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Sir David Brewster (1781—1868)
Scottish
natural philosopher, was born on the 11th of December 1781 at
Jedburgh, where his father, a teacher of high reputation, was
rector of the grammar school. At the early age of twelve he was
sent to the university of Edinburgh, being intended for the clerical
profession. Even before this, however, he had shown a strong inclination
for natural science, and this had been fostered by his intimacy
witha “self-taught philosopher, astronomer and mathematician,”
as Sir Walter Scott called him, of great local fame, JamesVeitch
of Inchbonny, who was particularly skillful in making telescopes.
Though
he duly finished his theological course and was licensed to preach,
Brewster’s preference for other pursuits prevented him from engaging
in the active duties of his profession. In 1799 he was induced
by his fellow-student, Henry Brougham, to study the diffraction
of light. The results of his investigations were communicated
from time to time in papers to the Philosophical Transactions
of London and other scientific journals, and were admirably and
impartially summarized by James D. Forbes in his preliminary dissertation
to the eighth edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica. The fact
that other philosophers, notably Etienne Louis Malus and Augustin
Fresnel, were pursuing the same investigations contemporaneously
in France does not invalidate Brewster’s claim to independent
discovery, even though in one or two cases the priority must be
assigned to others.The most important subjects of his inquiries
are enumerated by Forbes under the following five headings:
(1) The laws of polarization by reflection and refraction, and
other quantitative laws of phenomena;
(2) The discovery of the polarizing structure induced by heat
and pressure;
(3) The discovery of crystals with two axes of double refraction,
and many of the laws of their phenomena, including the connection
of optical structure and crystalline forms;
(4) The laws of metallic reflection;
(5) Experiments on the absorption of light. In this line of investigation
the prime importance belongs to the discovery (a) of the connection
between the refractive index and the polarizing angle,(b) of biaxial
crystals, and (c) of the production of double refraction by irregular
heating.
These
discoveries were promptly recognized. So early as the year 1807
the degree of LL.D. was conferred upon Brewster by Marischal College,
Aberdeen. In1815 he was made a member of the Royal Society of
London, and received the Copley medal; in 1818 he received the
Rumford medal of the society; and in 1816 the French Institute
awarded him one-half of the prize of three thousand francs for
the two most important discoveries in physical science made in
Europe during the two preceding years.
Among
the non-scientific public his fame was spread more effectually
by his rediscovery about 1815 of the kaleidoscope, for which there
was a great demand in both England and America. An instrument
of higher interest, the stereoscope, which, though of a much later
date (1849—1850), may be mentioned here, since along with the
kaleidoscope it did more than anything else to popularize his
name, was not, as has often been asserted, the invention of Brewster.
Sir Charles Wheatstone discovered its principle and applied it
as early as 1838 to the construction of an effective instrument,
in which the binocular pictures were made to combine by means
of mirrors. To Brewster is due the merit of suggesting the use
of lenses for the purpose of uniting the dissimilar pictures;
and accordingly the lenticular stereo-scope may fairly be said
to be his invention.
A
much more valuable practical result of Brewster’s optical researches
was the improvement of the British lighthouse system. It is true
that the dioptric apparatus was perfected independently by Fresnel,
who had also the satisfaction of being the first to put it into
operation. But it is indisputable that Brewster was earlier in
the field than Fresnel; that he described the dioptric apparatus
in 1812; that he pressed its adoption on those in authority at
least as early as 1820, two years before Fresnel suggested it;
and that it was finally introduced into British lighthouses mainly
by his persistent efforts.
Brewster’s
own discoveries, important though they were,were not his only,
perhaps not even his chief, service to science. He began literary
work in 1799 as a regular contributor to the Edinburgh Magazine,
of which he acted as editor at the age of twenty. In 1807 he undertook
the editorship of the newly projected Edinburgh Encyclopaedia,
of which the first part appeared in 1808, and the last not until
1830. The work was strongest in the scientific department, and
many of its mostvaluable articles were from the pen of the editor.
At a later period he was one of the leading contributors to the
Encyclopaedia Britannica (seventh and eighth editions), the articles
on Electricity, Hydrodynamics, Magnetism, Microscope, Optics,
Stereoscope, Voltaic Electricity, etc, being from his pen.
In1819
Brewster undertook further editorial work by establishing, in
conjunction with Robert Jameson (1774—1854), the Edinburgh Philosophical
Journal, which took the place of the Edinburgh magazine. The first
ten volumes (1819—1824) were published under the joint editorship
of Brewster and Jameson, the remaining four volumes (1825—1826)
being edited by Jameson alone.
After
parting company with Jameson, Brewster started the Edinburgh Journal
of Science in 1824, sixteen volumes of which aippeared under his
editorship during the years 1824—1832, with very many articles
from his own pen. To the transactions of various learned societies
he contributed from first to last between three and four hundred
papers, and few of his contemporaries wrote so much for the various
reviews. In the North British Review alone seventy-five articles
of his appeared. Special mention, however, must be made of the
most important of them all, his biography of Sir Isaac Newton.
In 1831 he published a short popular account of the philosopher’s
life in Murray’s Family Library; but it was not until 1855 that
he was able to issue the much fuller Memoirs of the Life, Writings
and Discoveries of Sir Isaac Newton, a work which embodied the
results of more than twenty years patient investigation of original
manuscripts and all other available sources.
Brewster’s
relations as editor brought him into frequent communication with
the most eminent scientific men, and he was naturally among the
first to recognize the benefit that would accrue from regular
intercourse among workers in the field of science. In an article
in the Quarterly Review he threw out a suggestion for “an association
of our nobility, clergy, gentry and philosophers,” which was taken
up by others and found speedy realization in the British Association
for the Advancement of Science. Its first meeting was held at
York in 1831; and Brewster, along with Charles Babbage and Sir
John F. W. Herschel, had the chief part in shaping its constitution.
In the same year in which the British Association held its first
meeting, Brewster received the honour of knighthood and the decoration
of the Guelphic order of Hanover. In 1838 he was appointed principal
of the united colleges of St Salvator and St Leonard, St Andrews.
In 1849 he acted as president of the British Association and was
elected one of the eight foreign associates of the Institute of
France in succession to J. J. Berzelius; and ten years later he
accepted the office of principal of the university of Edinburgh,
the duties of which he discharged until within a few months of
his death, which took place at Allerly, Melrose, on the 10th of
February 1868.
In
estimating Brewster’s place among scientific discoverers the chief
thing to be borne in mind is that the bent of his genius was not
characteristically mathematical. His method was empirical, and
the laws which he established were generally the result of repeated
experiment. To the ultimate explanation of the phenomena with
which he dealt he, contributed nothing, and it is noteworthy in
this connection that if he did not maintain to the end of his
life the corpuscular theory he never explicitly adopted the undulatory
theory of light. Few would dispute the verdict of Forbes:—”His
scientific glory is different in kind from that of Young and Fresnel;
but the discoverer of the law of polarization of biaxial crystals,
of optical mineralogy, and of double refraction by compression,
will always occupy a foremost rank in the intellectual history
of the age.”
In
addition to the various works of Brewster already noticed, the
following may be mentioned:—Notes and Introduction to Carlyle’s
translation of Legendre’s Elements of Geometry (1824); Treatise
on Optics (1831); Letters on Natural Magic, addressed to Sir Walter
Scott (1831); The Martyrs of Science, or the Lives of Galileo,
Tycho Brake, and Kepler (1841); More Worlds than One (1854).
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