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Who did the work? Experimental philosophers and public demonstrators in Augustan England
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
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The growth of modern science has been accompanied by the growth of professionalization. We can unquestionably speak of professional science since the nineteenth century, although historians dispute about where, when and how much. It is much more problematic and anachronistic to do so of the late seventeenth century, despite the familiar view that the period saw the origin of modern experimental science. This paper explores the broad implications of that problem.
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References
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40 Westfall, , op. cit. (22), 634Google Scholar. See below for Richard Lower and Edward Tyson. For graphs of activity from 1660 to 1727, see Hall, Boas, op. cit. (20)Google Scholar. Each chronological chapter is accompanied by one. The following list of individuals is arranged chronologically according to periods of activity in the Society.
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54 For Halley, see Pumfrey, , op. cit. (14), 15–16Google Scholar and Ronan, C. A., Edmond Halley: Genius in Eclipse, London, 1975, 63–75Google Scholar. Halley's only ‘experimental’ contribution after 1692 was an observation of the variation, reported in JB, 3/7/05, 110.Google Scholar
55 The most convenient summary of Hauksbee's life remains Guerlac's entry in DSB.
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58 Following Hauksbee the elder's last performance on 29 January 1713, experiments ceased. When on 21 May 1713 d'Aumont's arrival was announced just before the meeting commenced ‘Mr Hauksbee was ordered to prepare some particular Experiments for his Entertainment’ (JB, 21/5/13, 483Google Scholar). It was thought proper to defer the usual reading of papers for a Newtonian display, and the duke ‘was entertained with severall experiments of the production of light by friction, or elasticity, of the mutuall Attraction of the Parts of Matter, of the curve caused by the Rising of a Fluid between glass planes, etc.’ Sloane stalled by showing curiosities in the repository, and contributed an ‘experiment of the Stone called Oculus Mundi’. Whilst the attendance of ‘Mr [George] Berkeley, a clergyman’ did not provoke experimentation, the return of d'Aumont panicked them into a repertoire of air-pump experiments, presumably again by Hauksbee junior. See JB, 11/6/13, 492.Google Scholar
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63 This was initially a monetary payment only. A medal was also awarded from 1736, which Desaguliers won. The first person other than Desaguliers to receive the £5 was Gray, Stephen in 1731 and 1732Google Scholar. See Hall, Boas, op. cit. (20), 130–1.Google Scholar
64 JB, 5/3–30/4/24, 443ff.Google Scholar
65 I have not studied Gray's work after 1730, and my account relies upon those of Heilbron, , op. cit. (18) and op. cit. (21)Google Scholar, and his entry in DSB, s.v. ‘Gray, Stephen’.
66 I am grateful to Simon Schaffer for this suggestion.
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69 CM, 2/7/07, 144Google Scholar, when Hauksbee also received £40 ‘for his last years waiting upon the Society’. See also The Record of the Royal Society of London for the Promotion of Natural Knowledge, 4th edn, London, 1940, 30.Google Scholar
70 I have been unable to determine his dates. They are missing from the otherwise full index of Hall, Boas, op. cit. (20).Google Scholar
71 Westfall, , op. cit. (22), 673–5.Google Scholar
72 CM, 3/11/08, 156Google Scholar; CM, 12/1/08–9, 159. Emphasis supplied.Google Scholar
73 CM, 12/7/11, 192.Google Scholar
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76 For Fahrenheit see CM, 7/5/24, 279Google Scholar. ‘[Fahrenheit's] constant attendance upon the Society seemed to require some sort of acknowledgement’ which was 10 guineas. Fahrenheit was another who arrived as an unknown, was ‘given leave’ to attend meetings because he was not a Fellow, and provided experimental entertainment, as recorded in JB, 5/3/23–4, 443′Google Scholar; JB, 26/3/24, 454Google Scholar; JB, 2/4/24, 457Google Scholar; JB, 23/4/24, 467Google Scholar and JB, 30/4/24, 470Google Scholar. Having performed thermometric experiments and demonstrated instruments, Fahrenheit was proposed for a Fellowship by Desaguliers at the meeting of 26 March 1724 and subsequently elected.
77 See Pumfrey, , op. cit. (14), 7 and 38Google Scholar n26 and CM, 17/11/26 for Hooke's and Desaguliers' rebukes.
78 Though this is not to deny that they did experiment privately, and occasionally publicly. This is discussed below.
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83 One might speculate, in this regard, whether Newton, for example, thought of Hauksbee as an apprentice natural philosopher, when he directed him in the design of instruments and experiments.
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106 Desmarest, , op. cit. (27).Google Scholar
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