Electrickery

4 Nov, 2004 500 Science

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the dawn of the age of electricity. In Gulliver’s Travels, published in 1726, Jonathan Swift satirised natural philosophers as trying to extract sunbeams from cucumbers. Perhaps he would have been surprised, or even horrified, by the sheer force of what these seemingly obscure experimentalists were about to unleash on society. Electricity soon reached into all areas of 18th century life, as Royal Society Fellows vied with showmen and charlatans to reveal its wonders to the world. It was, claimed one commentator, ‘an entertainment for Angels rather than for Men’. Electricity also posed deep questions about the nature of life. For some it was the divine spark that animated all things, for others it represented a dangerous materialism that reduced humans to mere machines.But how did electricity develop in the 18th and 19th centuries? Why was it so politically contentious and how was it understood during the age in which it changed the world forever?

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Guests

  • Simon Schaffer 25 episodes
    Professor in History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Darwin College
  • Patricia Fara 17 episodes
    Historian of Science and a Fellow of Clare College, Cambridge
  • Iwan Morus 4 episodes
    Lecturer in the History of Science at Queen's University Belfast

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Programme ID: p004y269

Episode page: bbc.co.uk/programmes/p004y269

Auto-category: 509 (History of science)

Hello (First sentence from this episode) Hello. In Gulliver's Travels, published in 1726, Jonathan Swift satirised natural philosophers as trying to extract sunbeams from cucumbers.