics related to science.
Patricia, welcome.
Well, thank you very much for inviting me.
I'm very glad to be on the show.
Let's start with Isaac Newton.
How was it that he died rich?
He earned his money from several different ways. When he went down to London, he earned far more than he ever did as a Cambridge professor because he was running the London Mint. So he got a fat salary for that. He also got a premium, a reward for every single gold coin that was minted. He invested in global trading companies like the East India Company, for example, that were sending guns and textiles out to Africa and then shipping enslaved people.
over to the Americas.
And he also invested in other stock market companies.
So there was this famous occasion.
It's the anniversary this year of what's called the South Sea bubble.
When he invested a small fortune in a new company, the South Sea company,
and he watched the levels rise.
And he stayed in there and he sold when the stocks had gone up.
So he made a small fortune.
But then he made the classic beginner's era.
He invested in again at a higher.
price and he watched the value crash. So he did lose several million in today's currency on that
particular venture. But in general, when he died, he was an extremely rich man. And you can tell
that the inventory of his possessions runs to a vellum scroll that's 17 feet long. And what was it
that he collected so obsessively to have all these possessions? Well, a lot of it was equipment for
catering. I mean, he's got this reputation for being very anti-social. But,
that he had hundreds of plates and sets of cutlery and things like that.
He also had that ultimate Georgian luxury.
He owned two silver chamber pots.
He spent money on having a good number of portraits of himself painted
that he would send out to other people as sort of bribes or as rewards for their allegiance to him.
He had furniture, he had decorations, he had a carriage,
he had a sedan chair tucked in the stables.
He had lots of servants.
Now, as you know, Newton spends what, over 30 years working at the Mint?
Yes.
What's your model of why he did this?
How much was it for income?
Did he think he was done with major contributions, say, to physics and optics?
How do you think about that decision in his life?
I think he was very frustrated with being at Cambridge.
He applied for several positions there, which he didn't get.
He was, in theological terms, he was rather odds with everybody else at Cambridge.
because he was a very, very devout believer in God,
but he didn't adhere to the traditional to the Orthodox Anglican theological belief in the Trinity.
So that was difficult for him.
So he'd been trying to leave Cambridge for some time.
And he had a very close friend, Charles Montague, the Earl of Halifax,
who was Chancellor of the Exchequer, a very influential man.
And he managed to find Newton his very prestigious job at the Mint that paid a good salary.
And the minute Newton heard about it, he downed tools at Cambridge, rushed down to London,
and he'd moved and started a new life within a few months.
Now, why was the Mint located next to the weapons ordinance in London?
The Mint was traditionally located right inside the Tower of London.
And if you go to London now as a tourist, in normal times when you go,
you can be shown round the Mint, and it squashed into the inner and outer walls of the fortifications of the Tower,
right on the edge of the river.
So it's in an ideal location for all the gold coming in from Africa.
And it was close to Westminster and royalties and parliament.
So that was also a convenient location.
Newton didn't like being physically in the mint.
He was given a house that had walls all around the garden so you couldn't see anything.
But the worst thing was that it was very noisy.
At that time, there was a zoo in the tower.
And so he was kept awake all night by the roaring of the lions and the other animals in the zoo.
There was also the clanking of all the mint machinery.
And there were also, because it was the tower, it was a military fortification,
there were many soldiers there and they were riding around on horses and doing all their drill
and all the stuff that soldiers do.
So after a few months he left the tower because he really didn't like living there.
And he worked there one day a week, but he did most of his work at home.
And what do you think about Newton's basic idea on silver re-coignage?
Bring in all the silver coins, melt them down, reissue at a lower value.
Was he right about that or not?
Or do you side with John Locke?
He actually didn't want to do that.
So there was a big consultation when he was still in Cambridge.
And the trouble was that coins in those days were made of valuable metal.
So if you've got a silver coin that was worth a pound, the silver in it was itself worth a pound in.
money. It's not like dollars or cents
now where it's a bit of paper, which
a bit of paper, a dollar bill, is
in itself absolutely worthless.
And what criminals did
was a file bits off
the edge of these silver coins. So they
had lots of little silver shavings, which
they could melt down and turn
into silver and get rich that way. But that meant
the currency, the coins, were
getting lower and lower and lower
in value. And Newton's first
job, when he got to the mint,
was call in all the
currency. Every single coin was meant to go to the mint. Then he melted it all down and he started
again with new coins that had milled edges like modern coins do. So they're much, much more difficult to
scrape or to forge. And then he reissued those, but quite a lot of things went wrong. And like all
those stories, it was a tale of the rich got richer and the poor got poorer.
But why think that melting down the coins and reissuing them will solve the
problem. Don't you just reenact the same scenario each time all over again? No, you don't, because he
changed the way that coins were made. He modernized it. He kept the dyes, the molds for making the
coins were highly secret, and that made the coins much more difficult to forge. But also the fact that
all the coins have this milled edge, the little ridges around the rim of the coin, meant that you
couldn't shave a bit off because it would be noticeable. So nobody in a shot, nobody would accept that coin
because they'd immediately see that it wasn't worth its full value.
Now, Newton, as you know, was very interested in alchemy.
Was this just craziness on his part?
Or is there a way to read him that this is early nanotechnology and he was ahead of his time?
Or is he just out to lunch?
No, he was definitely not out to lunch.
Alchemy was a very serious pursuit.
It's had a very bad press.
It's always associated with people who were cranks or magicians.
If you think about the classic example of alchemy is turned,
leading lead into gold. That's changing something that is base, that's low, that's valueless,
that's dirty, changing it into something very valuable. When alchemists looked out on the world,
they could see everything around them changing. So, for example, acorns were growing into trees,
or babies were growing into adults, or wood was buried forest, was turning into coal.
So this idea of change seemed to make a lot of sense to them.
And the idea was that just as a base metal lead can be transmitted into gold,
so if you pray, you can cleanse your own soul and get nearer to God.
And it was that sort of spiritual alchemy that Newton believed in.
But he pursued a huge amount of alchemical research.
He was very expert in alchemy.
And many of his alchemical beliefs actually got carried over into his natural philosophy.
So you can't draw a hard line between.
alchemy that's rubbish and science that's legitimate and that science is right. It's not like that
at all. You have this very difficult problem of explaining how it is that gravity operates, because
if you think about it, it's something we still really haven't resolved. If you've got two
lumps of matter, like the earth and the moon, is made of inner material, how is it that somehow
they can attract each other, that they've got an innate power? And that's the sort of question
that science has never really been able to answer.
And he drew on his alchemical theories
to provide different mechanisms to justify
and to explain his theory of universal gravity.
So in many people's view of the world,
God created the universe,
and then God disappeared and left it to run itself like a clock.
Newton's idea was that God was constantly present
throughout the universe.
He used the word imminent.
He's imminent throughout the universe.
And when a comet comes in,
comets, in his view,
are sent by God,
and they've got fairy tales
that have got vegetative,
alive matter in them
that reanimate the universe.
So this very sort of vibrant,
vital living view of the universe
was one that's absent from modern physics
and one that he developed
from his alchemical research.
Now, Newton's notion of the ether in his optics, was that crazy? Was that a precursor of dark matter?
Is ether God? What's your take on that?
So in the optics, as it suggests, the name suggests, it's a book about optics. But at the end, he added 31 questions or queries, as he called them.
And that was a really good opportunity for him to float some really outlandish ideas and people who put a question mark at the end.
then nobody could accuse him of actually believing that.
He said, oh, I was just speculating.
In the queries of the optics, he formulated two different views of gravity.
One is the one that there's some sort of invisible power that stretches out through empty space
and attracts the sun to the moon or the apple to the ground.
The other version is that there's something called an ether,
and that the ether is made up of tiny, tiny, tiny, invisible particles.
that you can't weigh, you can't see them, you can't smell them, but they pervade everywhere.
And then gravity can travel through that ether, just like sound is transmitted through air or through water.
And that basic model sounds really weird now.
But throughout the 19th century, regular scientists, very eminent, prominent scientists, all believed in the ether,
and they developed models of it, and it only finally disappeared in 1905 when Albert Einstein
introduced his theory of relativity, and one of his aims in doing that is to dispense of the ether,
to say it's a hypothetical substance, and it's no longer needed.
Did Newton ever have sex?
When he died, he told his doctor that he was a virgin, but of course that can't be proved.
He certainly had a very close emotional relationship with at least one young man,
but the concept of homosexuality is a 19th century one.
So he might well have had a very, very intense emotional relationship with young men
without actually having had sexual relationships with them.
Why was Newton so productive during the London plague?
Was he self-isolated?
Was he sending letters back and forth earlier in his career?
before your book starts.
It's in your other book about Newton.
Oh, that's right.
So during the pandemic, which we might now call it,
except it wasn't caused by a virus,
yeah, he retreated to his country cottage,
which now is about an hour by car away from Cambridge.
And that's when he supposedly sat beneath a tree in the garden
and watched an apple fall to the ground
and conceived the theory of gravity.
We can never know whether that happened,
but it was a story that he only started telling about five years before he died.
And he did tell it to four separate people.
So it sounds as though he was creating a mythological version of scientific creativity.
And the story was unknown for decades.
It was only really in the 19th century that the story of the apple tree came back.
And now, of course, it was though he were a secular saint.
He has an attribute like St. Catherine has a wheel.
Well, Isaac Newton has his apple.
Now, looking to the history of science more broadly,
investigators have known about static electricity for a long, long time, right, since the ancient Greeks.
If it wasn't Benjamin Franklin, who is actually the researcher who deserves credit for discovering what you might call the full power of electricity?
How does that happen exactly?
I think the person who deserves most credit for identifying it was Alessandro Volta.
the Italian researcher, because you're right, people had been able to generate static electricity for a long while.
There was a big argument. Is the electricity generated by a machine, by human beings? Is that the same
sort of electricity as exists inside our bodies? And what Volta was able to do, he created a thing
called a pile, which is a precursor of a modern battery. And he managed to produce a current of
electricity, and he showed that it's the same as the electricity that's in our bodies. So I think
Alessandro Volta is the most important person in the creation of current electricity, as opposed
to static electricity. So many factors seem to lie behind the origins of the scientific revolution
in England but also in Europe more generally,
which do you think is the underrated or under-discussed cause of the scientific revolution?
I personally don't think there was a scientific revolution.
I think it's a very inappropriate label.
And if you meet historians of science on the European continent,
it's something they haven't really heard of.
It was a term that was really introduced during the 20th century,
and it became particularly important after the Second World War,
when science was compared with religion
and the sort of rather idealistic view
was that there could be a universal language of science,
I suppose Isaac Newton's Principia would be sort of like the Bible of the new science,
and that could spread internationally.
And it went along with a very sort of pacifist aim
to reduce international tensions.
And this concept, the label the Scientific Revolution,
became really important during the second half of the 20th century
But since then, a lot of historians have strongly challenged it.
So I don't personally don't think it's a very good label.
But isn't there something to the notion that say Boyle, Cavendish and Hook,
what they did, which was quite significant, typically multifaceted,
it couldn't have happened in the year 1500,
but it could have happened and indeed it did happen in the years they lived in.
There was additional amount of wealth.
There was some institutional support for science.
There were royal societies. There's the beginnings of professionalization. Why shouldn't we see that as a discrete break in the history of science?
Because you've just given precisely all the reasons why I think it was a continuous effect. And you're quite right, it couldn't have happened in 1500 because the other social factors weren't in place. But the name of a revolution suggests that something changes precipitately and very quickly. I think it's quite relevant to remember that the word scientist,
wasn't even invented until the 1830s, and in this country, it didn't become common until late 19th, early 20th century.
So science, as we know it, didn't exist in the 16th, 17th century, which is where the scientific revolution is usually placed.
And the term scientific revolution implies that you go from a non-scientific state to a very scientific sort of position.
And that actually didn't happen.
and there was a long process of continuity.
And you could see the 18th century as being extremely important
for developing the idea of careers,
outside the church and the law,
which were the traditional careers,
developing different sorts of careers
and making science into a professional activity,
and that's what happened in the 19th century.
Now, you've written a book on 4,000 years of the history of science.
How well do you feel we understand the science,
the scientific understanding of the ancient world?
I looked back on that book, which I wrote about, I think came out about 15 years ago.
And when I wrote it, I was trying extremely hard to get away from a Eurocentric approach
and to write an international history of science.
And since then, I think history of science has become still more global and international.
So I think we do know a lot about the ancient world.
I think, unfortunately, we still don't take sufficient account of other cultures outside Greece and Rome,
as seen as being particularly important.
And I think more and more we have to look at what was happening in other parts of the world
and recognize that not everything originated with Europe.
If we look, say, at the breeding and origins of corn, which happens in central Mexico,
by a group of people now misleadingly called the Aztecs. How much do we understand about how that
happened? How much do we know about their science? Do we think they just got lucky? If we knew everything,
how many big surprises would there be? Because it's a remarkable achievement, right? They take a
weed and they make it into a food stuff that later fuels the industrial revolution.
Yes, but you could say, I mean, the same of the Egyptians, they cultivated a weed and turned it
into something that we used to print books on and use for transmitting knowledge. I think a lot of
of ancient cultures, ancient civilizations, had very advanced levels of knowledge, but they weren't
directing it to what we would call science. They wanted to live better. They wanted to be more
healthy. They wanted to grow more crops. They wanted to get from one place to another. They
wanted to become rich. And to do all those things, they developed techniques that later got
taken over and were adapted and now seen as being part of science. Some number of years ago,
researchers discover what's called the Anticthera mechanism from the ancient world.
It seems to be a kind of computational device.
Do we need to revise everything we had thought about the ancients with regard to science?
Or is this just a marginal change in our understanding of what they were able to do?
What else haven't we discovered from the ancient world?
I think the Antikythera device, which was an ancient mechanical clock from the Greek era,
which was discovered in the early 20th century,
is an absolutely magnificent example of the sort of thing that I'm talking about
because according to the standard historical works,
such an elaborate set of gears and such an intricate understanding of what's going on in the heavens,
but particularly the mechanical work that was involved,
couldn't possibly have happened before the Middle Ages.
And here there is this clock that's long, long preceding the Middle Ages.
And the fact that one has been found, which is so technically proficient,
suggests, I mean, it's sort of really confirmed,
that there must have been many, many others as well.
And what historians have started doing
is rereading ancient texts
and re-interpreting different references
to pick up indications that this sort of technology
did exist long before we thought it ever did.
What should undergraduate science students know about the history of science?
Oh, I think I would like to make history of science compulsory
for all science students.
I think one thing that they learn, they obviously learn about debates of the past.
A lot of the ethical considerations involved in previous debates are still very, very relevant now.
So I think that's very useful for them.
Another reason for them to learn history of science is that if they're scientists,
they're taught how to carry out calculations and how to advance from a certain base of knowledge
and to produce new knowledge.
What historians of science do is argue,
and interpret and find ways of expressing their own point of view.
So we teach science students how to write essays, how to present their own position.
And that's a skill that everybody is going to need.
If you're writing a grant application, you need to be able to present your ideas clearly.
And the other reason why I think every science student should learn history of science
is that the students I teach absolutely love it because they have an opportunity to argue
and to express their own ideas and things.
for themselves. And it's something that students really, really enjoy, as well as learning a lot from.
How valuable is Thomas Coon for understanding the history of science?
So Thomas Coon introduced, we didn't introduce it himself. He developed earlier ideas,
and it has come to represent this idea that science doesn't proceed in a straight line of up
the mountain of truth, that it proceeds through revolutions so that people get hold of a fixed idea
like, for example, they know, they know in their absolute hearts that the sun goes
round the earth, they know that the sun goes around the earth, but then more and more
evidence comes up that really argues against that belief and then there becomes a sort of
a crisis when the evidence overwhelms the previous belief and you flip into a new paradigm
and go for a different belief that the earth goes around the sun. I think an enormous
number of holes have been picked in Thomas Coon's book, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.
And I think Thomas Coon himself would agree with many of those.
On the other hand, it was a key book in the way that it influenced people and persuaded them
to think about the interaction between science and society in a different way.
So it's been enormously influential, although I don't really agree with all that much of it.
And what is it from philosophy of science that you find most valuable in understanding the history of science, if not Kuhn?
I suppose discussions about the nature of truth and objectivity and whether you can ever attain truth and what does that mean.
Yes, the sort of relationships, the theoretical, the philosophical relationships between an observation and a fact and a theory.
It's much more complicated than most people are led to believe.
In the history of science, is the abacus overrated or underrated in its import?
The abacus.
The abacus.
I don't think it is rated particularly highly in the history.
I mean, it's a good example of something that wasn't invented for scientific purposes,
but was developed by merchants when they're trading.
You need to add out the bills and work out, I don't know how much.
six metres of cloth that $10 a meter is going to cost.
So it's a good example of an instrument that was not developed for scientific reasons,
but for other reasons in this instance, trading and marketing.
Why is Queen Christina of Sweden an important figure for the history of science?
So Queen Christina of Science, well, she's important because she was a very, very intelligent
woman and she was lucky enough to be rich so she could study science.
and she collected an intellectual court around her,
and she attracted René Descartes, the French philosopher, to her court to come and be her tutor.
So she learned maths and physics from Descartes, one of Europe's leading philosophers at the time,
but it's quite cold in Sweden, unlike France, and he got very chilled, and he caught some illness,
and he died while he was in Sweden with her.
So that's what she's best known for.
but she was also revered in her own age as Athena, as Minerva, the goddess of wisdom.
And that became a very common emblem.
There's various busts and pictures of Queen Christina, dressed like Minerva, wearing a helmet,
because she was also the goddess of war, wearing a helmet with an owl on the top.
So I think Queen Christina was also important for launching a tradition of learned Minervas of women
who were capable of understanding scientific ideas.
Which is to you the most interesting city in Northern England?
Well, if I can extend Northern England of South a bit to the Midlands,
I would say Litchfield, because that's where Erasmus Darwin lived,
who was Charles Darwin's grandfather.
Litchfield is near Birmingham,
and in the 18th century, Birmingham was quite small and insignificant,
and Lichfield was very important.
And that's where Darwin developed one of the earliest theories of evolution to be expressed in Britain.
Do you think that Charles Darwin noticed his own genetic resemblance to his grandfather, Erasmus?
Oh, Charles Darwin was very impressed by his father.
For one thing, physically, they both had a large nose.
They both had a stammer.
That was something that Charles Darwin commented on.
He also inherited the family aversion to alcohol.
When Charles Darwin was a medical student in Edinburgh, he had to read Erasmus Darwin's medical textbook, which was called Zoonomia.
And it was in Zoonomia that in the pages at the end that Erasmus Darwin first suggested evolutionary ideas.
And when Charles Darwin went on the Beagle voyage, when he started taking notes about all the flora and fauna that he saw, he had several notebooks.
and there's one notebook that's got his first sketch of an evolutionary branching tree.
And that notebook is called zoonomia.
So I think that's just one example of how influential his grandfather's intellectual ideas were,
but also his general approach to life is aversion to slavery, for example.
Why do you think it took the world so long to unravel the geological insights
that were behind Darwin's theory of evolution.
So you need to see that the Earth has changed.
You see fossils in a historical record.
You see sediments of Earth corresponding to different eras of time.
You would think something like that could have been figured out by the Romans.
But it really comes quite late in the history of science.
Why?
Well, one reason why it came late in Europe was because of Christian beliefs.
I mean, what it says in the Bible, it says in the Bible,
that the earth was created in six days and on the seventh day God rested,
but more importantly, I think the idea of evolution,
that God created the world just as it is now.
And I think it took a long time to overturn those ideas,
but long before Charles Darwin formulated his idea of evolution by natural selection,
that view of the permanence and the unchanging nature of the earth
had been overturned a long while previously
and all the geological information was already in place by then.
So if you go back, for example, even to Robert Hook,
who was a contemporary of Isaac Newton,
during the plague when Isaac Newton was in his country home at Walsorp,
Robert Hook took refuge at a country house in Surrey
and he went for long walks over the downs
and he found lots of fossils of marine organisms.
So already in the middle of the 17th century, Robert Hooke was arguing that there must once have been a sea that lay over that land because he was finding all these marine fossils.
So it's a long, slow process. I think it's easy, in retrospect, it's quite easy to say, well, why did it take so long for people to discover that?
One reason is that they had other things to do. Another reason is that during the 18th and 19th centuries, when all the new canals and,
and the railways were being built, then people started slicing down inside the earth,
and they could see, for the first time, they could see all those layers, all those geological strata.
So again, it was a different activity improving transport that stimulated the scientific insights.
Linnaeus comes up with his system for classifying plants in what, 1730s, 1740s.
That also seems quite late.
We've had plants around forever.
Christianity is not an obstacle there.
Why does that development take so long?
Plants had been classified for many, many centuries.
They're just being classified in a different way.
But not with unique identifiers, right?
Everyone would have their own system.
There were multiple dimensions.
What do you use plants for?
Whereas the Linnaean system, it more or less did uniquely identify plants,
almost like a search engine in a way that other researchers could work with.
And that's what took so long.
because people classified plants according to why they needed to use them.
Plants mostly used for food and for drugs.
In John Ray in the 17th century did introduce a classification system.
It was a different classification system.
By the time Linnaeus proposed his, there was several others,
and his was strongly opposed.
It's got several important defects.
It's completely arbitrary the way that it counts
the sexual characteristics of the flowers. There's also roughly half flora don't have flowers that
you can count the sexual characteristics in that way. So it's a deeply flawed system that was
much criticised at the time. And it was like all new scientific ideas, it had to be promoted.
There had to be almost a sort of public relations exercise to make sure that Lanayan botany was
accepted rather than another one. And it's now being replaced. I mean, there's a lot of
debate about whether it is the best and the most useful classification system. So it's not
absolutely right. It's just one system of doing it. If we look at 18th century portraits,
either of scientists or of patrons, they rarely seem to be happy. Why is that? Perhaps they don't
look happy because they have to sit still for a long while being painted. That's certainly true of
the early photographs that people had to pose for a long while, because portraits were painted,
if they were painted of a man,
it's different for a woman,
but a portrait was painted of a man
was to show his importance
and his seriousness and his gravitas.
So they didn't necessarily show him as unhappy.
In the 18th century,
they were shown mainly as being sort of noble and austere.
It was in the 17th century,
a lot of them actually were given very melancholic expressions,
someone like the Darius, John Evelyn, for example,
or Isaac Newton himself.
because being melancholy was associated with scholarship,
the idea that you would sit inside in a darkened room
and you had very white skin and fine bones.
So your physical attributes reflected the brilliance of your brain.
Who is the great underrated British visual artist in all of British history?
Well, one of my favourite pictures,
she's not particularly underrated, is by Muggy Hamlin.
and the reason it's my favorite pictures
is because she shows Dorothy Hodgkin,
who is the only British woman to have won a Nobel Prize for Science,
and very, very few people have heard of her.
I would like to see Maggie Hamlin more representative,
but also this particular portrait.
Dorothy Hodgkin, she won the Nobel Prize,
she identified the molecular structures
through x-ray crystallography.
She identified insulin,
vitamin B, and penicillin.
She was also a very affable, lovely person
who campaigned for maternity leave for women in the universities,
who was very supportive of other women.
And she doesn't have a sort of glamorous,
sort of heroic, tragic tale,
like Rosalind Franklin, for example.
She was just an ordinary woman
who got on and she did her science,
and she had four children and she was very supportive of her peers
and everybody liked her.
She seems to me that she is the ideal role model for a scientist.
And Maggie Hamlin has painted a very, very sympathetic portrait of her
as an elderly lady borrowing amongst her papers
and she's painted her with four arms
because she's so busy that her arms are dashing around all over the place
and she's got a big model of a molecule in the middle of her desk
to show off her achievements.
Now, on the role of women in the history of science,
Londa Schiebinger has written that early women's scientific contributions
were most prominent in, and I quote,
illustrating, calculating, or observing.
Do you agree? And if so, why was that the case?
Science was being carried out at home
before the 19th century,
not much was happening in universities or in public laboratories.
So a lot of women were at home,
and they were essentially working with their brothers
or their fathers or their husbands,
they weren't allowed to go to university.
So unless they were very rich and could afford a private tutor,
they didn't have the opportunity to learn all the scientific theories
that men could because men were allowed to study those sort of subjects.
But if you think about the history of science,
of course there are individuals like Newton and Einstein
who make great discoveries.
But science isn't just about that.
You have to be able to communicate.
ideas from one person to another, from one country to another. And if you think about that sort of
model of science, if you think of science as being continuous, not as a sort of range of mountain
peaks with individual geniuses standing on top of them, then women played a very, very
important role because teaching, illustrating, drawing, editing, running museums,
collecting different sorts of specimens,
those are all absolutely crucial.
So if you think of Isaac Newton,
he wrote his Principia
in a very complicated geometrical language,
and he said he deliberately made it very difficult
because what he said was,
I don't want to be bothered by little smatterers in mathematics.
So ordinary people, even quite skilled mathematicians,
found his book impossible to approach.
So it was only when other people translated it or explained the ideas in it in simpler terms
that his vision, supposedly under the apple tree, managed to spread around the world.
And women played a very important role in that sort of communication and spread of science.
So I agree with Landa Shevinger, but I also think that we need to rewrite how we think about the history of science and what's important about the history of science.
Science is about collaboration. It's about cooperation. It's not about unique effort. And women were very important in that process.
Between 1650 and 1710, 14% of German astronomers were women, arguably higher than is the case today. How did that happen?
Because astronomy was, it is a subject now that you study at university, but it was also, it was a craft to study astronomy, to study the stars, you need to.
to make instruments and the instruments were being made at home.
The guild structure was very strong in Germany.
And a lot of women in England as well
who were working in instrument-making shops inherited their father's business
or they were trained up from when they were small children
to work with their father.
And that sort of structure was stronger in Germany than it was in England.
But there were also some important female astronomers.
So, for example, the first astronomical,
Royal at Greenwich when the observatory was built in the 17th century, the first astronomer
Royal was John Flamsteed.
And his wife, Joanna, was also a good astronomer, and she was very good at carrying out
all the mathematical calculations that are needed to transform the data, the readings of the
stars, to transform those data into measurements that can be recorded in a star catalogue.
Another excellent example of that is Caroline Herschel, who came over from Germany with her brother William,
and they set up in Bath together.
And she was going to be a musician.
And she started on her musical career.
But then William Herschel got the astronomy bug, and he persuaded her to devote her life to helping him.
And she was out there all night, observing on the telescope, also carrying out this work of
translating raw data into figures that could be recorded in the style catalog. And she also
discovered, on her own, she discovered several new comets. And she became very well known for that
in the late 18th century. Why are women today so prominent in vaccine science compared to say
theoretical physics? I'm glad they're prominent in some science. That's absolutely excellent.
I think the problem with theoretical physics, I think there aren't enough good teachers in the girls' schools.
I think that's one problem.
I also think we still have a cultural bias, which is very unfortunate, which suggests that women are not clever enough to do physics.
I personally really resent that because I've got a degree in physics from Oxford.
I think a lot of men in physics, unfortunately, are still unwilling to recruit or to promote female scientists.
So those are some of the prejudices that we have to smash down.
What do you think of the literature on the paradox of gender equality and STEM?
So for instance, if you go to many of the Muslim nations where women are quite oppressed,
they're quite a high percentage of STEM students.
If you go to the Nordic nations where women really have pretty strong rights, they're quite a low percentage of the STEM students.
Does that suggest it's really about preferences and not about social constraints?
Yeah, I think those data are very, very interesting.
And I unfortunately don't know enough about the situation in Muslim countries.
And as I understand it, it's different in, well, naturally it's different in different countries.
But that does very strongly confirm what I was saying, that it's a sort of social prejudice, a set of cultural
beliefs rather than an intrinsic inability of women to do physics.
And as I understand it, a lot of women in Arab nations who go into science at university
level then end up teaching other women.
And I think that's something that we could benefit from in this country,
whereas where a lot of the problem starts at school,
that girls aren't well taught and they're discouraged from carrying out subjects like
computer science or physics.
In your path to getting a physics PhD, as a woman, what was the greatest barrier or obstacle you faced?
I haven't got a physics PhD. I graduated in physics. And that was at a time when, because I got a good degree result, I was offered a position as a PhD student, which would be fully funded by the government. Life was much better back then. And I turned it down because I didn't want to spend the next three years.
in a laboratory, fine-tuning instruments and working out some number to the 10th place of
decimals. So I made a positive decision that I was bored by physics. I wasn't very good at
the practical aspect anyway. And I wanted to get out in the world and I wanted to do something
different. Now, in one of your interviews, you said the following, this is a quotation. For example,
when I first finished reading George Elliott's Middle March in my early 20s, I resolved to live by her
concluding insight that even unhistoric acts, small ones that seemed within my grasp, could have
cumulative beneficial effects.
Yes.
How has that decision shaped your life?
Oh, I think I still try to abide by that. So, for example, I was what's called the senior
tutor of a college, which is sort of rather like a dean in America, I believe. And I was
responsible for the pastoral well-being and the educational welfare of about seven
100 students, I think, something like that, each year.
And the aspect of that work that gave me most pleasure and most gratification was when a student
was in deep distress for some reason or another, and I managed to help that individual student
and help them sort of regain their life and get back to work and become a happy student
again. And I sort of think that's the sort of thing that George Elliott was talking about,
that I had hope that I had a big influence on individual lives. And that was the most
rewarding aspect of my career. Who first spotted your talent and science?
Oh, when I was at school, a teacher. And I was, I think in retrospect, I was at a very
competitive girls' school. I was very, very good at science and maths, but I was pretty good at
English and history as well. And I was always, sorry, it sounds like I'm boasting, but I was always
top of the form. No, you're supposed to boast. That's the purpose of our last segment.
Okay. Well, I was always top of the form. There's lots of other qualities which I don't have,
but intellectually, I was a year younger than everybody else, and I was at the top of the form.
So I was a very clever person. Intellectually, I was very clever, not in all sorts of other ways.
And because it was a high-powered girls' school, I think all the teachers and my parents were absolutely delighted that they had a girl, a teenage girl, who was very, very good at science and obviously could succeed.
And I was sort of steered into studying science without anybody, including me, seriously questioning whether that was what I actually wanted to do.
And I was very intellectually competent, so I passed all my exam.
and I went to Oxford and I got a very good degree.
But I'm far happier now, now that I've undertaken a historical subject
and I'm more on the sort of art side.
And perhaps that's what I should have done when I was at school,
but no one ever knows that at the time.
Why is it you think you didn't suffer from so much of what is sometimes called
a gender confidence cap?
Oh, I did enormously.
I mean, I'm much older now.
I've sort of slightly had time to get over it.
But yes, I was hugely unconfident, not so much when I was at university,
but after I left university, what I discovered was that I should never, ever admit
that I had a degree in physics from Oxford.
Because if I was at a nightclub or a party or something,
there would soon be this big empty space all around me.
And I felt at that time there was a double image.
I was being encouraged to succeed intellectually as a scientist, but I also, there was still
that older role model that I had to be the perfect wife and the perfect mother, and I had
to have my nail varnish all sorted out. And so there was this double role model, and I was sort of
trying to fill both, and I felt that I was fulfilling neither. And I don't think it was really until
my 40s or 50s that I started feeling confident.
Are you a fan of segregated single-sex education, like
Girl schools? No, I'm not. And there are still a couple of colleges at Cambridge, which are single-sex,
and I have been quite consistently outspoken about saying that I personally think that that's wrong.
For junior high school? No, I think education should be mixed all the way up. I think we've just got to,
we're never going to get away from gender discrimination if we keep separating people. And we've got to bring them together.
I mean, I think achieving gender equality isn't just a matter of improving the position of women.
We've also got to change the attitude of men and the attitude of men and women towards their lives and towards work.
And that's one of the things I find it wonderful when I walk around Cambridge now.
And I see young fathers taking their children to school or playing with their children.
and I think that's a cooperative parental approach towards their children is fantastic.
It's wonderful for the children.
And it is also very rewarding for the parents as well, for both parents, particularly the father.
And I think we've got to get away from this idea that work is what really matters,
because it's life that matters and how happy you are.
That's far more important than what work you managed to do.
How did your startup experience teach you how to write?
my startup experience, how do you mean by that?
Yes. Well, you talk about this in one of your interviews,
that you had a small, sort of within the family tech company of sorts,
and you had to do writing for the company.
Right, yeah, okay.
So my husband and I, very foolishly, probably, in our early 20s,
both left our work, and we set up a small company making educational material
about statistics and about computers.
and my role in that was to write the script.
So I had to translate quite complex ideas about computer programming and about statistics,
which I already knew about them,
but I had to translate them into very simple phrases,
and each one had to be matched to an illustration.
And I think that's probably why I have so many images in my book,
because we were making what they don't exist now,
but they were called take slide programs,
the 35-millimeter slides that were synchronized with a tape cassette.
So you had to present an image and an idea together in very simple, basic terms.
And I think that was fantastic intellectual training.
What do we need to do then to produce more highly intelligent popular writers on science?
If you needed to learn to write that way, that suggests it's pretty hard to get more through the pipeline.
Well, my remedy naturally would be to teach them all history of science. And the latest book, I don't know, I assume it's come out in America, Merlin Sheldrake's Entangled Lives. He was one of my students and he did History of Science when he was at Cambridge. And he is an excellent example of how someone who studied history of science can also be a brilliant scientist and a brilliant writer.
What do you find most rewarding in the visual arts
because your writing is suffused with images, as are your talks?
I think pictures are very important.
Pictures include a huge amount of information.
Many types of information can only be communicated visually.
It's just personally, I love going to art galleries.
And I found it a very rewarding way of teaching
because at the beginning of the academic year,
you've got a group of students and they're all very nervous, not just of me, they're nervous of each other.
They don't want to embarrass themselves in front of the other students.
So if I show them a picture, everybody can say something about a picture.
They can say, well, that's a man and a woman sitting at a table.
By encouraging them to explore the picture, more and more ideas come out.
And I think it's a very helpful way to start a conversation about what's happening and what all the
subtexts are and what all the symbols are. If you go back to the Renaissance
the 17th century, it was traditional that the frontispiece of a book, the image opposite
the title page, the frontist piece carried a visual summary of the argument of the whole
book. That was true, I suppose, the latest famous example was in the middle of the 19th century,
Charles Lyle's famous book on geology.
It had a frontist piece about the temple of Serapis,
and that summarised his whole theory about the temple's sinking and rising,
so on the pillars of the temple,
you could see boreholes from the marine organisms
where it had been submerged below the waters.
I think that's an old tradition to summarize an argument in pictures,
and I think perhaps it's one we could valuably get back to.
Who is the greatest female illustrator of science?
Oh, Madame Lavoisier.
She was Marie-Lauze-Lau-Lau-Sier.
She was married to Antoine LeVoisier,
who was the French chemist who introduced a lot of the symbols that we've got today.
He introduced the idea that you have an equation in chemistry,
and all the weights have to be the same on both sides.
And when they got married, she was only 13.
And the first thing she did was learn English,
which he never did.
So she was absolutely essential in his work
with all the English chemists
and the people like Benjamin Franklin
from the States and Joseph Priestley from English.
And he published a big book,
a revolutionary book of chemistry.
It was published during the French Revolution.
He published a book which is commonly regarded
as a very revolutionary book.
It's regarded as a foundation of modern chemistry.
And it's got 12 plates in it.
and each of those plates shows an instrument and takes it apart
so that somebody who reads a book in Berlin or New York or London
could replicate Lavoisier's results precisely
and build an instrument that was exactly the same as the one that he was using.
And she drew all those plates.
There's a famous portrait of them.
It's in the Metropolitan in New York.
A big portrait, a double portrait,
of the Lavoisier couple.
And on his side of the picture,
there's lots of glass instruments
and bowls and tubes.
And on her side of the picture,
she's looking very beautiful and glamorous,
but on her side of the picture,
there's a big portfolio.
And she was an art student.
And she learnt from Davy,
the man who painted the double portrait.
And all her illustrations,
her sketches still survive
at Cornell University in the archive.
And there's pictures of her,
made by her showing her husband's laboratory.
And she shows herself sitting in the middle of the laboratory,
and she's writing down all the observations,
and she's very, very much involved in the scientific work.
So there's two different kinds of illustration that she did.
One was technical illustrations for the book,
and the other was this illustration showing science not as a sole product of Lavoisier's brain,
but as a collective work, there's about 10 people in the picture,
and it includes her as a woman right at the centre of the Wazia science.
And for botany, who is an important illustrator?
Who was an important illustrator for the development of the science of botany?
Oh, for botany.
Forgive my American accent.
Sorry, sorry, an important illustrator.
Well, one of them was a 17th century Dutch woman called Maria Sibyla,
Mary Ann. And she was an extraordinary woman who went out to the East Indies, either on her own or
with her daughter, I can't remember. And she painted the most wonderful pictures of butterflies and
plants and insects. So she, I think she was a very important illustrator. Her works were
collected by Queen Charlotte, who was the wife of King George III. And she did a great deal to promote the science
of botany amongst women at the end of the 18th century.
Last two questions. First, what is your most effective, unusual work habit?
My most effective and usual. Well, someone, people who stayed with me in my house
have told me that I have a habit of which I was completely unaware, that I sit upstairs,
where I'm sitting there in my study, and I sort of work on my computer.
And then about every half an hour, there's an enormous bang.
and I stamp around the room swearing, and the people in the house are terribly worried that
something has gone awfully wrong. And then I get back to work, and everything resumes as usual
for the next half an hour, and then it all happens again. I was completely unaware that I did
that until several people have told me that I do, but it seems to work.
Last question, your book about Isaac Newton, and again, the title is Life After Gravity.
That's coming out soon. It is finished. I recommend it highly, but after that, what will you be doing next?
I've got several projects. One is I would like to write a book about caricatures. So my ideal project would be to have a set of about 50 caricatures by people like William Hogarth or Gilray, which are satires on science. And to accompany each caricature with about a thousand words explaining what the joke is, because we've lost touch with it. So, for example, one of the most famous, which seems relevant today,
is that when Jenna introduced smallpox vaccination at the end of the 18th century,
everybody was absolutely terrified about what effects that would have on the human body.
And Gilroy did a very famous caricature of all the patients in the clinics
sprouting horns and turning into cows because the vaccine was taken, was based on cowpox.
So that's just one very obvious example.
There were a lot of caricatures about Charles Darwin, for example,
representing him as an ape because what he dared to do was bring together animal life and human life.
Or there's another famous one of Marie Curie and she's with her husband.
And it's so typical that her husband Pierre is holding up this tube of radium chloride
and it's shining out on his forehead as though he were the genius.
And she's dressed very demurely and timidly and she's hiding behind her back.
so it's giving him all the credit for this discovery,
whereas actually it was her work.
It was her project, and she was in charge of radiation.
Patricia Farah, thank you very much.
Well, thank you.
Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler.
You can subscribe to the podcast in iTunes, Stitcher, or your favorite podcast app.
And if you like this podcast, please consider rating it on iTunes and leaving a review.
This helps other people find the show.
Thank you.
