The last man who knew everything : Thomas Young, the anonymous genius who proved Newton wrong, and deciphered the Rosetta Stone, among other surprising feats
Born in 1773, Thomas Young lived in a pivotal time. The explosion of knowledge that was soon to come made it impossible to be a true polymath?a master of multiple disciplines. Young was the last of the polymaths, and his contributions to science are truly staggering. Challenging the theories of Isaac Newton, he was the first to prove that light is a wave; his work on the Rosetta Stone was instrumental in deciphering the language of the ancient Egyptians; and his study of the human eye led him to formulate the three-color theory of vision, more than a century before it could be proved. And yet, Young was ridiculed and rejected by the scientific establishment throughout his lifetime. In "The Last Man Who Knew Everything," Andrew Robinson returns this forgotten genius to his proper position in the pantheon of great scientific thinkers. Thoroughly researched and elegantly executed, Robinson reveals the humble brilliance of a man whose eclectic genius ostracized him from his peers, but whose extraordinary breakthroughs were indispensable in forming the foundation of modern knowledge
Biography
x, 288 pages : illustrations, facsimiles, portraits ; 24 cm
9780131343047, 9780452288058, 0131343041, 0452288053
77528344
Child prodigy
Fellow of the Royal Society
Itinerant medical student
'Phenomenon' Young
Physician of vision
Royal institution lecturer
Let there be light waves
'Natural philosophy and the mechanical arts'
Dr Thomas Young, M.D., F.R.C.P
Reading the Rosetta Stone
Waves of enlightenment
Walking encyclopedia
In the public interest
Grand tour
Dueling with Champollion
A universal man
"1st Plume printing, January 2007"--Title page verso
"Previously published in a Pi Press edition"--Title page verso