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Performing in a different place: the use of a prodigy to the Dublin Philosophical Society

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2020

PADDY HOLT*
Affiliation:
School of History and Philosophy of Science, the University of Sydney, Carslaw Building F07, Darlington, NSW2006, Australia. Email: [email protected].

Abstract

From 8 February until at least 19 April 1686, the Dublin Philosophical Society was occupied with a prodigiously talented young girl whose name was never recorded. She was less than eleven years of age, but still much older than the society itself, which had begun meeting less than three years previously. Although one of many wonders engaging the curiosity of the nascent society, this girl served a surprising range of purposes, so that accompanying her anonymity was a curious malleability. Pressed into several different roles and identities, her exploitation affords a glimpse into the various qualities that could make a spectacle useful in a philosophical climate that was unique among the British Isles. The use of this girl therefore not only sheds light on the needs of a less familiar learned society, but also shows how these could differ from those of its better-understood counterparts. For a period of time, it was the versatility not of the gentlemen in Dublin, but of the prodigy they used, that best served this group on the periphery.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 2020

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Footnotes

I would like to thank Prof. Ofer Gal and Dr Elena Serrano for some helpful conversations on material discussed in this article. Two anonymous referees and Amanda Rees, the editor of the BJHS, also provided useful comments and suggestions.

References

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2 Hoppen, op. cit. (1), vol. 1, p. 79.

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29 Hoppen, op. cit. (1), p. 81.

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39 After a long hiatus, Petty seems to have resumed work on these experiments in 1684. For example, see British Library Add MS 72855, f. 34.

40 Petty, op. cit. (36), pp. 90–91. Although it is worth pointing out that Petty's experiments were anything but ‘cheap’.

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42 Lord Clarendon to John Evelyn, 14 February 1685/1686, in Singer, op. cit. (33), vol. 1, p. 250.

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53 Hooke, op. cit. (52), A2r.

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65 Ashe, op. cit. (64), p. 605.

66 St George Ashe to William Musgrave, 18 March 1685/1686, in Hoppen, op. cit. (1), vol. 2, pp. 606–607, 605; Hoppen, op. cit. (3), p. 36.

67 Ashe, op. cit. (66).

68 Ashe, op. cit. (66), pp. 606–607.

69 Ashe, op. cit. (66), p. 607.

70 Ashe, op. cit. (66), p. 607.

71 Ashe, op. cit. (66), p. 606.

72 Hooke, op. cit. (52), A1r.

73 Boyle, op. cit. (56), p. 166.

74 St George Ashe to William Musgrave, 18 March 1685/1686, in Hoppen, op. cit. (1), vol. 2, p. 606. For references to the ‘globes’ see the minutes for 1 March in Hoppen, op. cit. (1), vol. 2, p. 81.

75 Hooke, op. cit. (52), A1r; Lawson, op. cit. (52).

76 Hoppen, op. cit. (3), p. 157.

77 Hoppen, op. cit. (1), vol. 1, p. 57; Hoppen, op. cit. (3), p. 157.

78 Hoppen, op. cit. (1), vol. 1, p. 79.

79 Sprat, op. cit. (55), p. 110.

80 William Molyneux to Edmond Halley, 8 April 1686, in Hoppen, op. cit. (1), vol. 2, pp. 614–618.

81 Molyneux, op. cit. (80), p. 615.

82 Molyneux, op. cit. (80), p. 615.

83 Molyneux, op. cit. (80), p. 615.

84 Thomas Gale to St George Ashe, 27 March 1686, in Hoppen, op. cit. (1), vol. 2, p. 608.

85 Aubrey, op. cit. (11), pp. 98–99.

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89 Mazzotti, The World of Maria Gaetana Agnesi, op. cit. (8), pp. 18–19.

90 Mazzotti, The World of Maria Gaetana Agnesi, op. cit. (8), p. 19.

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92 Petty, op. cit. (36), p. 91.

93 Ashe, op. cit. (59), pp. 898–900.

94 Ashe, op. cit. (59), pp. 899–900.

95 For reports of this see, for example, Aubrey's, John Brief Lives with an Apparatus for the Lives of our English Mathematical Writers (ed. Bennett, Kate), 2 vols., Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016, vol. 1, pp. 4447Google Scholar; BL Add MS 72850, particularly ff. 110–111v.

96 Lord Clarendon to John Evelyn, 14 February 1685/1686, in Singer, op. cit. (33), vol. 1, p. 251.

97 Clarendon, op. cit. (96), pp. 250–251.

98 John Evelyn to the Countess of Clarendon, 14 August 1686, in Chambers, Douglas D.C. and Galbraith, David (eds.), The Letterbooks of John Evelyn, 2 vols., Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2014, vol. 2, p. 804Google Scholar.

99 The Countess of Clarendon to John Evelyn, 29 January 1686/1687, in Singer, op. cit. (33), vol. 2, p. 149.

100 It was also helpful in firming up relations with the Royal Society, since it nudged Clarendon into telling Evelyn, ‘they deserve the patronage of your society at London, and all the encouragement you can give them’. For more on this point see Clarendon, op. cit. (96), p. 251.

101 Clarendon, op. cit. (96), p. 251.

102 It is difficult to find any mention of her after appearing in the Countess of Clarendon's letter to John Evelyn of 29 January 1686/1687, for which see Clarendon, op. cit. (99), p. 149.