Mary, Queen of Scottish banknotes
Publisher |
Physics World
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Physics
Science
Technology
Publication Date |
Feb 23, 2016
Episode Duration |
00:19:37
The life and legacy of Mary Somerville, who will appear on the new RBS £10
The life and legacy of Mary Somerville, who will appear on the new RBS £10

To learn about Somerville’s academic achievements and personal life, Dacey visits the University of Oxford’s Somerville College. Founded in 1879, it was originally a women-only institution and is named after Somerville, who achieved international acclaim during her lifetime. Famous alumni include chemistry Nobel laureate Dorothy Hodgkin, and the only female prime ministers of the UK and India to date: Margaret Thatcher and Indira Ghandi. Today, the college accepts both men and women but maintains its reputation for being one of the more open and progressive of Oxford’s colleges. Dacey meets Somerville’s current principal Alice Prochaska, a historian by training, who describes Somerville’s formative years and how her influence lives on at the college today.

Prochaska describes how Somerville first encountered mathematics from an unlikely source – an algebra puzzle in a woman’s magazine. Without the support of her parents – who thought maths could turn a female mind to mush – Somerville showed a combination of genius and sheer determination to teach herself Euclidian geometry by candlelight. Under the encouragement of her second husband, William Somerville, she developed a flair for interpreting some of the leading mathematics of her day and communicating this to a wider audience via her accessible writing. One of her best received publications was her book On the Connexion of the Physical Sciences, originally published in 1834 and hailed by many of the period’s leading thinkers, including Charles Darwin. To learn about the influence of Somerville’s work and how she became a fixture in Europe’s intellectual circles, Dacey also meets with science historian Allan Chapman.

In the second half of the podcast, Prochaska talks about some of the challenges that women in science still face today, and discusses some of the initiatives in place at Oxford to encourage diversity. If you would like to find out more about diversity issues in physics, make sure you don’t miss the March issue of Physics World, a special edition on this topic.

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