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A Financial Times Economics Book of the Year A brilliant narrative
of early capitalism's most famous scandal, a speculative frenzy
that nearly bankrupted the British state during the hot summer of
1720 - and paradoxically led to the birth of modern finance. The
South Sea Company was formed to trade with Asian and Latin American
countries. But it had almost no ships and did precious little
trade. Instead it got into financial fraud on a massive scale,
taking over the government's debt and promising to pay the state
out of the money received from the shares it sold. And how they
sold. In the summer of 1720 the share price rocketed and everyone
was making money. Until the carousel stopped, and thousands lost
their shirts. Isaac Newton, Alexander Pope and others lost heavily.
Thomas Levenson's superb account of the South Sea Bubble is not
just the story of a huge scam, but is also the story of the birth
of modern financial capitalism: the idea that you can invest in
future prosperity and that governments can borrow money to make
things happen, like funding the rise of British naval and
mercantile power. These dreamers and fraudsters may have bankrupted
Britain, but they made the world rich. Praise for Money For
Nothing: 'A scholar who makes complicated and subtle matters not
just accessible but fun. Utterly relevant to the 2008 financial
crisis and 2020 pandemic' SIMON SEBAG MONTEFIORE 'Thoroughly
researched and vibrantly written, Money For Nothing captures those
heady, heartbreaking times, which still hold lessons for today'
DAVID KAISER 'A gripping story of scientists and swindlers, all too
pertinent to our modern world' JAMES GLEICK 'It's easy to look back
and think of the South Sea bubblers, like the tulip-mad Dutch of
the 1630s, as financially naive - until you remember how many
people jumped in on various other more recent crazes (from Beanie
Babies to Pets.com and Bitcoin). This is not a new tale, but
Levenson tells it with a light touch' SPECTATOR
Already famous throughout Europe for his theories of planetary
motion and gravity, Isaac Newton decided to take on the job of
running the Royal Mint. And there, Newton became drawn into a
battle with William Chaloner, the most skilful of counterfeiters, a
man who not only got away with faking His Majesty's coins (a crime
that the law equated with treason), but was trying to take over the
Mint itself. But Chaloner had no idea who he was taking on. Newton
pursued his enemy with the cold, implacable logic that he brought
to his scientific research. Set against the backdrop of early
eighteenth-century London with its sewers running down the middle
of the streets, its fetid rivers, its packed houses, smoke and fog,
its industries and its great port, this dark tale of obsession and
revenge transforms our image of Britain's greatest scientist.
In Measure for Measure, Thomas Levenson offers a compelling account
of how scientific thinking development from the day 2,500 years ago
when Pythagoras discovered the musical scale to the present day.
The story unfolds through the tales of instruments scientific and
musical: the organ, the microscope, the still, the scales,
Stradivari's miraculous violins and cellos, computers, and
synthesizers. What emerges is a unique portrait of science itself
as an instrument, our single most powerful way of understanding the
world. Yet perhaps the most important invention of modern science
has been the power to countenance its own limitations, to find the
point beyond which science can explain no more, to rediscover that
science, like music, is an art.
In 1695, Isaac Newton--already renowned as the greatest mind of his
age--made a surprising career change. He left quiet Cambridge,
where he had lived for thirty years and made his earth-shattering
discoveries, and moved to London to take up the post of Warden of
His Majesty's Mint. Newton was preceded to the city by a genius of
another kind, the budding criminal William Chaloner. Thanks to his
preternatural skills as a counterfeiter, Chaloner was rapidly
rising in London's highly competitive underworld, at a time when
organized law enforcement was all but unknown and money in the
modern sense was just coming into being. Then he crossed paths with
the formidable new warden. In the courts and streets of London--and
amid the tremors of a world being transformed by the ideas Newton
himself had set in motion--the chase was on. This revelatory tale
of Isaac Newton's journey through London's underworld will appeal
to fans of"The Professor and the Madman."
In 1859, the brilliant scientist Urbain LeVerrier discovered that
the planet Mercury has a wobble, that its orbit shifts over time.
His explanation was that there had to be an unseen planet circling
even closer to the sun. He called the planet Vulcan. Supported by
the theories of Sir Isaac Newton, the finest astronomers of their
generation began to seek out Vulcan and at least a dozen reports of
discovery were filed. There was only one problem. Vulcan does not
exist - and was never there. The real explanation was only revealed
when a young Albert Einstein came up with a theory of gravity that
also happened to prove that Mercury's orbit could indeed be
explained - not by Newton's theories but by Einstein's own theory
of general relativity. THE HUNT FOR VULCAN is a scientific
detective tale at the intersection of theory, measurement, and
belief; and a reflection on a bizarre period in which the power of
conformity led very smart people to literally see a planet that
wasn't there.
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