Scientific Jefferson:
Revealed |
| |
| Martin Clagett |
| 176 pages, 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 |
| 23 color and 10 b&w illustrations |
| cloth ISBN 978-0-8139-2854-8 $24.95 |
 |
Well known as a politician and architect, Thomas Jefferson also
made important contributions to science. He was elected the third
president not only of the United States but also of that most
august of scientific clubs, the American Philosophical Society,
following in the footsteps of Benjamin Franklin and David Rittenhouse.
He penned what was arguably the most important American scientific
work of the eighteenth century, Notes on the State of Virginia.
He designed architecture that promoted a healthy mind in a healthy
body and the prevention of infectious diseases, and devised codes
and a cipher machine to shield the new Republic against threats
of foreign espionage. In his new book, Martin Clagett explores
these and other achievements, returning Jefferson to his rightful
place as an innovator in the scientific realm.
Scientific Jefferson: Revealed explores how science shaped
Thomas Jefferson's views on politics, religion, economics, and
social developments in America. The first of all sciences for
Jefferson was agriculture, to which he was attached "by inclination
as well as by conviction that it is the most useful of occupations
of man." He introduced new and useful plants and livestock
into America and advocated the study and practice of agriculture
as a science. Perhaps most importantly, he brought forth his original
invention of the mathematically precise "Mouldboard Plough
of Least Resistance."
Clagett also highlights Jefferson's endeavors in archaeology.
Jefferson developed the scientific methodology of stratification,
which is the foundation of modern archeological techniques, and
because of this innovation, he is often called the "Father
of American Archaeology." In addition, Clagett examines Jefferson's
contributions to anthropology, ethnology, comparative linguistics,
paleontology, and medicine.
Scientific Jefferson is punctuated with color illustrations,
charts, and documents that demonstrate Jefferson's scientific
talents, interests, and accomplishments. Clagett concludes with
a broader summary of Jefferson's scientific achievements and offers
a fresh view of Monticello, the University of Virginia, and even
Jefferson's own gravestone as testimonials to his devotion to
science.
Distributed for the Office of the President of the University
of Virginia
Martin Clagett is an Omohundro Scholar
in Residence at the College of William and Mary. In 2007-2008 he
was both the Gilder-Lehrman Fellow at the International Center for
Jefferson Studies at Monticello and a visiting lecturer at the University
of Virginia.