9.5.12

The Last Page


According to a search I did on Wolframalpha, 129 million is the number of unique book titles in existence. In this blog I am picking my choice of book for each of the last 5 centuries. Given that not many books existed before 1500 as the printing press was not invented until 1440 I had quite a range to pick from. In this blog I am just concentrating on works of non-fiction which should cut the selection down to say, 40 million. At the end of the day this is a personal choice, however I have tried at all times to back up my choices with references from authoritative and reliable sources.





16th Century -- Montaigne's Essays



Highly annotated copy of The Essays


The Essays by Michel de Montaigne is my choice for book of the 16th century. It is estimated that there are over 150 millions blogs in existence on the world wide web today. Blogging had to start somewhere and the origin of writing about oneself started in 1580 with the publication of the above. Before this it was unheard of for a writer to publish details of their private everyday actions and thoughts. I refer you to an article in the New York Times on this subject.



In The Essays, which incidentally is Montaigne's only book, he waxes lyrical on subjects as diverse as 'On prognostications', 'On smells', 'On not pretending to be ill', 'On diversion' and 'That we should not be happy till after our death'. There are 107 essays in all. In these essays we learn the following and much more:
  • How to cope with a friend's death
  • How to work up courage
  • How to act well in morally difficult situations
  • How to make most of life and prepare for death
To what is owed the success of this book and its continuing relevance today? The following quote from Andre Gide may explain:
The success of the Essays would be inexplicable but for the author's extraordinary personality. What did he bring to the world then that what was new? Self knowledge - and all other knowledge seemed to him uncertain; but the human being he discovers - and uncovers - is so genuine, so true, that in him every reader recognises himself (Gide, A 1939, p.2).

                                                                             The Dashing Dude Himself

We are fortunate that The Essays survived at all given that it was banned by the Catholic Church from 1676-1854. We are fortunate they were written at all as Montaigne nearly died in a riding accident in late 1569. France suffered great upheavals during the 16th century. Civil war between Catholics and Protestants (Huguenots) raged from1562-1598. The war was made up of seven separate wars. An atrocity would take place followed by war for 2-3 years, peace would be negotiated until the next atrocity and then the cycle would start again. Bubonic plague was still very prevalent in France in the 1500's with plague on Montaigne's estate in 1585 forcing him to leave the area.





Sarah Bakewell introduces How to Live: A Life of Montaigne from George Miller on Vimeo.
Biographer Sarah Bakewell describes how she first became captivated by the sixteenth-century French writer, Michel de Montaigne. She also explains the ways in which her biography of the writer is unusual and why she thinks Montaigne still speaks powerfully to contemporary readers.








17th Century -- Spinoza's Ethics




Title page of The Ethics

Of all the philosophers of the seventeenth-century, perhaps none have more relevance today than Spinoza (Nadler, S 2008). The Ethics by Baruch Spinoza is my choice of book for the 17th century. The Ethics is the author's principal philosophical work. It was finished in 1675 and first published after the author's death in 1677. The Enlightenment is said to have been sparked by this and his other works.



The Age of Enlightenment was a European cultural and intellectual movement whose aim was for society to move away from superstition and religious mantras and instead adopt reason and science as its foundation. Seven philosophers were associated with the initial process of the  Enlightenment: Bacon, Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza, Locke, Bayle and Leibniz (Israel, J p.9).







Spinoza's contribution was arguably the most crucial in crystallising what is termed Radical Enlightenment, primarily because his thought goes further than that of the other six in undermining belief in revelation, divine providence and miracles, and hence ecclesiastical authority, and also because he was the first major advocate of freedom of thought and the press as distinct from freedom of conscience, and the first great democratic philosopher (Israel, J p.10)
The Ethics is not an easy read, it has a forbidding mathematical structure taken from Euclid with many definitions included and a very technical vocabulary

Baruch Spinoza (1632-1677)


Now bear with me here, below is a summary of The Ethics taken from The Internet Encyclopaedia of Philosophy (a peer reviewed academic resource):

A monumental work, that presents an ethical vision unfolding out of a monistic metaphysics in which God and Nature are identified. God is no longer the transcendent creator of the universe who rules it via providence, but Nature itself, understood as an infinite, necessary, and fully deterministic system of which humans are a part. Humans find happiness only through a rational understanding of this system and their place within it (Dutton, B, D 2005).




The 17th century is considered to be Amsterdam's golden age. In this era you could have your portrait painted by Rembrandt or Vermeer, make a fortune and then lose a fortune in the tulip mania or join The Dutch East India company and travel the world.
Among the great many people that Spinoza influenced over the years was the Nobel Prize winning Argentinian poet Jorge Luis Borges. Below is a YouTube video of him reading a sonnet he dedicated to Spinoza. If you were to only click on one item in this blog make it this one.










18th Century -- Smith's Wealth



Title page of the Wealth of Nations

The contribution that The Wealth of Nations, published in 1776, made to the understanding of what came to be called capitalism was monumental. Smith showed how the freeing of trade can very often be extremely helpful in generating economic prosperity through specialization in production and division of labour and in making good use of economies of large scale (Sen 2009).










The book I have chosen as my book of the 18th century is An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith. It was published in 1776, the same year as American Independence, with the author having worked on it for ten years.
Smith was born into the small fishing village of Kirkcaldy in Scotland. He went on to be educated at Glasgow University, where he later obtained a professorship teaching moral philosophy. Little is known of the personal life of Smith who, like Spinoza, ordered his friends to destroy his private papers after his death. He was an integral member of the Scottish Enlightenment (link to informative podcast) along many other great minds including David Hume, Robert Burns, James Watt and Sir Walter Scott.
Many people quote Smith without having actually read him and economic fundamentalists have, especially since the Thatcher/Reagan era, used his words for their own purpose. This is something that can happen to all great works. Many fundamentalists argue for free unregulated markets and laissez-faire; however in another quote from economist and Noble Laureate Amartya Sen:
Smith’s economic analysis went well beyond leaving everything to the invisible hand of the market mechanism. He was not only a defender of the role of the state in providing public services, such as education, and in poverty relief (along with demanding greater freedom for the indigents who received support than the Poor Laws of his day provided), he was also deeply concerned about the inequality and poverty that might survive in an otherwise successful market economy (Sen 2009).
The message to take from this is that Wealth is not only relevant to our times but it needs to be re-read, reinterpreted and revitalised.



Smith's statue on the Royal Mile, Edinburgh
Final resting place



























19th Century -- Darwin's Species



Title page of The Origin of the Species

Let me lay my cards on the table. If I were to give an award for the single best idea anyone has ever had, I'd give it to Darwin, ahead of Newton and Einstein and anyone else. In a single stroke, the idea of evolution by natural selection unifies the realm of life, meaning, and purpose with the realm of space and time, cause and effect, mechanism and physical law (Dennett 1995, p. 21)





The book I have chosen as my book of the 19th century is On the Origin of the Species by Charles Darwin, or to give it its full title On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life.
The book was first published on the 24th of November 1859, selling out the first print of 1250 copies almost immediately. Darwin had worked out the theory by 1839 and but did not publish it for 20 years. The reason for this, it has been asserted, is that Darwin feared an outcry from the establishment; however, in an article in Nature magazine, Odling-Smee (2007, p.487) argues that Darwin was determined to assemble a huge body of evidence to support his theory and to clear any stumbling blocks before publishing it in full.


Portrait of a young Darwin




Darwin did not mention humankind in Origins however the essential message of the book regarding humans is summarised by Padian (2008 p.634) perfectly as follows:


Humans are animals, one species of many on the planet, bound by common ancestry to all other species, part of an age-old dance of reproduction, accommodation, survival and alternation.


Darwin published Origins in the middle of what came to be known as the Victorian era. This era is synonymous with child labour, mass sewerage systems, Jack the Ripper, gas lighting and Gilbert and Sullivan. Other important works of the 19th century would be Das Capital by Karl Marx and The Interpretation of Dreams by Sigmund Freud. However as Padian (2008 p. 632) states, the ideas of Marx have been distorted beyond recognition by political execution and the ideas of Freud no longer merit scientific recognition.



                                             In this YouTube video acclaimed  naturalist Sir David Attenborough 
                                                    presents his views on Darwin and his continuing relevance
                                                     







20th Century -- Carson's Spring



Front cover of Slient Spring

The 'control of nature' is a phrase conceived in arrogance, born of the Neanderthal age of biology and philosophy, when it was supposed that nature exists for the convenience of man (Carson 1962, p.243).

The book I have chosen for the 20th century is Silent Spring by American biologist Rachel Carson. Silent Spring catalogued the impact of widespread and indiscriminate spraying of DDT (dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane) and other even more toxic organochlorines such as aldrin, chlordane and dieldrin on wildlife, marine life and humans alike, and questioned their use without proper investigation of their long-term effects. She meticulously describes how DDT enters the food chain and lodges in the fatty tissue of birds and animals. DDT, though first synthesized in 1874, was not discovered to be an insecticide until 1939. After World War II it was made available to farmers as an agricultural insecticide. By the late fifties more than 30,000 tons a year were being used in the United States alone. The agricultural use of DDT was banned in most developed countries in the 1970s and 1980s with Britain being one of the last, not banning it until 1984.

Rachel Louise Carson at home with cat Moppet
Like Darwin above, Carson spent a number of years researching her book. She knew that it would feel the full force of the powerful chemical industry. It has over 600 references which take up almost fifty pages at the end of the book. What is the book's legacy? Steiguer (2006 p. 40) states:

Rachel Carson's most important legacy may not be found in the laws of Congress nor in the halls of Washington's bureaucracy, but in the minds of the people. She shocked us into awareness of the deadly threat posed to present and future generations when the air, water, and soil are used casually as repositories for toxic substances.

Silent Spring was published in the 1960s, 27 September 1962 to be precise. These were times of great change and tumult in the United States and in many other parts of the world as well. The Cuban Missile Crisis happened in October 1962, the Berlin Wall was erected in August 1961 and the Soviet Union had sent the first man into space in April 1961.





Bill Moyers Journal: Remembering Rachel Carson with Kaiulani Lee from BillMoyers.com on Vimeo. Kaiulani Lee has toured with her play A Sense of Wonder, which is based on the life of Carson, for over 20 years.

 

Further Research

A great source for future research into books and book lists can be found here. Goodreads.com has a vast array of lists under various headings. Check out 100 most influential books ever written by Martin Seymour Smith. The Guardian has published a list of 100 greatest non-fiction books. Time magazine did something similar.  Melvyn Bragg has weighed in with his own 12 books that changed the world. Here is a link to it on librarything .  Project Gutenburg holds over 39000 free books. It holds 4 out of the five books above with Silent Spring the odd one out, the reason being  it is still within copyright. Your local public library library should hold a copy.

Conclusion

The Special Broadcasting Service (SBS) of Sydney Australia has as its main corporate slogan "Seven Billion Stories and counting". Since the invention of the printing press it has been largely through the medium of books and writing that people have broadcast their stories, theories and ideas to the world. I have brought to you in this blog my choices of the last five centuries, these being the  tiniest sample of what is out there and along with there being seven billion stories I am sure that there are also seven billion views on the choice of books encompassing the time span.

And so finally.......
Every Sunday evening Adam Smith held a dinner at his home for a group of his close friends. His last recorded words recorded on that final Sunday were " I believe we must adjourn this meeting to another place"


Bibliography

Adam-Smith-Statue.JPG [image] in Wikimedia Commons, 30.07.08, 1745, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Adam-Smith-Statue.JPG>.

Age of Enlightenment - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 2012, viewed 11 April 2012, <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_Enlightenment>.

 All-TIME 100 Nonfiction Books | Entertainment | TIME.com, 2012, viewed 6 May 2012, ,http://entertainment.time.com/2011/08/30/all-time-100-best-nonfiction-books/>.

BBC - BBC Radio 4 Programmes - In Our Time, The Enlightenment in Scotland, 2012, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00548ln>.

Carson, R 1962, Silent spring, London : Hamish Hamilton, London p. 243.

Charles Darwin by G. Richmond.jpg [image] in Wikimedia Commons, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Charles_Darwin_by_G._Richmond.jpg>.

Dennett, DC 1995, Darwin's dangerous idea : evolution and the meanings of life, Simon & Schuster, New York.

Dutton, BD 2012, Spinoza, Benedict De, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://www.iep.utm.edu/spinoza/>.

estimated number of unique books - Wolfram|Alpha, 2012, viewed 17 May 2012, <http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?

Ethics (book) [image] in Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 2012, viewed 16 May 2012,  <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethics_(book)>.

 Grave Adam Smith.JPG [image] in Wikimedia Commons, 30 July 2008(2008-07-30), 1805, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Grave_Adam_Smith.JPG>.

Index Librorum Prohibitorum - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, viewed 7 April 2012, <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Index_Librorum_Prohibitorum>.

Israel, J 2011, Democratic Enlightenment : Philosophy, Revolution, and Human Rights 1750-1790, e-book, viewed 11 April 2012, <http://swin.eblib.com.au.ezproxy.lib.swin.edu.au/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=800816>.

Michel_de_Montaigne_1.jpg [image] in Wikipedia commons, viewed 7 April 2012,
<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Michel_de_Montaigne_1.jpg>.

Nadler, S 2012, Baruch Spinoza, viewed 11 April 2012, <http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/spinoza/>.

Nature Video Channel 2009, PART 1: David Attenborough on Darwin - by Nature Video, 30 January, viewed 28 April 2012, <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uz7U4k522Pg>.

NLM Opens Darwin Exhibition, "Rewriting the Book of Nature", 2012a, U.S. National Library of Medicine, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://www.nlm.nih.gov/news/darwin_exhibit09.html>.

Odling-Smee, L 2007, 'Darwin and the 20-year publication gap', Nature, vol. 446, no. 7135, 2007/03/29/, p. 478+.

Padian, K 2008, 'Darwin's enduring legacy', Nature, vol. 451, no. 7179, Feb, pp. 632-634.

Project Gutenberg - free ebooks, 2012, viewed 16 May 2012,  <http://www.gutenberg.org/>.

Sarah Bakewell Draws on Montaigne in ‘How to Live’ - NYTimes.com, 2012, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/18/books/18montaigne.html>.

Sarah Bakewell introduces How to Live: A Life of Montaigne on Vimeo, 2012, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://vimeo.com/18791643>.

 Sen, A 2009, Capitalism Beyond the Crisis, The New York Review of Books, viewed 22 April 2012, <http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2009/mar/26/capitalism-beyond-the-crisis/>.

“Silent Spring” -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia, 2012, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/media/99787/Book-cover-of-Rachel-Carsons-Silent-Spring-first-published-in>.

Spindlework's Channel 2008, Borges: Spinoza's Sonnet, 2008, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hav8-ZLxdJY>.

Spinoza.jpg [image] in Wikimedia Commons, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Spinoza.jpg>.
 Steiguer, De JE 2006, The origins of modern environmental thought, University of Arizona Press, Tucson.

The great books list, 2012, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://www.thegreatbookslist.com/otherlistssmith.html>.

The 100 greatest non-fiction books | Books | guardian.co.uk, 2012, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/jun/14/100-greatest-non-fiction-books>.

The Wealth of Nations | Adam Smith Institute, 2012, viewed 16 May 2012,  <http://www.adamsmith.org/wealth-of-nations>.

Twelve Books That Changed the World - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 2012, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twelve_Books_That_Changed_the_World>.

US EPA, O, Office of Web Communications 2012, DDT | About EPA | US EPA, viewed 16 May 2012, <http://www.epa.gov/aboutepa/history/topics/ddt/>.




 

2.5.12

Silent Spring

The sedge is wither'd from the lake,

And no birds sing.  

Keats









Rachel Louise Carson at home with cat Moppet.




The 'control of nature' is a phrase conceived in arrogance, born of the Neanderthal age of biology and philosophy, when it was supposed that nature exists for the convenience of man (Carson 1962, p.243).
The book I have chosen for the 20th century is Silent Spring by American biologist Rachel Carson. Silent Spring catalogued the impact of widespread and indescriminate spraying of DDT (dichlorodiphipheny/trichloroethane) and other even more toxic organochlorines such as aldrin, chlordane and dieldrin on wildlife, marine life and humans alike, and questioned their use without proper investigation of their long-term effects. She meticulously describes how DDT enters the food chain and lodges in the fatty tissue of birds and animals. DDT, though first synthesized in 1874, was not discovered to be an insecticide until 1939. After World War II it was made available to farmers as an agricultural insecticide. By the late fifties more than 30,000 tons a year were being used in the United States alone. The agricultural use of DDT was banned in most developed countries in the 1970s and 1980s with Britain being one of the last, not banning it until 1984.
Like Darwin below, Carson spent a number of years researching her book. She knew that it would feel the full force of the powerful chemical industry. It has over 600 references which take up almost fifty pages at the end of the book.   What is the book's legacy? Steiguer (2006 p. 40) states:
Rachel Carson's most important legacy may not be found in the laws of Congress nor in the halls of Washington's bureaucracy, but in the minds of the people. She shocked us into awareness of the deadly threat posed to present and future generations when the air, water, and soil are used casually as repositories for toxic substances.



                            Video taken from Britannica briefly illustrating Carson's struggle with the chemical industry.

Silent Spring was published in the 1960s, 27 September 1962 to be precise. These were times of great change and tumult in the United States and in many other parts of the world as well. The Cuban Missile Crisis happened in October 1962, the Berlin Wall was erected in August 1961 and the Soviet Union had sent the first man into space in April 1961.





                      
                                                           Have some DDT on your porridge, why don't you?

Carson bequeathed her manuscripts and papers to Yale University. A complete listing can be found here.
Silent Spring is mentioned at number 16 in the collection of the 25 greatest science books of all time collated by Discover magazine. It is mentioned in Time magazine's all time 100 non-fiction books. It is also mentioned in the Guardian's 100 greatest non-fiction books.

Reflection on research

Having now moved into the 20th century the research for this blog, while not becoming easier, at least has much more visual content available. For instance it is not known what Spinoza truly looked like, the picture I have used of him on this blog was constructed from notes. I also note that as the World Wide Web does not refuse content, there are all matter of articles on the subject of Silent Spring out there with many people pushing their own agenda. The use of authoitative sources are vital. I am still using Britannica and the catalogue of the State Library along with YouTube and podcasts.



References

Carson, Rachel. [Video]. Encyclopædia Britannica Online, viewed 6 May 2012, <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/media/112348/Learn-about-world-renowned-biologist-Rachel-Carson-who-alerted-the>.

25 Greatest Science Books of All Time | DISCOVER Magazine, 2012, viewed 6 May 2012, <http://discovermagazine.com/2006/dec/25-greatest-science-books/article_view?b_start:int=1&page=2>.

Carson, Rachel. [Video]. Encyclopædia Britannica Online, viewed 6 May 2012, <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/media/112348/Learn-about-world-renowned-biologist-Rachel-Carson-who-alerted-the>.

Carson, R & CBS News. 1963, The Silent spring of Rachel Carson, CBS News, n.p.
DDT so safe you can eat it 1947, viewed 5 May 2012, <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtcXXbuR244&feature=related>.

De Steiguer, JE 2006, The origins of modern environmental thought, University of Arizona Press, Tucson.

Lear, L 2012, The Life and Legacy of Rachel Carson, viewed 5 May 2012, <http://www.rachelcarson.org/>.

Rachel Carson - Hosted by Google,[image], takenSeptember 24, 1962, viewed 6 May 2012, <http://images.google.com/hosted/life/8eeaae5c2a9b455e.html>.

Silent Spring | All-TIME 100 Nonfiction Books | Entertainment | TIME.com, 2012, viewed 6 May 2012, <http://entertainment.time.com/2011/08/30/all-time-100-best-nonfiction-books/>.

The 100 greatest non-fiction books | Books | guardian.co.uk, 2012, viewed 6 May 2012, <http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/jun/14/100-greatest-non-fiction-books>.

28.4.12

On the Origin of the Species.


Let me lay my cards on the table. If I were to give an award for the single best idea anyone has ever had, I'd give it to Darwin, ahead of Newton and Einstein and anyone else. In a single stroke, the idea of evolution by natural selection unifies the realm of life, meaning, and purpose with the realm of space and time, cause and effect, mechanism and physical law (Dennett 1995, p. 21)

                                                              The Evolutionary Man Himself

The book I have chosen as my book of the 19th century is On the Origin of the Species by Charles Darwin or to give it its full title On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life.
The book was first published on the 24th of November 1859, selling out the first print of 1250 copies almost immediately. Darwin had worked out the theory by 1839 and but did not publish it for 20 years. The reason for this, it has been asserted, is that Darwin feared an outcry from the establishment; however, in an article in Nature magazine, Odling-Smee (2007, p.487) argues that Darwin was determined to assemble a huge body of evidence to support his theory and to clear any stumbling blocks before publishing it in full.

What is Natural Selection. I will let Richard Dawkins (1996 p.66) explain:
The genes that exist are the genes that made it through a million sieves in cumulative cascade. And what was it that made them do so well? They co-operated, through the intricate processes of embryology, with other successful genes to build an unbroken succession of elite individuals, equipped by them to become ancestors. That is why the qualities of the elite are the qualities inherited by every animal and plant: because existence is tough, and competition sorted out the ancestors from the failures.
 Darwin did not mention humankind in Origins however the essential message of the book regarding humans is summarised by Padian (2008 p.634)  perfectly as follows:
Humans are animals, one species of many on the planet, bound by common ancestry to all other species, part of an age-old dance of reproduction, accommodation, survival and alternation.



In this YouTube video Sir David Attenborough presents his
views on Darwin and his continuing relevance.

Darwin published Origins in the middle of what came to be known as the Victorian era. This era is synonymous with child labour, mass sewerage systems, Jack the Ripper, gas lighting and Gilbert and Sullivan.

Other important works of the 19th century would be Das Capital by Karl Marx and The Interpretation of Dreams by Sigmund Freud however as  Padian (2008 p. 632) states, the ideas of Marx have been distorted  beyond recognition by political execution and the ideas of Freud no longer merit scientific recognition.

The complete works of Darwin can be found here.

Section of the only illustration in the original book commonly referred to as Darwin's Tree of Life.
Something that Smith below shares with Darwin is that both feature on Bank of England notes,Darwin on the ₤10 and Smith on the ₤20.

Reference List

Charles Darwin aged 51.jpg [image], Wikimedia Commons, viewed 28 April 2012, <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Charles_Darwin_aged_51.jpg>.

Dawkins, R 1996, 'Accidents of life: Darwinian theory was the bestidea of all time, but why did it take so long to evolve? And what if we had 16 fingers?(The Issues)', New Statesman (1996), vol. 138, no. 4981, p. 66.

Dennett, DC 1995, Darwin's dangerous idea : evolution and the meanings of life, Simon & Schuster, New York.

Origin of Species.svg [image], Wikimedia Commons, viewed 28 April 2012,
<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Origin_of_Species.svg>.

Odling-Smee, L 2007, 'Darwin and the 20-year publication gap', Nature, vol. 446, no. 7135, 2007/03/29/, p. 478+.

Padian, K 2008, 'Darwin's enduring legacy', Nature, vol. 451, no. 7179, Feb, pp. 632-634.

Nature Video Channel 2009, PART 1: David Attenborough on Darwin - by Nature Video, 30 January, viewed 28 April 2012,  <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uz7U4k522Pg>.

Wijhe, JV 2012, The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online, viewed 28 April 2012,   <http://darwin-online.org.uk/>.

        

    

11.4.12

The father of Economics: Adam Smith (1723-1790)

The contribution that The Wealth of Nations, published in 1776, made to the understanding of what came to be called capitalism was monumental. Smith showed how the freeing of trade can very often be extremely helpful in generating economic prosperity through specialization in production and division of labor and in making good use of economies of large scale (Sen 2009).

The book I have chosen as my book of the 18th century is An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith. It was published in 1776 the same year as American Independence, with the author having worked on it for ten years. Smith divided Wealth into five parts which are as follows:
  1. Of the Causes of Improvement in the productive Powers of Labour
  2. Of the Nature, Accumulation, and Employment of Stock
  3. Of the different Progress of Opulence in different Nations
  4. Of Systems of political Economy
  5. Of the Revenue of the Sovereign or Commonwealth
As can be seen Smith did not go for catchy titles and very much liked the word "of".

 Smith was born into a small fishing village of Kirkcaldy in Scotland. He went on to be educated at Glasgow University where he later obtained a professorship teaching moral philosophy. Little is known of the personal life of Smith who like Spinoza ordered his friends to destroy his private papers after his death. He was an integral member of the Scottish Enlightenment along many other great minds including David Hume, Robert Burns, James Watt and Sir Walter Scott.

The continuing relevance of the book can be found in the following passage taken from it:
When the people of any particular country have such confidence in the fortune, probity, and prudence of a particular banker, as to believe that he is always ready to pay upon demand such of his promissory notes as are likely to be at any time presented to him; those notes come to have the same currency as gold and silver money, from the confidence that such money can at any time be had for them (Smith 1776, p.292).

The Economical Man Himself


Many people quote Smith without having actually read him and economic fundamentalists have, especially since the Thatcher/Reagan era onwards, used his words for their own purpose. This is something that can happen to all great works. Many fundamentalists argue for free unregulated markets and laissez-faire; however in another quote from economist and Noble Laureate Amartya Sen:
Smith’s economic analysis went well beyond leaving everything to the invisible hand of the market mechanism. He was not only a defender of the role of the state in providing public services, such as education, and in poverty relief (along with demanding greater freedom for the indigents who received support than the Poor Laws of his day provided), he was also deeply concerned about the inequality and poverty that might survive in an otherwise successful market economy (Sen 2009).
The message to take from this is that Wealth is not only relevant to our times but it needs to be re-read, reinterpreted and revitalised.

This is a good concise video giving an overview of Smith by Cloudbiography.


 All 900 pages of the tome can be found here at Project Gutenberg. It should come as no surprise that Wealth of Nations is included in the 100 best Scottish books of all time. Melvyn Bragg in his book Twelve books that changed the world lists Wealth as one of his choices, and who are we to argue with Melvyn?

Reflection on research

A research facility that I am finding very useful that I neglected to mention in post 3 is the use of podcasts. I have found podcasts on the various books and authors on many networks including NPR, ABC, BBC, RTE and for this post on Econtalk. One particular podcast has been very useful and that is  In Our Time from BBC Radio 4 and I can already see that it has many podcasts concerning my next post. I have changed from using the catalogue at Swinburne to the catalogue at the State Library of Victoria, as I am finding its results more useful and it does not have as many broken links.

Reference list

Adam Smith, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, edited by R.H. Campbell and A.S. Skinner (Clarendon Press, 1976), I, II.ii.28, p. 292

Adam Smith [image], Wikimedia Commons, viewed 22 April 2012, <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:AdamSmith.jpg>.

Abrahams, T 2005, Adam Smith - The Wealth of Nations (1776),  The List, viewed 22 April 2012, <http://www.list.co.uk/article/2826-adam-smith-the-wealth-of-nations-1776/>.

Amartya Sen 2009, Capitalism Beyond the Crisis, The New York Review of Books, viewed 22 April 2012, < http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2009/mar/26/capitalism-beyond-the-crisis/>.

An Inquiry Into the Nature and Causes of The Wealth Of Nations, Project Gutenberg, viewed 22 April 2012, <http://www.gutenberg.org/files/3300/3300-h/3300-h.htm>.

BBC 2012, Radio 4 People - Melvyn Bragg, viewed 22 April 2012, <http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/people/presenters/melvyn-bragg/>.

Cloudbio 2011, Adam Smith, 12 December, viewed 22 April 2012, < http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8rif2cq47c8>.

Miller, The Legendary Adam Smith Building Cat | Facebook, 2012, viewed 22 April 2012 <http://www.facebook.com/TheAdamSmithBuildingCat>.

Twelve Books That Changed the World - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 2012, viewed 22 April 2012, <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twelve_Books_That_Changed_the_World>.




9.4.12

The father of the Enlightenment: Baruch Spinoza (1632-1677)

Of all the philosophers of the seventeenth-century, perhaps none have more relevance today than Spinoza (Nadler, S 2008). The Ethics by Baruch Spinoza is my choice of book for the 17th century. "The Ethics" is the author's principal philosophical work. It was finished in 1675 and first published after the author's death in 1677. The Enlightenment is said to have been sparked by this and his other works.

The Age of Enlightenment was a European cultural and intellectual movement whose aim was that society would move away from superstition and religious mantras and adopt reason  and science as its foundation. Seven philosophers were associated with the initial process of the enlightenment, Bacon, Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza, Locke, Bayle and Leibniz (Israel, J p.9).
However Spinoza's contribution was arguably the most crucial in crystallising what is termed Radical Enlightenment, primarily because his thought goes further than that of the other six in undermining belief in revelation, divine providence and miracles, and hence ecclesiastical authority, and also because he was the first major advocate of freedom of thought and the press as distinct from freedom of conscience, and the first great democratic philosopher (Israel, J p.10)
  The Ethics is a book in five parts. They are
  • God, nature and the meaning of substance
  • Nature of the mind
  • Knowledge
  • Passion and action
  • Virtue and happiness
"The Ethics" is not an easy read, it has a forbidding mathematical structure taken from Euclid with many definitions included and a very technical vocabulary. Full text of the work is here courtesy of Project Gutenberg.

Now bear with me here, below is a summary of The Ethics taken from The Internet Encyclopaedia of Philosophy (a peer reviewed academic resource)
 A monumental work that presents an ethical vision unfolding out of a monistic metaphysics in which God and Nature are identified. God is no longer the transcendent creator of the universe who rules it via providence, but Nature itself, understood as an infinite, necessary, and fully deterministic system of which humans are a part. Humans find happiness only through a rational understanding of this system and their place within it (Dutton, B, D 2005).
As can be seen Spinoza had a very naturalistic view of God and of the Universe.
 Spinoza rejects the traditional view of God and the world as separate from each other and the assumption of purpose, because the idea of somebody or something fulfilling a purpose implies the existence of a creator who is distinct from creation (Seidel, E 2001)
 One of the key arguments of Spinoza is that a human being should live by the guidance of reason alone and should not governed by fear or superstition. As Stephen Nadler again outlines in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy the crucial message of the work is:
  .........in showing that our happiness and well-being lie not in a life enslaved to the passions and to the transitory goods we ordinarily pursue; nor in the related unreflective attachment to the superstitions that pass as religion, but rather in the life of reason (Nadler, S 2008).
Spinoza was a Dutch Jewish philosopher. His ancestors were of Portugese descent. They were driven out of Portugal because of the Inquisition. In 1656 Spinoza was issued with a cherem, or excommunication, from his Jewish community in Amsterdam. It was life-long excommunication. The reason for this is not known but one can assume it was for his radical ideas and thinking. Like Montaigne before him his works were banned by the Catholic church and put on the Index Librorium Prohibitorum.

                                                                The Enlightened One Himself


The 17th century is considered to be Amsterdam's golden age. In this era you could have your portrait painted by Rembrandt or Vermeer, make a fortune and then lose a fortune in the tulip mania or join The Dutch East India company and travel the world.






This is a YouTube video of Spinoza's more famous quotes.

In the course of researching this blog I have come across a new term, a catablog and this is one concerning all things Spinoza.

As with "The Essays" above "The Ethics" is included in the book The 100 most influential books ever written by Martin Seymour-Smith

Notes on the research process

By and large I am enjoying the research process although I feel it is taking up too much time to the detriment of other subjects. One resource that I am finding particularly useful is to find one authoritive book on the subject and while it will not supply all required information it can deliver many good leads which can then be investigated. In Montaigne's case it was a book by Sarah Bakewell and in Spinoza's case it was a book by Jonathan Israel. Initially I am using Wikipedia and Britannica online and following on by using the Swinburne catalogue.

Reference list


Age of Enlightenment - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, 2012, viewed 11 April 2012, <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_Enlightenment>.

iPerspective 2011,Baruch Spinoza - Top 10 Quotes, 23 October, viewed 11 April 2012, <http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=bbTTR9UI5fI>.

Dutton, B,D 2012, 'Spinoza, Benedict De' , Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, viewed 11 April 2012, <http://www.iep.utm.edu/spinoza/>.

 Israel, J 2011, Democratic Enlightenment : Philosophy, Revolution, and Human Rights 1750-1790, e-book, viewed 11 April 2012, <http://swin.eblib.com.au.ezproxy.lib.swin.edu.au/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=800816>.

Nadler, S 2012, Baruch Spinoza, viewed 11 April 2012, <http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/spinoza/>.

Necessarily Eternal, 2012, viewed 11 April 2012,
<http://perturbedintellect.typepad.com/necessarilyeternal/>.

Seidel, E 'SPINOZA.', European Judaism, vol. 34, no. 1

Spinoza  2012, [image] in Wikipedia Commons, viewed 11 April 2012,  <http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ea/Spinoza.jpg>.

The 100 Most Influential Books Ever Written (book) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, Public domain?, viewed 12 April 2012,  <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_100_Most_Influential_Books_Ever_Written_(book)>.

The Project Gutenberg E-text of The Ethics, by Benedict de Spinoza, 2012, viewed 12 April 2012, <http://www.gutenberg.org/files/3800/3800-h/3800-h.htm>.





                                         

2.4.12

The father of all bloggers: Michel Eyquem de Montaigne (1533-1592)

The Essays by Michel de Montaigne is my choice for book of the 16th century. It is estimated that there are over 150 millions blogs in existence on the world wide web today. Blogging had to start somewhere and the origin of writing about oneself started in 1580 with the publication of the above. Before this it was unheard of for a writer to publish details of  their private everyday actions and thoughts.  I refer you to an article in the New York Times on this subject.

In The Essays,  which incidently is Montaigne's only book, he waxes lyrical on subjects as diverse as 'On prognostications', 'On smells',  'On not pretending to be ill', 'On diversion' and 'That we should not be happy till after our death'. There are 107 essays in all. In these essays we learn the following and much more:
  • How to cope with a friend's death
  • How to work up courage
  • How to act well in morally difficult situations
  • How to make most of life and prepare for death
To what is owed the success of this book and its continuing relevance today? The following quote from Andre Gide may explain:

The success of the Essays would be inexplicable but for the author's extraordinary personality. What did he bring to the world then that what was new? Self knowledge - and all other knowledge seemed to him uncertain; but the human being he discovers - and uncovers - is so genuine, so true, that in him every reader recognises himself (Gide, A 1939, p.2).


                                                 The Handsome Dude Himself
In her recent biography of Montaigne Sarah Bakewell has outlined why we still need Montaigne to guide us, especially in the realm of politics. 
The twenty-first century has everything to gain from a Montaignean sense of life, and, in its most troubled moments so far, it has been sorely in need of a Montaignean politics. It could use his moderation, his love of sociability and courtesy, his suspension of judgment, and his subtle understanding of the psychological mechanisms involved in confrontation and conflict. It needs his conviction that no vision of heaven, no imagined Apocalypse, and no perfectionist fantasy can ever outweigh the tiniest of selves in the real world (Bakewell, S 2011, p.327).
We are fortunate that The Essays survived at all given that it was banned by the Catholic Church from 1676-1854. We are fortunate they were written at all as Montaigne nearly died in a riding accident in late 1569. France suffered great upheavels during the 16th century. Civil war between Catholics and Protestants (Huguenots) raged from1562-1598. The war was made up of seven separate wars. An atrocity would take place followed by war for 2-3 years, peace would be negotiated until the next atrocity and then the cycle would start again. Bubonic plague was still very  prevalent in France in the 1500's with plague on Montaigne's estate in 1585 forcing him to leave the area.

I note in my research that The Guardian in an article compiled by its book desk had included the Essays in its 100 greatest  non-fiction books under the subject of philosophy.
I noted also that in a synopsis I found on this website of a book entitled 100 most influential books ever written by Martin Seymour Smith that the Essays comes in at 37.




This is a youtube video which highlights a number of Montaigne's most well known truths.


This link from Project Gutenburg will take you to the full online text, enjoy.....


Reference list:


Bakewell, S 2011, How to live, or, A life of Montaigne in one question and twenty attempts at an answer, Vintage, London.

Essays of Michel de Montaigne, 2012, viewed 10 April 2012, <http://www.gutenberg.org/files/3600/3600-h/3600-h.htm>.

Gide, A 1939, 'Montaigne.(Michel de Montaigne)(Critical Essay)', Yale Review, vol. 89, no. 1, p. 53.

Index Librorum Prohibitorum - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, viewed 7 April 2012, <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Index_Librorum_Prohibitorum>.

Michel_de_Montaigne_1.jpg [image] in Wikipedia commons, viewed 7 April 2012,
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/34/Michel_de_Montaigne_1.jpg.

Quotes from Michel de Montaigne 2009, viewed 7 April 2012,  
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d2FDSj4t75A&feature=player>.

Sarah Bakewell Draws on Montaigne in ‘How to Live’ - NYTimes.com, viewed 7 April 2012,
<http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/18/books/18montaigne.html>.

The great books list, 2012, viewed 8 April 2012,  <http://www.thegreatbookslist.com/otherlistssmith.html>.

The 100 greatest non-fiction books | Books | guardian.co.uk, 2012, viewed 7 April 2012, <http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/jun/14/100-greatest-non-fiction-books>.

28.3.12

Research Brief



The research topic I have picked is “5 Centuries, 5 Books”. I plan to take the last five centuries from the 20th to the 16th and pick a book from each that defines the century it was printed in and that has ongoing relevance even for readers of today. I will investigate various lists of published and “best of” lists published to view the available books. I will be concentrating on non-fiction. When I narrow the search down I will write about the books themselves and their authors.

I shall research the impact that the various books have had not just on their times but also on subsequent times.

I plan to research the various literary reviews and literary criticisms of each book. I plan to search the various online databases for these.

I shall briefly outline the historical context into which each book arrived.

The 16th Century

Well known authors of this century are Shakespeare, Machiavelli, More and Marlowe.

Significant events of the century are The Protestant Reformation, The Reign of Elisabeth I, The Spanish Armada and Copernicus writes Commentariolus.

The 17th Century

Well known authors of this century are Shakespeare again, Cervantes, Moliere and Descartes.

Significant event include The English Civil War, The Fall of the Ming Dynasty and The Reign of Peter the Great.

The 18th Century

Well known authors of this century are Voltaire, Swift, Defoe and Paine.

Significant events are The American War of Independence, The French Revolution and The beginning of The Industrial Revolution.

The 19th Century

Writers: Wilde, Twain, Dostoyevsky and Dickens

Events: Population of the planet reaches 1 billion, Napoleonic Wars, The Irish Potato Famine and Slavery abolished in many countries.

20th Century

Writers: Orwell, Rowling, Atwood, Plath and Joyce.

Events: Great Depression, Population of the planet reaches 6 billion, W.W.I, W.W.II and The W.W.W.