Posts tagged ‘mathematics’
Ladies of the Laboratory 3: The Scientific Slut–Émilie du Châtelet
Written by Lewis D. Eigen
There is one marvelous scientist who, in the 18th century, not only brought the new mathematics and physics of Isaac Newton to much of France, but also found and corrected some errors that Newton had made—overturning erroneous physics principles that then had general scientific concurrence. The scientist was a woman–Émilie du Châtelet. And yet even many of the modern feminists who have sought to give female scientists due recognition, tend to avoid using this scientist as an example. The reason is that by modern contemporary standards, she was a slut—a sexual libertine. She was a little too liberated. This article is not only about her, but about the culture that to this day inhibits recognition of a female scientist because of her personal sexual predilections—having nothing to do with science.
Ladies of the Laboratory 2: How in a Few Months Late in the 19th Century One Man Who Had Little Interest in Gender Equality Hired More Female Astronomers than the World Had Ever Known
The remarkable story of a unique occurance in scientific history where although males were the final controllers, women worked with other women and under female supervision and the science thrived. This one instance a female culture, scientific laboratory was so successful that females produced more science output than all the men in history. The mostly female model succeeded so well that it put itself out of existence. But more females had worked as astronomers in this one instance than in all of prior recorded history.
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