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Between Hostile Camps: Sir Humphry Davy's Presidency of The Royal Society of London, 1820–1827

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

David Philip Miller
Affiliation:
School of History and Philosophy of Science, University of New South Wales, Kensington, New South Wales, Australia, 2033.

Extract

The career of Humphry Davy (1778–1829) is one of the fairy tales of early nineteenth-century British science. His rise from obscure Cornish origins to world-wide eminence as a chemical discoverer, to popular celebrity amongst London's scientific audiences, to a knighthood from the Prince Regent, and finally to the Presidency of the Royal Society, provide apposite material for Smilesian accounts of British society as open to talents. But the use of Davy's career to illustrate the thesis that ‘genius will out’ is not without its problems. As Davy began to reap the benefits of his early chemical discoveries, and to acquire status and wealth, his dedication to research waned. The ‘new’ Davy who emerged in the years after Waterloo, though admired by many sections of the metropolitan scientific community, was also widely criticized. Ambivalence became marked with Davy's election to, and conduct in, the Presidency of the Royal Society.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 1983

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References

I thank the Librarian of the Royal Society of London for permission to quote from the John Herschel papers. Material from the J.E. Smith and William Swainson papers is quoted by courtesy of the Linnean Society of London. Arnold Thackray, Jeffrey Sturchio, Robert Bud and an anonymous referee contributed valuable criticism.

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33 Baily, Francis to Babbage, Charles, 11 11 1820Google Scholar, British Library, Add. MSS. 37182, f. 291. On Baily see Horton-Smith, L. G. H., The Baily family of Thatcham and later of Speen and of Newbury all in the country of Berkshire, Leicester, 1951, pp. 6980Google Scholar and Herschel, J. F. W., ‘Memoir of Francis Baily’, Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 1844, 6, 89121.Google Scholar

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64 The tendency of chemists to be generally conformist in their attitudes towards institutional innovation, and their lack of aspiration to disciplinary identity when compared with astronomers and geologists, is an interesting and, so far as I am aware, as yet unexplained phenomenon. The Chemical Society of London was not formed until the early 1840s. Part of the explanation for this surely lies in the extent to which the pursuit of chemistry was allied to medicine and the industrial arts. See Bud, R. F., ‘The origins and early years of the Chemical Society of London’, University of Pennsylvania PhD dissertation, 1980.Google Scholar

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