Foundations: Book ReviewsFaraday: The Life
Friday, 30 December 2011 18:11

Faraday: The Life

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Interesting as backgound material to the story of the eighteenth-century blossoming of "natural philosophy" into modern science.

Michael Faraday was an anomaly, even in his own time.  He was an autodidact who never really got to grips with mathematics, and a devout Sandemanian Christian, yet he made significant discoveries in physics and chemistry and  disbelieved in creationism.  He was a prolific experimental scientist who declined to patent his discoveries, allowing others to reap the financial and technological benefits.  He was also a self-taught artist and a talented teacher-popularizer.

This biography is written by a non-scientist, an art historian who has chosen to emphasise the extra-laboratory side of Faraday, his religion, psychology and  interpersonal  and professional relationships.   There are plenty of non-technical descriptions of him engaged in scientific work, in pursuance of the author's partial attempt to demonstrate and analyze his genius.

496pp paperback; b/w illus; appendixes; index; references

Additional Info

  • Year Published: 2009
  • ISBN: 978-0007329342
  • Author: James Hamilton
  • Publisher: HarperCollins
  • Price: £12.59
Read 1967 times Last modified on Friday, 30 December 2011 18:22
Tom Deteau

Tom trained as a nurse and anaesthetic technician in the NHS and practised in various specialities including ICU, Theatres, Coronary Care, and A&E.  Now retired, pursuing a leisurely and nomadic research programme into medical history.

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