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The Royal Society Video Podcast

The Royal Society Video Podcast




Lectures on topical science issues brought to you by the Royal Society.

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Chasing Venus

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, May 15, 2012


New York Times Best Selling and award-winning author Andrea Wulf tells the extraordinary story of the first global scientific collaboration set amid warring armies, hurricanes, scientific endeavour and personal tragedy. On 6 June 1761 and 3 June 1769 the planet Venus passed between earth and sun - each time visible as a small black dot. Transits of Venus always arrive in pairs - eight years apart - but then it takes more than a century before they are seen again. In the 1760s the world's scientific community was electrified because the transit would allow them for the first time to calculate the distance between the planets in our solar system. At a time when war was tearing Europe and much of the rest of the world apart, hundreds of astronomers overcame political, geographical and intellectual boundaries to work together. For a decade the Royal Society was gripped by transit fever, organising viewings and expeditions to farflung corners of the globe, including Captain Cook's Endeavour voyage to Tahiti.

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Sir George Cayley (1773-1857), the Father of Flight

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, May 08, 2012


In this talk, Alan Morrison discusses Cayley's pioneering aviation work; his role as an inventor; and as founder of the Royal Polytechnic Institution in Regent Street. Cayley's work will be related to the scientific and intellectual milieu of the day, and to debates regarding the public engagement with science and technology.

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Hero or villain?

Author: The Royal Society
Thu, Apr 26, 2012


Nevil Maskelyne, 5th Astronomer Royal and Fellow of the Royal Society, is today best known as the villain of Dava Sobel's Longitude. This talk will, however, look further back and examine how Maskelyne has fared since his death in 1811, attempting to pinpoint when and why a more negative assessment overshadowed the positive celebration of a significant figure of British science

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How should a Chemist understand Brewing?

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, Apr 24, 2012


Eighteenth-century chemists could gain useful income and patronage as advisors to industry - and some of the wealthiest and most influential industrialists were brewers. Making chemical knowledge credible to this audience, however, was not always easy: most brewers trusted the direct lessons of the brewhouse - and also the countinghouse - to those of the laboratory. In this talk, Dr James Sumner discusses how chemists tried to resolve these problems, and how they were challenged by experienced brewers promoting a scientific identity of their own.

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Dream to Reality?

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, Apr 24, 2012


Plastics pioneers had great aspirations for their new materials. Roland Barthes called plastics "a miraculous substance . . . a transformation of nature". Serendipity, careful experimentation and entrepreneurial skills have all played significant roles in the development of modern plastics. This presentation by Dr Susan Mossman of the Science Museum will assess whether the visions of key early pioneers such as Leo Baekeland have been realised today.

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'Against Images Made By Hands': Florence Nightingale's Reluctant Life in Portraiture

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, Apr 24, 2012


Florence Nightingale disliked having her portrait taken as much as she hated being a celebrity, yet it was largely through the visual representations of her face and person in the press that she gained iconic status in Victorian England. Representations of the idealised Angel of the Crimea tell as much about attitudes of her time as they do about the reality of her life. Natasha McEnroe examines Nightingale's life through a selection of images of her, and will consider whether they can shed some light on the controversy around the mysterious illness of her later years.

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Shakespeare the metallurgist, Eliot the spectroscopist

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, Apr 24, 2012


From the moment of their discovery, each of the chemical elements has embarked on a journey into our culture. Over millennia and decades, they have gained meaning through encounter and manipulation. Those long known, such as gold, silver, iron and sulphur, all found in the Bible, have largely settled associations with immortality, virginity, strength and evil. The arts exploit, renew and modify these meanings often in surprising ways. Hugh Aldersey-Williams elaborates.

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The History of the Web Part I

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, Dec 20, 2011


Wendy Hall is Professor of Computer Science at the University of Southampton. Her research interests include the development of web technologies, digital libraries, and human computer interaction. In this talk she will discuss the history of the web, and give an insider's perspective on its possible future.

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Publishing Faraday's Candle

Author: The Royal Society
Thu, Dec 15, 2011


Michael Faraday's The Chemical History of a Candle is arguably the most popular science book ever published. Based on Faraday's final series of Christmas Lectures at the Royal Institution, it has never been out of print in English since it was first published in 1861.

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Radiometers as buttonholes

Author: The Royal Society
Thu, Dec 08, 2011


William Crookes was a physicist, chemist, entrepreneur and spiritualist. Being a consummate experimenter he designed precision instruments of great delicacy, in particular exquisite glass vacuum tubes. The radiometer, when first exhibited in 1875, took the scientific world by storm, and became his trade mark.

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Jonas Moore

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Dec 02, 2011


The mathematician and surveyor Jonas Moore was elected FRS in the 1670s, but under the Cromwellian regime he had had a different kind of career as a surveyor, working for the company that successfully completed the draining of the Fens. This paper examines one of the products of that time: his sixteen-sheet 'Mapp of the Great Levell', printed in 1657 or (more likely) 1658. It was an impressive advertisement, for the drainage project, for the skills of its Surveyor, and for the increasing capabilities of the English map trade.

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Niepce in England

Author: The Royal Society
Wed, Nov 23, 2011


In October 2010 the National Media Museum hosted the 'Niepce in England' Conference where they could announce and share with the photographic, conservation and scientific communities the ground breaking findings which had been discovered during the collaborative research partnership between the National Media Museum and the Getty Conservation Institute.

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Science for all

Author: The Royal Society
Wed, Nov 09, 2011


How do you get ordinary people to take an interest in science? This was already becoming a problem for the scientific community in the early twntieth century. But rather than letting outsiders do the job, the scientists took an active role. This talk explores their successes and failures as communicators, with comments on how things changed between then and now.

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Music, architecture and acoustics in Renaissance Venice

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, Nov 08, 2011


During the Renaissance in Venice, composers such as Gabrieli and Monteverdi created some of their greatest masterpieces for performance in the great churches on festive occasions. But what would the music have sounded like, given its complexity and the long reverberation times of the large churches?

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Mary Somerville

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, Nov 08, 2011


Mary Somerville (1780-1872) was a leading mathematician and author of important books on the sciences: it was in connection with a review of one of these that the term "scientist" first appeared in print. This talk examines her career in relation to debates about the role of women in the making of knowledge and her vision of science in furthering the progress of civilisation and empire.

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Alchemy and patronage in Tudor England

Author: The Royal Society
Thu, Oct 27, 2011


In early modern England, alchemical practitioners employed a range of strategies to win the trust and support of powerful, even royal, patrons: from the preservation of health with potent elixirs, to the resolution of England's bullion shortage through mass production of transmuted gold.

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'Behold a New Thing in the Earth!'

Author: The Royal Society
Wed, Apr 20, 2011


The Great Exhibition of 1851 has routinely been portrayed as a celebration of science, technology, and manufacturing. However, for many contemporaries-including Prince Albert-it was a deeply religious event. In analysing responses to the Exhibition, we shall examine the complex and fascinating relations between science, technology and religion at the start of the high Victorian period.

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John Soane and the learned societies of Somerset House

Author: The Royal Society
Wed, Apr 20, 2011


The architect John Soane became an Associate of the Royal Academy in 1795, a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1796 and, finally, a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1821. All three were then housed in Somerset House. Soane was an avid collector and enthusiastic auto-didact, and the world of these learned societies, their libraries and museums, was the one in which he felt most at home. This talk will explore the influences upon Sir John Soane as he transformed his own house at 13 Lincolns Inn Fields into a museum, a process finalised by a private Act of Parliament passed in 1833.

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Science and the Church in the Middle Ages

Author: The Royal Society
Wed, Apr 20, 2011


It is commonly assumed that what little scientific advance there might have been in the Middle Ages was held back by the power of the Church. But, in fact, there was important progress in science and technology during the medieval period. And the influence of the Church was generally positive even if it imposed strict limits beyond which philosophers should not tread.

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A history of autism: my conversations with the pioneers

Author: The Royal Society
Mon, Apr 11, 2011


In this talk, Adam Feinstein will describe two fascinating journeys of discovery: his travels around the world for his new book, speaking to the key pioneers in the history of autism - including close colleagues and relatives of Leo Kanner and Hans Asperger - to investigate how the concept of the condition has evolved over the past 75 years; and his own remarkable personal voyage of understanding through his autistic son, Johnny.

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Paul Dirac and the religion of mathematical beauty

Author: The Royal Society
Mon, Apr 04, 2011


For the great theoretical physicist Paul Dirac, the importance of mathematical beauty was 'like a religion'. Although his first papers on quantum mechanics showed an acute aesthetic awareness, he first set out his principle of mathematical beauty only in 1939, a decade after he did his best work. In this talk, Farmelo will discuss the origins of Dirac's aesthetic sensibility and take a look at the extraordinary personality of the physicist Niels Bohr once called 'the strangest man'.

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Ghosts of women past

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, Mar 8, 2011


"I do not agree with sex being brought into science at all. The idea of 'woman and science' is completely irrelevant. Either a woman is a good scientist, or she is not." So declared Hertha Ayrton over a hundred years ago - but she was unable to become a Fellow of the Royal Society because she was married. How has the past affected present attitudes towards women in science? Dr Patricia Fara, Clare College, Cambridge

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Presidential Politics: how Henry Tizard did not become PRS in 1945

Author: The Royal Society
Thu, Dec 2, 2010


In 1945, the Royal Society needed a new President to succeed Sir Henry Dale. The debate about who it should be turned into a clash between competing visions of the Society should be doing in the postwar world.

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The Evolutionary Archive

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, Nov 23, 2010


The Accounts addressing the recent history of British evolutionary science have not yet fully benefited from research using archives held at British Library, including the papers of John Maynard Smith FRS

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Scientists Abroad: Royal Society expeditions in the 20th century

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, Nov 23, 2010


The Royal Society has a long tradition of sponsoring scientific expeditions to all parts of the world. Although less famous than James Cook's 18th century voyages, a number of expeditions were mounted in the 20th century to places such as Antarctica, the Solomon Islands, Brazil, and Aldabra Atoll.

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Fleas, lice and an elephant on the moon

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, Nov 23, 2010


The early Fellows of the Royal Society were convinced that their research would be of great benefit to mankind-but their contemporaries were not so sure. This talk will discuss some of the jokes, ballads and poems written in response to the activities of the Royal Society in the seventeenth century.

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The 19th century photographic collections of the Royal Society

Author: The Royal Society
Mon, Nov 15, 2010


An introduction to the early photographic collections of the Royal Society. This talk will explore the extensive collection of photographic portraits of key scientists and look at how it all began

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"Mr Baker gave a paper":early links between the Royal Society and the [Royal] Society of Arts

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, Oct 26, 2010


Henry Baker (1698-1774) microscopist and son-in-law of Daniel Defoe was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1740 and adecade later he played a prominent part in the foundation of the Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (known since 1908 as the Royal Society of Arts).

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Pictures in the Sky:the Origin and History of the Constellations

Author: The Royal Society
Wed, Oct 6, 2010


In the days before writing, storytellers used the sky as a picture book to illustrate their tales of gods, mythical heroes and fabulous beasts. Those pictures among the stars were the origin of our system of constellations. Today, the entire sky is divided into 88 constellations of varying shapes and sizes. This talk, which includes illustrations from some of the greatest star atlases in the world, will trace the origin of the constellation system back to Greek times and explain who filled in the gaps between the ancient Greek figures, who decided on the official boundaries between constellations, and how the names of certain stars came about.

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The Great Experiment: the early evolution of the Royal Society

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Oct 1, 2010


Within a few years of its foundation, the Royal Society acquired a crucial institutional role in organising and arbitrating scientific research. Yet what has often been overlooked is the element of evolution - even of trial and error - in the Society's development in its earliest years. This talk will explore the sometimes painful process by which the Society's founders discovered what functions this novel body could most usefully serve.

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Reading science through its regions: Cornwall in the nineteenth century

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Jan 8, 2010


Is it helpful to consider the history of science in Britain through one of its regions? By considering one such region the English county of Cornwall this lecture argues that it is. A variety of economic, political and cultural forces acted on and through the region to produce a flourishing scientific scene there in the nineteenth century, including numerous scientific museums and regular exhibitions of local scientific and industrial innovations; the second-oldest geological society in Britain; and a Royal Society-funded meteorological observatory (as well as two nineteenth-century Presidents of the Royal Society). Its unique geology, natural history and antiquities attracted the attention of scientific luminaries such as Sir William Hooker, Sir Henry De la Beche and Sir John Gardner Wilkinson. More generally, it is argued that such a geographically-contextual approach highlights important processes that are otherwise missed in more conventional histories of science. Simon Naylor is Senior Lecturer in Historical Geography at the University of Exeter's Cornwall Campus. He has just completed his latest book, Regionalizing Science: Placing Knowledges in Victorian England, which will be coming out in 2010.

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John Henslow, Cambridge University and the Education of Charles Darwin

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Nov 27, 2009


Charles Darwin came to Cambridge University after a dismal year reading medicine at Edinburgh. At Cambridge he fell deeply under the influence of John Henslow, Professor of Botany, whose own vibrant research programme focussed on experimental studies of the nature of species. Such a close friendship grew between them that Darwin was known as "the man that walks with Henslow", and it was Henslow who recommended Darwin for the Beagle voyage. We will here explore the contribution of Henslow and his scientific colleagues in the University to the education of young Mr Darwin, and consider its lasting impact. John Parker is Professor of Plant Cytogenetics at the University of Cambridge, Director of the Cambridge University Botanic Garden and Curator of the University's Herbarium.

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The Foul of mouth and evil eyed

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Nov 6, 2009


Francis Galton's scientific career was based on his fascination with statistics. He counted and measured everything from numbers of attractive women in different cities to the frequency people fidgeted in scientific meetings. However his most intensive research was devoted to human physical attributes such as height, chest width, arm strength and colour vision. At the same time as developing theories on inheritance of physical characteristics, he proffered suggestions about the improvement of the human race. This talk will concentrate on his work in the context of Victorian ideas about criminality. Natasha McEnroe is the Museum Manager of the Grant Museum of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy and Curator of the Galton Collection at University College London. She has lectured widely, and co-edited a collection of essays entitled The Tyranny of Treatment: Samuel Johnson, His Friends and Georgian Medicine (British Art Journal, 2003).

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The Science of Common Things; Dr Melanie Keene

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Oct 16, 2009


Scientific explanations have often relied on common objects, from watches to grains of sand, to provide an understanding of the natural world. The use of familiar things to illustrate scientific theories was particularly prevalent and powerful in the mid-nineteenth century. In this talk we will see how many different household artefacts - from candles to cups of tea, pebbles to primroses, salt to see-saws - were used to instruct new audiences in the science of common things.

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Smashing species: Joseph Hooker and Victorian science

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Oct 16, 2009


Joseph Dalton Hooker once described classifying plants and animals as exciting work, 'the species go smash smash every day'. Hooker was one of the nineteenth century's most powerful and influential men of science: director of the Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew, President of the Royal Society and a close friend and key ally of Charles Darwin. In this engaging, illustrated talk Jim Endersby will show that understanding why Hooker was so keen to "smash" species, and how he did it, helps us understand much about Victorian science, especially why Darwin's ideas about species were both useful and dangerous to his friends and colleagues.

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The Leviathan of Parsonstown

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Oct 9, 2009


In 1845 William Parsons, the third Earl of Rosse, built the largest telescope in the world at his home, Birr Castle in Ireland. The combination of its extravagant ambition, uniqueness and inaccessibility brought to a head a problem that had run through the history of the reflecting telescope, where the foremost research instruments had been built by amateur instrument makers for their own ends. Lord Rosse fulfilled his ambition to have the world's largest telescope, but did he achieve his other aim, to bring the large reflector out of the sphere of the individual enthusiast and into mainstream of a shared astronomical practice?

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Kent's Cavern

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Jun 12, 2009


Excavations from the 1820s to 1860s in Kent's Cavern (Torquay, Devon) played a major role in the establishment of deep roots for human antiquity, coinciding with the development and promulgation of Darwin's and Wallace's notion of evolution by means of natural selection. We review the history of investigations at the site in wider context, showing how the cave's archaeology challenged established dogma promulgated by Buckland, Cuvier and others, and came to be one of the most informative sites for Ice Age human behaviour in Britain.

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The Telescope at 400: a Satirical Journey

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, May 22, 2009


As it begins its fifth century, the telescope holds its own as an icon of scientific endeavour. Its status has not always been uncontested, however, since telescopes and their users have often found themselves on the wrong side of sharp-minded wits. As science suffered turbulent times, so the telescope could come under attack

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Lord Rayleigh's Legacy

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, May 5, 2009


The private laboratories and equipment used by the Third and Fourth Barons Rayleigh (John William Strutt and his son Robert John Strutt) remain largely as they were when used by these great scientists. This lecture will take the audience on a virtual tour of the laboratories and describe some of the important experiments conducted there.

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Rutherford and the Birth of Nuclear Physics

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Apr 24, 2009


In 1911, Ernest Rutherford interpreted the earlier experimental results of his students, Geiger and Marsden, as showing that at the centre of the atom there was a small, dense nucleus with a positive electric charge. This insight was to fundamentally change our understanding of the structure of the physical world and led to the birth of nuclear physics. As we near the centenary of this historic scientific contribution, we will look at how this discovery came about, examine Rutherford's legacy and the important questions that remain in the field of nuclear physics a hundred years on.

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The Linnean Society Library

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Apr 17, 2009


Founded in 1788, the Linnean Society is one of London's oldest learned institutions. Among other collections, the Society's Library preserves the manuscripts, books and correspondence of Carl Linnaeus, the father of modern plant and animal classification. Linnaeus's library gives fascinating insight into his life and work.

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The Georgian Star

Author: The Royal Society
Mon, Apr 6, 2009


In the spring of 1781, William Herschel discovered the planet Uranus, using his homemade telescope in the back garden of his house at 19 New King Street, in Bath. For the world of astronomy, it was an astonishing find - the first new planet ever found. But Herschel himself considered it relatively unimportant compared with his true quest: to understand, with the help of his sister and collaborator Caroline, the very nature and evolution of the universe itself.

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Spiderman

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Jan 23, 2009


Dr Martin Lister (1638-1712), vice-president of the Royal Society and court physician, is best known as England's first arachnologist and conchologist. This talk will also address some of his lesser-known discoveries, including his invention of the histogram and the stratigraphic map.

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The Brother Gardeners

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Aug 8, 2008


The tale of how a group of passionate plant collectors, botanists and explorers turned Britain into a nation of gardeners. The cast includes Peter Collinson, who brought the American wilderness to British parks; botanists Carl Linnaeus and Daniel Solander; and Sir Joseph Banks, who turned Kew into a storehouse of Empire.

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Christopher Wren and St Paul's Cathedral

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Aug 1, 2008


This year sees the 300th anniversary of the topping out of St Paul's. This talk shows how the cathedral is a monument to a mathematician and scientist at the dawn of the Enlightenment, and looks at the changing career of England's foremost architect, already over 30 when he was appointed Royal Surveyor by Charles II.

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Surveying the scene, engineering the machine

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Jul 25, 2008


The designs of civil engineer John Smeaton (1724-92), including wind and water mills, steam engines, river navigations, canals and harbours, are among the Society's archival treasures. This talk examines the purpose of the drawings and the development of surveying and engineering draughtsmanship in the 18th century.

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Mortal Coil

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Jul 18, 2008


A talk exploring the seventeenth-century fascination with life extension, including the speculations of Sir Francis Bacon and the early Fellows of the Royal Society, and tracing its influence on modern science and medicine including cryonics, genetic engineering and nanotechnology.

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Domesticating electricity

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Jul 11, 2008


The electrification of Britain at the turn of the 20th century inspired not only fascination and puzzlement but also fear and revulsion. This talk looks at the controversies about the nature and applications of electricity, especially at women's role in taming electric lighting to make it aesthetically suitable for domestic usage.

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Before the British Museum

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Jul 4, 2008


A chance to take a guided tour of the Library's current exhibition, featuring fossils, lodestones and stuffed bird specimens from the Society's early museum. There will be short talks on how the collection began, Nehemiah Grew's influential catalogue, and the afterlife of the Repository following its transfer to the British Museum.

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Innovation's Heroes and Villains

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Jun 27, 2008


Mike Green, author of 'The Nearly Men', delves into the dark side of technological advance, looking at the bitter rivalries, tales of treachery and acts of deceit behind the inventions and scientific discoveries which defined the modern age.

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The Apothecaries and their garden

Author: The Royal Society
Thu, Jun 19, 2008


Chelsea Physic Garden was founded in 1673 by the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries. Find out how this unique garden has survived over the centuries, and how it is as relevant in today's environment as it was when it was created as an outdoor classroom for the apprentice apothecaries.

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An Inquisitive Age

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Jun 13, 2008


The Royal Society began with a group of men who were interested in natural phenomena and wanted to understand how their world worked - but they were not trained scientists. This talk will explore some of the lesser known aspects of their research programme, featuring carts with legs, monstrous births, and showers of fish from the heavens. Presented by Dr Felicity Henderson, King's College London

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Bird Stuffers and Snake Charmers

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Jun 6, 2008


Bird Stuffers and Snake Charmers, the Royal Society's involvement with India, with Rupert Baker, Royal Society Library, and Anna Winterbottom, Queen Mary, University of London

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Balloon Madness

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, May 30, 2008


When balloons were invented, there was a lively debate about their possible uses. This talk introduces the spectrum of meanings that became attached to balloons, and shows how natural philosophers vied with adventurers to explore and understand the regions of air.

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Endurance and Discovery

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, May 27, 2008


The Royal Society and its Fellows have been at the forefront of polar exploration for scientific purposes. This is an opportunity to find out more about these extraordinary expeditions and the resourceful pioneers who led them.

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Robert Hooke

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, May 23, 2008


A fascinating look at the disorganised paper trail left by Robert Hooke, the Royal Society's first Curator of Experiments, and at the efforts of contemporary historians to piece together his paperwork and restore his legacy.

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Into the blue

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, May 20, 2008


Rupert Baker, Library Manager of the Royal Society looks at travel and expedition related stories using RS archive material.

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Why creationism is wrong and evolution is right

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, May 16, 2008


Many biologists are worried by a recent and unexpected return of an argument based on belief by the certainty, untestable and unsupported by evidence, that life did not evolve but appeared by supernatural means. Worldwide, more people believe in creationism than in evolution. Why do no biologists agree? Steve Jones will talk about what evolution is, about new evidence that men and chimps are close relatives and about how we are, nevertheless, unique and why creationism does more harm to religion than it does to science.

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Bill Bryson: A short history of nearly everything

Author: The Royal Society
Tue, May 13, 2008


Bill Bryson, acclaimed author of 'A Short History of Nearly Everything' and winner of the 2004 Aventis Prize for Science Books, talks about how, in his biggest book, he confronted his greatest challenge yet: to understand - and, if possible, answer - the oldest, biggest questions we have posed about the universe and ourselves.

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Lord Cable

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Nov 16, 2007


Sir William Thomson, known to later generations as Lord Kelvin, was the quintessential Victorian physicist. He was also a leading figure in the development of the submarine cable network that linked the far-flung British Empire. This talk examines how closely telegraphy and physics were intertwined in Kelvin's career.

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"Dr Livingstone I presume"

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Nov 9, 2007


David Livingstone FRS, missionary, explorer, doctor and natural historian, was a prolific correspondent. A team of experts is now publishing his letters online, including those in the Royal Society's archives. This illustrated talk from the team describes Livingstone's adventures and this exciting new project.

Download File - 381.2 MB
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Climate Change on the Living Earth

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, May 9, 2008


Observations from around the Earth suggest that even the gloomiest predictions of climate change from the 2007 IPCC report may underestimate the seriousness of the changes due this century. In this lecture, Professor James Lovelock discusses the consequences, particularly for the UK and Europe, and how we might respond by an adaptive retreat whilst at the same time seeking a global solution to what seem to be ineluctable adverse changes in the Earth's climate.

Download File - 436.2 MB
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Useful Bodies

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Oct 26, 2007


Private anatomy teaching flourished in London in the second half of the 18th century. Many of its leading proponents were also Fellows of the Royal Society. This talk explores some of their stories, and the role of the Society in providing a public sanction for the noisome business of private dissection.

Download File - 104.4 MB
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Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and the Royal Society

Author: The Royal Society
Fri, Oct 12, 2007


Royal Society luminaries such as Sir Joseph Banks PRS and John Lindley FRS were vital in establishing plant science at Kew. All but two of Kew's directors have been Fellows, and Kew's scientific progress has long been supported by the Society. This talk tells the story of this ongoing relationship.

Download File - 54.8 MB
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  • LearnOutLoud.com Product ID: T039532

 Science  Environment
 Biography  Scientists
 Science  Scientists
 Science  Biology

 

 
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