Thursday, August 01, 2024

Culled from the Vaults - My Secret Museum of Cybernetics

 A rewrite



My Secret Museum of Cybernetics


i.


Intellectual pretensions were welcome around my house growing up in Racine. I got a job at an after-school job at the library, and found  a book for every imagining I might have.


At the point where Bob Dylan and Summer of Love mysticism was passing cars and rockets in my personal hit parade, I chanced upon the notion of feedback. It had a scientific aspect and a musical aspect [the latter in the hands of Jimi Hendrix, the Velvet Underground and Canned Heat].


I was assigned to write a thesis that could serve as an essay for college admission. So I had a mind to study. With Bronski's Science and Human Values in hand I began a piece on The Humanization of Science, in part a Renaissance study. In part a look at the history of alchemy. I'd often begin at the beginning of things and hardly get any further.


At the same time I found out about Norbert Weiner and Claude Shannon - about cybernetics and information theory. Cybernetics, closely related to Automation [a boogie man at the time - 1968-69], and feedback became a life long dabble.


In a long stint as a blogger I'd pull notes together, as I read library books on the topic.


ii.



Wiener - The efforts of Norbert Wiener’s biographers always will be shadowed by I Am a Mathematician. This, his own biography, is likely to overwhelm other attempts to write his story - He was able as a writer, engaging personally, and he ably perceived threads of significance as he viewed his own life.


One can find threads in his work, but they are somewhat disparate, reflecting a mind that jumped at ideas. Wiener’s work, which ranged from estimations of Brownian motion to artillery shell trajectories may appear even topsy-turvy, in the light of history. [Re Brownian motion: Gemini tells me In essence, Einstein provided the physical insight, and Wiener provided the mathematical tools to describe and analyze it. And it was a proof of existence of atoms.]


Wiener’s life was both blessed and vexed by the fact of his prodigiousness, which he handled in greater depth in another autobiographical installment. As much as he finally was to become the iconic image of the absent minded professor, he had a grounding in real life. That, he somewhat credited to growing up for a time in Fitchburg Mass where the kids treated him as different but still a kid. 


As the years went passing by his was a delicate dance of pure science and [mostly mathematical] thought partnered with an engineer’s, and sometimes, a medical doctor’s quest.


Ending up at MIT rather than Harvard might have been a cause or effect of this quest. His work on harmonic analysis fed readily into work on electronic valve implementations of Fourier transforms, and [thence] to the study of harmonics.


He discusses early interest and work in Harmonic Analysis and the Fourier Transform; and sees similarity of thread in these. Discusses his important work on Brownian Motion and his later work in feedback estimation and cybernetics.


iii.


WIENER. more - Norbert Wiener was born in Kansas City, Missouri on November 26, 1894, and died on a lecture swing of Sweden and Norway in Stockholm on March 18, 1964, after having fathered the field of cybernetics, which seeks to study the nature of control in animals and machines.


Cybernetics, 40 years after Wiener’s death, is not so much a science or even segment of science – although the issues considered in cybernetic man-machine interaction are still at the heart of most considerations in science fiction and many other types of fictions. [Still I subscribe to a Google alert on the topic of "feedback biology". Work is slow to put it mildly.]


Of course, the 1990s term cyberspace [and more recent siblings such as cybersecurity] derives from cybernetics. So Wiener’s influence in the public arena continues in a fashion.


The mature Norbert Wiener with a pince-nez and coke-bottle eye-glasses looked the very emblem of the European intellectual. [Stories of absent mindedness, too, are offered. ] But he was a son of the Midwest and New England. His father moved from Missouri to Massachusetts in 1895 and eventually became a teacher at Harvard. His son was prodigious. He was to finish high school at 11, and receive a Harvard PhD at 17.


Wiener the younger wolfed-down literature and was interested especially in natural scientism, although he admits in one of his biographical writings, ‘Ex-Prodigy,’ that he was as much occupied in the ‘diagrams of complicated structures...’ as in the adventure of naturalism. Turn-of-the-Century Norbert’s interests straddled the philosophical and the mathematical in way that is hard to imagine today.


Awkward – not physically dexterous among sportsman schoolmates, he was. In his own terms he was a combination of ‘mental quickness and physical slowness.’ In a way, this sets the scene for future studies of human and machine control systems.


Primary influences on young W. were philosophers Spinoza and Leibniz - Spinoza for his somewhat mathematical approach to religion, and Leibniz for being a universalist [the last universal thinker – the last individual to hold the existent world of knowledge in his own head, so they say.]


After Harvard, Wiener took a travelling fellowship and met with Bertrand Russell, where he met up with Einstein’s works, and just basically became imbued in the heady environment around Russell. Russell built upon Boole, to forge a link between mathematics and philosophy [logic] that became a foundation work for modern computing. I take it Boole was a math cult thing until the days of Turing and Shannon.


Wiener never lost a fond attachment to Harvard, Mass., and its surroundings, where his father had a farm, and where Norbert grew up. Harvard the town is 16 mi. from Fitchburgh. He liked the fact that he could return there, and be himself, an eccentric genius, but a part of the order of things there. As his career continued at M.I.T. , he seemed to mix both theory and practice, and not to stray too far from one or the other. His basic practicality, neither conservative nor liberal, is seen in his critical comments on Russell’s personal 'preenings' [libertinisms] .


He differed from Russell, in another, more pointed, way. He was far from a Pacifist, and Russell was one of the most famous pacifists of all time. When he returned to the U.S. prior to the country’s entry into World War I, he repeatedly tried to join the army – but indexterity, poor vision, and bad marksmanship mitigated against his initial conscription. Early after his return he worked at the GE Factory in Lynn, Mass., and then in Albany, N.Y. at the Encyclopedia Americana [echoes of Jorge Borges!]. In 1918, math friend Veblen hired him as ‘computor’ at the U.S. Army Proving Grounds at Aberdeen, Maryland.


There he worked on range tables, which would ultimately lead, in World War II, when aircraft became the [moving] target, to his vision of cybernetics.



Wiener wrote autobiographically at some length. The notes here come upon reading “Norbert Wiener” by Pesi R. Masani.


iv.


Reading Player Piano. And remembering the factory cybernetic. A lot of these idea were in my head when I got a summer job on assembly lines at Johnson's Wax [if you ever get to Wisconsin, be sure in visit the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Johnson's Wax building - the factory moved many years ago.]


When I worked the Paste Wax line at Johnson's, we placed the lids on the cans (two of us) by hand. It could well have been the oldest line in the old factory. With so much cybernation around, it seemed primitive - something that could be automated. And I would look at the other lines (the Jubilee line with its ear shattering glass jostling was adjacent) and wonder how. Earl, the engineer, I remember him now in crew cut, white short sleeve shirt, tie, glasses and pocket protector, would come by and eye the process as well. This was me entering the world. When I worked the line, one day, my compatriot, Pedro did not come back from lunch. His girl friend shot him over his paycheck. Well, he was just 'winged' - and he was back in work the next day (hilariously using just one arm to put lids on cans).


When I worked the line: they would pump-in Muzak. Then by syndicated radio. Once a week, in some alternating pattern related to pay day: "Whistle While you Work."


Player Piano by Vonnegut describes the factory and the rise of automation in a dystopian but whimsical future. Machinists with their blackened hands. Great description of the punch press sound: 'Aw grump. Tonka Tonka. Aw grump. Tonka Tonka.' Vonnegut was something of a technical writer [a press release and story writer for GE in Schenectady, NY after WW II] and was quite aware of "Cybernetics" because Weiner's writings were prominent. Norbert Weiner appears on page 14 of Player Piano, he comes up in conversation about time and motion.  [See more on this below.



Adding to Wiener miscellany : Novelist Thomas Pynchon noted that he was influenced by Norbert Weiner's then popular "The Human Use of Human Being" which discussed entropy in relation to communication. Yet as far as I can tell, Pynchon 's interest in entropy - his title for a short story that garnered him award and attention ahead of V -  was in physics terms (Universal Heat Death) which Weiner had studied considerably  and not related to  Wiener's communications research.


 


v.


Norbert Weiner [1894? -1964?] is definitely the father of cybernetics – and an influential thinker on the phenomenon of feedback. He was a brilliant mathematician, and, just like a movie math genius in his day and others, he was a little batty -  he was absent of social artifice - as he would creatively and readily follow lines of thought and forgo the important social and practical niceties. He as thus unlike in manner to a lot of his more competitive colleagues during the defining experience of World War II.[Thinking of Vannevar Bush, inventor of most powerful analog computer, most especially.


Now, cybernetics - the interdisciplinary study of the structure of regulatory systems - never became much of a science unto itself, except, for a while, in the Soviet Union. Some of its interests informed AI which never became much of a science either. But regulatory system study continues, and people continue to find out things, and they generally should thank Weiner for in some way setting the stage.


[Cybernetics has a moment in the brief Socialist regime [1970-1973?] of Salvador Allende. Before CIA 'influencers' sponsored Augusto Pinochet and company's junta, Allende's democratically government was trying to bring a new form of socialism that was data driven. In those days, what might pass for the big data enterprise today would be called cybernetics. This school of technology, founded by Norbert Wiener, studied feedback in systems, be they animal or machine. The automatic pilot was perhaps cybernetics crowning achievement. In the Chile case, technologist Stanford Beers was enlisted to bring the magic of realtime feedback to state planning. It was way ahead of its time, and burdened by lethal sniping.]



My take on reading Dark Hero of the Information Age, a biography of Weiner, is that Weiner could best be considered as a theorist although one who was most interested in practical applications. He worked with engineers, but he wasn’t really of them.



Together with Bigelow in 1942 he worked to build a statistical predictor, or anti-aircraft firing system. Out of such efforts much significant technology arose. But my reading of Dark Hero leads me to conclude Weiner’s efforts were influential but not effectual. His predictor did not improve much on a Bell Labs predictor, although it may have been more elegant and forward looking in design in aspects. Still for me he is crucial.

Vonnegut and Weiner

Reading and so it goes for Kurt Vonnegut a life by Charles J Shields page 97 vonnegut is working at General Electric in Schenectady the job he got through his brother a company scientist who among other work experimented with seeding clouds to create rain. Kurt fudged his application form saying he graduated from college. In fact,  he had attended Cornell and another school without graduating.

 

We will find him at the GE Schenectady works among full time publishing staff that created manuals examinations and visual aids and promotional stories on GE advances in all kinds of publications. He had previously worked as a newspaper man, and readily found targets for story ideas about the company’s progressive technology.

 

The author Shields says Vonnegut was initially very positive about working at the company he wrote for example about sodium lights. Among favored projects was an oral history with some of GE famed long time researchers headed to retirement.

 

General Electric was all about progress. The company motto was “Progress is our most important product.” [Recalling tonight a train trip from Chicago to Boston, and an interminable evening’s wait in Schenectady [for a NY train to connect] near GE which was a limitless industrial complex of otherworldly sodium lighting.]

 

He bemoaned on occasion his classification as a science fiction writer, saying the fact that he had technology in stories should not consign him to such a category.

 

But the experience was to sour and in the end would see Schenectady serving as a setting for his first novel - Player Piano.

 

Page 123 play it piano saw a cameo [of sorts] appearance by Norbert Weiner - the father of cybernetics. Player Piano [a droll title choice as the paper punch-roll programmed instrument put a few ticklers out of work in its day.

 

Player piano was very much about automation and dehumanization as a result of computerization. Kurt sent a copy of player Piano galleys to Weiner who bridled at the books  insertion of a John von Neumann character. Why don't you change the name? he asked.

 

Later on Cape Cod, It was a struggling artist version of KV that was to follow. Writing novels. Trying to pay for his family's needs by selling stories to Colliers and the Saturday Evening Post. Knowing the different magazines of the day that placed short fiction would come to an end with the Golden Age of television emerging. He quickly realized that work orders for magazine fiction would have to give way to television show scripts that he couldn’t quite hit with. 

That he may have been able to swim in the same lane as a Playhouse writer and Twilight Zone founder Rod Serling is clear in such works as "Harrison Bergeron" a short story that ran in the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. It's set in the year 2081, when everyone is equal. As described by Shields, this future worked because "Nobody was any smarter than anybody else." Ballerinas must wear disabling weights, for example. Something amusing to liberals of those days, and libertarians of today, I'd guess.


When his father died he inherited money which mostly was wasted on the effort to start a foreign car dealership in Osterville on the Cape. The hope was it would work magically, and he could just write. The bottom feeder market of paperback reprints sold in ‘dime stores and bus stations’ would have to serve as his golden path.


Tuesday, July 30, 2024

From Data Data Data - CIA vs. Cybernetic Socialists

http://itsthedatatalking.blogspot.com/2015/01/the-best-laid-plans-of-mice-and-man.html http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/cybernetic-revolutionaries http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/10/13/planning-machine https://www.jacobinmag.com/2015/04/allende-chile-beer-medina-cybersyn/

 Does a 1970s Utopian technology effort offer useful guides for those trying to assess the progress of new technology today? In one case, at least, yes. It is the story of Salvador Allende's attempt to build a working Socialist government in Chile with computer cybernetics.

The tale is told especially well, under the able hands of author and researcher Eden Medina. Medina rolls up the takeaways in a recent article in Jacobin magazine. It is a summary of some important lessons garnered during work on her 2013 book, The Cybernetic Revolutionaries.

You see, before CIA influencers sponsored Augusto Pinochet and company's junta, Allende's democratically government was trying to bring a new form of socialism that was data driven. In those days, what might pass for the big data enterprise today would be called cybernetics. This school of technology, founded by Norbert Wiener, studied feedback in systems, be they animal or machine. The automatic pilot was perhaps cybernetics crowning achievement. In the Chile case, technologist Stanford Beers was enlisted to bring the magic of realtime feedback to state planning. It was way ahead of its time, and burdened by lethal sniping.

 A chief lesson in all that conflag is that the state and its priorities shape how a technology is designed and used. In Allende's work to create a better state planning system based on the infant cybernetic architectures, Beers was given had a lot of rein to try and involve workers, ahead of engineers and government bureaucrats in the planning of production. Uber advocates might say that is going on with its upsurge today, though, we'd say, that is arguable.

"Computer innovation wasn’t born with Silicon Valley startups, and it can thrive by taking on design considerations that fall outside the scope of the market," writes Medina. Yet, the basic lesson is tremendously true: technologies get no more freedom to range than the political system gives them. That lesson may be taught at MIT, but it is largely buried in the footnotes or drowned out by the gush of venture capital, and its dreams.

Read more on this.

Thursday, July 25, 2024

From the Vaults 2017 - Larry Martin Bittman Remembered


Kremlin-financed media outlet RT (formerly Russia Today) is little more than a propaganda machine controlled by Russian intelligence agencies. yet...Anyone shocked by the Kremlin-funded news station RT in all of this probably never heard of Voice of America, a U.S. government-funded news service that broadcast the American response to Soviet propaganda during the Cold War. 

The Ruse seem quite able actors in this field - The US seems a ready audience.

This stuff is taking me back to college days. I took a class on World Press at BU led by Larry Martin - actually Lawrence Martin-Bittman, a former Czech Intelligence Agent - who had a unique view on "News".

Martin-Bittman later wrote a memoir The KGB and Soviet Disinformation. There he wrote "Deception is a relatively easy game, particularly against anyone willing to be deceived."

One of Martin-Bittman's acts as part of Czech intelligence was to forge a letter from Cardinal Spellman to a W,German Anti-Communist leader, then disclosing it was a forgery, I guess doing no more than sowing doubt. 

His 1964 operation planted forged incriminating papers in a trunk which was then sunk Bohemia's Black Lake - then cued Czech TV to find while filming a documentary. The papers had some W German pol as a WW II Nazi, but not truely.

What Larry taught me was the newspapers of the rest of the world explicitly reflected partisan political camps. They were voices for Left or Right parties. That they critiqued US media as veiled propaganda played into the analysis that I and my friends had been developing.

https://krebsonsecurity.com/2017/01/dni-putin-led-cyberattack-propaganda-effort-to-elect-trump-denigrate-clinton/

Thursday, July 18, 2024

Velvet Tones

Mindy Silver a few blocks away bought the first record and everyone used to borrow/trade records back then. She was very Avant Garde. But I didn't like it. They played Heroin on the Underground radio. That didnt really work as well as St. Peppers, IMO at the time. The second record... White Light White Heat and Sister Ray..at 6.30 in the morning the overnight DJ would put something on and split...something long like InnaGaddaDavida...or Sister Ray... and that really got my attention.. was played repeatedly. This was on a little clock radio that woke me up for school. I bought the record. I liked it almost as much as Canned Heat. My friends who were more adventurous went to Chicago to the Electric Circus to see them on a bill with the Grateful Dead....When the Third Record came out...that was a shock...the mildness of it was pretty unexpected. Again Milwauke underground radio..WTOS.. played it all the way through. Oddlly, late one night, they appeared on The Paul Benziquin show out of Chicago. They looked nothing like the White Light Black Leather crew of the year before. In the year 1969 I was invested in dates and only bought Nasvhille Skyline and The Velvets 3rd record. Only Murder Mystery was like the earlier stuff. But it was much more open to a Teenager in Love. Loaded really did not get played. I didnt know it had come out but got it as a twoffer sale along with Grateful Dead American Beauty [maybe]. And it was so rocking and positive I was gone about it. It inspired me to get a few other guys to play music in our folks basement. Sweet Jane was doable for us. And it was so rocking and positive I was gone about it.  Out of 400 kids at my high school I doubt 10 people knew about the Velvets. In college it wasn't too different, but on the East Side of Milwaukee they were not unknown. They used to say they were big in Boston and Cleveland. Started reading Lester Bangs deliberately, Creem magazine. /// Told anyone who would listen about the Velvet Underground and Lou Reed./// If you came over, you were going to hear Loaded. It wasnt overloaded with drugs. It was Loaded with Hits1! Decided to move to New York but it was too late to see the Velvet Underground. Saw Lou with the Long Island Band at Avery Fisher Hall. Pretty flat. Saw RocknRoll Animal tour at Boston's Orpheum. That was a flip out... he didnt play guitar, and they guys who did sounded like Alice Cooper.


THis screed is inspired by a Reddit Fan Group. All I can think: You had to be there. You cant guess about this stuff. Amazing the AI is learning from Reddit, because so much of it is poses based on guesses.

Velvet Underground was king of the drone. And feedback. World weariness to go! It is everywhere now. At Walmart even. They also wrote about sick characters in a way much copied. You really have to find a time tunnel to know what it was like before and during the Velvet Underground, who didnt really 'happen' until well after they broke up. But everything comes after them. Everything in terms of rocknroll of the demimonde. Reading Lester Bangs is time well spent. Confuting the gorb points in a Reddit commentary would take a lot of effort , tho it did cause the electrons on this screen to appear - I prefer to continue my work building the first quantum transporter. Yes some good stuff came out from band members after the breakup. But nothing matches quite the 4 VU records.

Sunday, July 14, 2024

Mendel of the Minors

 


I recently picked up for a summer read “The Gene” by Siddhartha Mukherjee. As I began to plow through the nearly 600-page book, it seemed to display the accidents and unforeseen circumstances that can track scientific research and technological innovation.

The Gene begins with Gregor Mendel in the monastery in Brno, now a part of the Czech Republic. There the eventual founder of the science of genetics is perceived as slow, happy in the garden with his peas, not smart or articulate enough to be more than a substitute teacher. The friar abbots try and give him every chance to gain a useful education, and perhaps step up from substitute. And by some phenomenal luck, he’s sent to study in Vienna. Thus, to study under no less than Doppler.

Yes, he comes to study under Austrian physicist Christian Doppler, the mathematician and physicist who proposed that the perceived pitch of sound or the color of light was not fixed but depended on the relative locations and velocities of the observer and the source. His principles on the nature of change in wave frequency influence work that led to today’s radio astronomy efforts, radar, sonar, and more. It must be seen as a happy accident, for Mendel to learn from Doppler.

Mendel patiently raised peas in his garden. He experimentally crossbred the pea plants and dutifully documented the results. Some viewers have seen him as a plodder, with no theoretical understanding of underlying forces at work. But author Mukherjee assures that Mendel knew “he was trying to unlock the material basis and laws of heredity.”

The author also writes that Doppler’s example as a physicist informed Mendel’s efforts. Mendel found in bits of different bits of data on plants – height, texture, color –  the elements that could reveal an underlying pattern that could be described numerically. That is, a numerical model that marked the inheritance of traits.

This ended up in a research paper presented to the Natural Science Society in Brno. But Mendel’s station at the far reaches of the scientific community assigned his work to a type of oblivion that was a long time in lifting.

Mukherjee cites a geneticist describing this as “one of the strangest silences in the history of biology.”

The Mendel story contrasts with Darwin’s story in Mukherjee's work. Darwin had a position close to the center in the scientific culture of his day. But Darwin and others struggled to move the science of heredity forward after the big bang of Origin of the Species.

The mechanism was already described in some measure by Mendel but his duties as a cleric and clerk led him to be “choked by administrative work,” and his paper became for him a capstone. Gradually over decades his work was discovered and replicated, eventually triggering a general evangelization of Mendel.

In terms of the initial wilting on the vine of Mendel’s work, there wasn’t anything that couldn’t really have been foreseen. As Mukherjee observes, Darwin’s reading of his keystone paper  took place at the Linnean Society in London. Mendel presented at the Natural Science Society of Brno, far afield. That Mendel's work slashed steadily, like a scythe through the pages of time, until it reached an audience, speaks volumes for its worth.

Wednesday, July 10, 2024

Receptive Remonstrations of the AI kind


A technology that is to succeed in the market - overhyped or not - needs a name that can be infused with aspiration, can be a receptacle for desire. Cloud computing blithely surpassed "grid" and "utility computing" because cloud could hold anyone's dream. Today's out-of-the-box solution "AI" (which took over in the popular press from GenAI and ChatGPT) fits that bill.

I had a chance to speak with a prominent politician at the city level.

Let's say the matter under discussion was a problem such as graffiti on gravestones or ajar manhole covers.

No matter.

The word "AI" came up. Helpful to collaboration. Maybe in some instances. The politicians' problem is that they "can't hire enough people to do all that needs to be done" and are looking for AI [read: GenAI] to improve collaboration and productivity. 

So naturally they are receptive to the claims of somewhat imminent AI innovation.

If I talked with a VC just about before the time ChatGPT came out, they'd be quite receptive to a new boom mechanism... after large interest rate increases. It was foisted for apparently free upon the world.


https://www.wcvb.com/article/boston-traffic-google-ai-optimization-project-green-light/61828648

Thursday, June 27, 2024

Unforgettable technology comrade

 

Tuesday, June 11, 2024

The Gene – An Intimate History

 

The Gene begins by Siddhartha Mukherjee begins with Mendel in the monastery, where he is perceived as slow, a good guy for the garden, not smart enough to be a teacher, but they gave him every chance, and he’s sent to study. Thus, to learn under no less than Doppler.

Yes, he comes to study under Christian Doppler. The brilliant mathematician and physicist - who argued that the pitch of sound or the color of light was not fixed but depended on location and velocity of the observer. An experimentalist whose work would influence Einstein’s perceptions in the following century, he very well have noticed a train whistle changing pitch as it approached and receded, to develop his theory by way of analogy. TV histories of this may suggest he hired a band, put them on a train, and demonstrated his theory to a fin-de-siecle crowd.

Mendel’s era was the tail end of Linnaean, the era when eager naturalists valiantly classified according to likeness. Naming has lost some of its panache, but it continues.

We leave Mendel aside and consider the homunculus and other historical conjectures on mechanisms of heredity. Back into time, so to speak. So, we go from Doppler to Pythagoras for a discussion of mathematical patterns and in the context of sexual differences. Pythagoras is followed by Plato and Aristotle. The pursuit of data patterns will become a touchpoint continual in this history.

Aristotle developed new notions on the Pythagorean scheme of patrilineal heredity. The author, in one of many illuminating sidenotes points out that Aristotle had a sense that there was an analogy to be made between the transmission of heredity and the transmission of information; a Century later, the biologist Max Delbruck would joke that Aristotle should have been given the Nobel Prize posthumously for the discovery of DNA! DNA once described showed the mechanism of storage of genetic information [messages] that was long sought. 

Then to the narrative enters Charles Darwin. His is a story with which I am familiar from numerous books. But amazing to me is Muckherjee’s ability to synthesize and rapidly present key-points, as in the passages noted in the rest of this blog post. 

[Side-Noting here that one of the few really deep scientific books I ever read-through was The Growth of Biological Thought by Ernst Mayr. Highly recommend!]

We find Darwin setting sail in the Beagle Brig sloop, he a natural historian that took with him on the voyage Charles Lyell’s Principles of Geology. The central idea there are natural forces shaping and reshaping the earth. Alert to the insight and prepared to find analogies, Darwin in Montevideo, Punta Alta, Tierra del Fuego, Lima and of course Galapagos was open to discovery. He found the Galapagos finches, mockingbirds, blackbirds, iguanas, and saw that “each variety is constant in its own island.” He returned to England, thought and wrote, but didn’t publish this.

He studied barnacles, dissected sea animals and so on , but was in 1859 spurred to publication finally by the work of Alfred Russel Wallace. [It would be interesting to read a book on this fellow, whose social status was quite different than Darwin’s in a place where social status carried a big stick.]

Wallace separately formulated a general theory about a mechanisms driving variation on islands. He sent his paper to Darwin. Who was nudged to finally write his own paper. Mentioning here an analog both Darwin and Wallace were influenced by – that is Rev. Thomas Malthus, the statistician and Sorcerer of what became Eugenics.

Darwin at Lyell’s urging, appeared together with Wallace, in a gentlemanly fashion, at the Linnaean Society where they both announced their discoveries at the same time – but to an audience that was not particularly enthusiastic about either study.

Darwin remains a hard read today. So it is interesting that author Mukherjee cites, Richard Owen on the topic of Darwin’s sparse theory construction. Owen, ‘Darwin's Frenemy,’ would use Darwin's own quote to describe the problematic nature of the Origin of the Species, which became a book. “One’s imagination must fill up very wide blanks,” Darwin said and Owen repeated. 

"The Gene" will set out to fill in the blanks.

Mukherjee builds his narrative by Reverse Russian Doll design. That is: 

Each historical science figure leads to a somewhat sequential insight in  another, with the theme of heredity evolving as the thread. I find there are big leaps that traverse the different fields of thought in the history of genetic science as told by Mukherjee. What’s learned in one area leads – with tuning – to developments in an other area. As history documents, science in the days discussed here was more a big undefined monolithic blob and less a highly specialized matter as in today's science world.