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I think Professor Taylor and I are at cross-purposes in our discussion of the influence of scientists upon the art of navigation before the nineteenth century. Dr. Freiesleben expressed the view that until 1800, ‘when our technical age began’, there was a big gap between what interested scientists and what the seaman could understand and apply, that men of science were too remote from practical requirements. The implication was that scientists were not concerned with seamen's problems nor seamen with obtaining scientific help. I pointed out that whatever the situation in the eighteenth century might have been, in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries improvements of a radical nature were made by scientists, working with and for seamen, in the means of practising the art of navigation, in particular by English scientists working in the latter part of the period under the aegis of Gresham College and the East India Company. This is historical fact, little known perhaps, but none the less fact. I certainly never intended it to be understood that the seaman-scientist relationship peculiar to this period and resulting in such important developments typified, to use Professor Taylor's expression, ‘the degree of cooperation between sailor and scientist prior to the nineteenth century’. I intended it to be understood as being descriptive of the situation or relationship peculiar to the period in which it occurred, roughly 1550–1640 and more particularly 1598–1637.
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- Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1956