BENJAMIN FRANKLIN AND DARWIN’S ‘LUNATICKS’ By JONATHAN POWERS

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN AND DARWIN’S ‘LUNATICKS’ By JONATHAN POWERS

£6.00


Benjamin Franklin (1706-90) was the most glamorous scientific figure of the 18th century after Isaac Newton. Having made his fortune as a writer and publisher, he retired to explore the emerging new science of ‘electricity’. His discoveries led to the conferment of Doctorates by the University of St Andrews and Oxford University, as well as his election as the first-ever overseas Fellow of the Royal Society and the award of its prestigious Copley Medal. It was his demonstration that lightning was electrical and the invention of the lightning conductor which captured the public imagination but, in the investigations described in this mini-monograph, he also introduced terminology which is still in everyday use.

His first excursion in 1758 seems to have been instrumental is stimulating the formation of the ‘Lunar Circle’, which was put onto to a more organised footing in 1766, after Franklin had introduced Dr William Small from William and Mary College to Matthew Boulton in Birmingham. This mini-monograph shows how the shared interests and attitudes of a network of friends spanning the Atlantic helped to shape the modern world.

These ‘Enlightenment Mini-Monographs’ have been specially written and published for the benefit of the Derby Museum and Art Gallery, and other regional cultural charities. The author is Professor Emeritus Jonathan Powers DL DUniv, the first Academic Pro Vice-Chancellor of the University of Derby. These little books all contain some new and original material not to be found elsewhere.

 

First published by iOpening Books 2012, reprinted 2014

Extended edition Quandary Books 2016, reprinted 2017

Colour and b/w illustrations

Pages: v, 63.

ISBN 978-0-9545779-4-0


 

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