JF Ptak Science Books Quick Post
This interesting illustrations shows the plans of 16 different aircraft and the triumph of aviation in the scant five years since the Wright brothers' successful first powered flight in 1903. From left-to-right and top-to-bottom the designer/builder reads: Wright, Farman, Santos Dumont, Cornu, de la Vaux, Bleriot, Apferer, Bleriot (again), Dufaux, Delagrange, Farman, Bazin, Langly, Brequet, and Esnault-Peletrie. The image is found in Nature, 1908, vol 78, pp 668-672.
There's a lot in this article but what I focused on was the shot across the bow to the Brits, the author taking issue with their capacities, and telling them to go and get some better maths (or someone better than them to do the thinking and work the numbers): "The recent flights show what can be done in aviation by a person possessed of skill and experience. They are a necessary factor in the development of artificial flight. The problem is quite in a different position from what it was a year ago. But if flying machines are to be made accessible to the million, the sooner English aeronauts learn mathematics or get someone to do the mathematics the better. At the present time a great deal of rubbish passes off as mathematics which is quite unworthy of the name..."
Comments