Benjamin Franklin's ScienceBenjamin Franklin is well known to most of us, yet his fundamental and wide-ranging contributions to science are still not adequately understood. Until now he has usually been incorrectly regarded as a practical inventor and tinkerer rather than a scientific thinker. He was elected to membership in the elite Royal Society because his experiments and original theory of electricity had made a science of that new subject. His popular fame came from his two lightning experiments-the sentry-box experiment and the later and more famous experiment of the kite-which confirmed his theoretical speculations about the identity of electricity and provided a basis for the practical invention of the lightning rod. Franklin advanced the eighteenth-century understanding of all phenomena of electricity and provided a model for experimental science in general. |
Contents
Franklins Scientific Style | 14 |
How Practical Was Franklins Science? | 31 |
The Mysterious Dr Spence | 40 |
Collinsons Gift and the New German Experiments | 61 |
The Kite the Sentry Box and the Lightning Rod | 66 |
Father Diviš and the First European Lightning Rod with Robert Schofield | 110 |
Prejudice against the Introduction of Lightning Rods | 118 |
Heat and Color | 159 |



