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Herschel in Bedlam: Natural History and Stellar Astronomy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

Simon Schaffer
Affiliation:
St John's College, Cambridge, CB2 1TP

Extract

In his comprehensive survey of the work of William Herschel, published in the Annuaire du Bureau des Longitudes for 1842, Dominique Arago argued that the life of the great astronomer ‘had the rare privilege of forming an epoch in an extended branch of astronomy’. Arago also noted, however, that Herschel's ideas were often taken as ‘the conceptions of a madman’, even if they were subsequently accepted. This fact, commented Arago, ‘seems to me one that deserves to appear in the history of science’. From the time Herschel published his first paper in the Philosophical transactions in 1781, he was subjected to the suggestion of lunacy. His patron and friend William Watson, told him that after his claims for the extraordinary power of his telescopes, ‘your prognosis that some would think you fit for Bedlam has been verified’. On learning of Herschel's supremely accurate new micrometer, the astronomer Alexander Aubert exclaimed to Herschel that ‘we would go to Bedlam together’: Aubert wrote to Herschel in January 1782 that he should ‘mind not a few jealous barking puppies: a little time will clear up the matter, and if it lays in my power you would not be sent to Bedlam alone, for I incline much to be of the party’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 1980

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References

NOTES

1 Arago, D. J. F., ‘Analyse historique et critique de la vie et des travaux de Sir William Herschel’, in Annuaire du Bureau des longitudes, 1842, pp. 249608 (257, 515).Google Scholar

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23 Collected papers, i, 49.Google Scholar

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26 ‘Catalogue of double stars’, 10 01 1782Google Scholar, ibid., i, 90.

27 Michell, to Cavendish, , 2 07 1783Google Scholar, cited by McCormmach, R., ‘John Michell and Henry Cavendish: weighing the stars’, The British journal for the history of science, 1968, 4, 126–55 (129, n.9)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For discussions of Herschel's concepts of ‘resolvable’, ‘accurate’, and ‘ambiguous’, see Collected papers, i, 59 (1782); ii, 459–60 (1811); ii, 593 (1818)Google Scholar. On the linguistic issues involved in taxonomy, and its development, see Dean, J., ‘Controversy over classification’, in Barnes, B. and Shapin, S. (eds.), Natural order, London, 1979, pp. 211–28Google Scholar; and Baker, K. M., ‘An unpublished paper of Condorcet on technical methods of classification’, Annals of science, 1962, 18, 99123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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29 [Brougham, Henry], Edinburgh Review, 1803, 1, 426–31Google Scholar. For Herschel's and Watson's responses, see Lubbock, , op. cit. (2), pp. 282–4.Google Scholar

30 Ibid. For comments on the policy of the Review, see Clive, J., Scotch reviewers: The Edinburgh review, 1802–1815, Cambridge, Mass., 1957CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Morrell, J. B., ‘Professors Robison and Playfair and the ‘Theophobia Gallica’’, Notes and records of the Royal Society, 1971, 26, 4363.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

31 Banks, to Herschel, , 24 03 1800Google Scholar, in Lubbock, , op. cit. (2), p. 266Google Scholar. Herschel's work on radiation is discussed in Lovell, D. J., ‘Herschel's dilemma in the interpretation of thermal radiation’, Isis, 1968, 59, 4660CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Herschel himself insisted that ‘we cannot too minutely enter into an analysis of light, which is the most subtle of all the active principles that are concerned in the mechanism of nature’, in Lubbock, , op. cit. (2), pp. 262–8.Google Scholar

32 On Brougham's epistemology, see Cantor, G., ‘Henry Brougham and the Scottish methodological tradition’, Studies in the history and philosophy of science, 1971, 2, 6989CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Olson, R., Scottish philosophy and British physics, Princeton, 1975, pp. 98111Google Scholar. On Lavoisier's reform and the attacks upon it, see Crosland, M., Historical studies in the language of chemistry, London, 1962Google Scholar, chapter V. The comment of Robison, John is in a letter to Watt, James, 9 09 1800Google Scholar, in Robinson, E. and McKie, D. (eds.), Partners in science, London, 1970, p. 352.Google Scholar

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34 For the British response to reform, see ibid., chapter VII. See particularly, Cavendish, H., Scientific papers, ed. by Thorpe, E., Cambridge, 1921, ii, 324–6Google Scholar; and Black, J., Lectures on the elements of chemistry, ed. by Robison, John, Edinburgh, 1803, i, 555Google Scholar. On Linnaean sources in natural history, see Linnaeus, C., Philosophia botanica, Stockholm, 1751, para. 256Google Scholar; Daudin, H., De Linné à Lamarck: méthode de la classification et l'idée de série animale, 1740–1790, Paris, 1926, pp. 4653Google Scholar; Canguilhem, G., Etudes d'histoire et de philosophie des sciences, Paris, 1968, pp. 342–4Google Scholar; Stafleu, F. A., Linnaeus and the Linnaeans, Utrecht, 1971Google Scholar; Jones, W. P., ‘The vogue of natural history in England, 1750–1770’, Annals of science, 1937, 2, 345–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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36 Collected papers, ii, 654Google Scholar; Lubbock, , op. cit. (2), pp. 66–7.Google Scholar

37 Collected papers, i, xxiiiGoogle Scholar; Lubbock, , op. cit. (2), p. 73Google Scholar. For the importance of natural history at the Bath Society, see the sources cited in n. 6, above.

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39 Watson, to Herschel, , 7 12 1781Google Scholar, ibid., p. 96: ‘as I was informed that some nebulous stars are… inserted in the Connaissance des temps for 1783, I have bought it and sent it’, ibid., p. 96; Maskelyne, to Herschel, , 19 04 1782Google Scholar (partly reproduced in ibid., p. 110; discussed in Hoskin, , op. cit. (5 William Herschel), pp. 32–3Google Scholar on Michell, John, ‘An inquiry into the probable parallax of the fixed stars’, Philosophical transactions, 1767, 57, 234–64CrossRefGoogle Scholar; for the development of the observatory, see Bennett, J., op. cit. (15).Google Scholar

40 Collected papers, ii, 654Google Scholar; Dreyer reproduces Herschel's drawing of the Orion nebula at ibid., ii, 496.

41 Ibid., ii, 654–5.

42 Ibid., i, 423.

43 Ibid., ii, 213.

44 Ibid., ii, 465.

45 For an analysis of the contents of Messier's catalogue, see Jones, K. Glyn, The search for the nebulae, Chalfont St Giles, 1975Google Scholar. For Messier's approach to the nebulae, see his ‘Notice de mes comètes’, Observatoire de Paris, MSC.2.19.

46 Lalande, to Herschel, , 4 04 1784Google Scholar, in Lubbock, , op. cit. (2), p. 201Google Scholar. Compare Jaki, L., The Milky Way, New York, 1972, p. 222.Google Scholar

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51 Ibid., i, 652.

52 Ibid., ii, 653.

53 Ibid., ii, 652.

54 Ibid., ii, 653.

55 ‘On the construction of the heavens’, ibid., i, 223–59, and ‘Catalogue of one thousand new nebulae and clusters of stars’, ibid., i, 260–93.

56 Herschel, to Lalande, , 01 1785Google Scholar. Royal Astronomical Society Herschel Papers W.1/1., f. 181.

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62 Foucault, , op. cit. (9, The order of things), p. 150Google Scholar. On the absence of evolutionary theories, see Bowler, P. J., ‘Evolutionism in the Enlightenment’, History of science, 1974, 12, 159–83CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; and Bynum, W. F., ‘The great chain of being after 40 years’, History of science, 1975, 13, 128CrossRefGoogle Scholar, commenting on Lovejoy, A., The great chain of being, Cambridge, Mass., 1936, 1964.Google Scholar

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