
|
Charles Babbage is popularly known as the
"Father of Computing" for his pioneering work with computing
machines. The use of Jacquard punch cards, chains and
subassemblies, and the logical structure of the modern computer
all developed from the work of Babbage.
Babbage was born in London on December 26, 1791, the
son of Benjamin Babbage, a London banker and grandson to
Benjamin Babbage, who was the Mayor of Totnes, Devon in 1754.
Although Babbage was born in London, he's regarded as a
Devonian.
Born the son of a Banker,
Babbage followed the typical path of a Victorian era "thinking
gentleman", entering Trinity College, Cambridge in 1810, and
receiving his MA in 1817. Babbage occupied the Lucasian chair
of mathematics at Cambridge from 1828 to 1839 and was the
founder of several Victorian era societies and associations,
the most famous of which included the Analytical Society in
1820, and the Statistical Society of London in 1834. Babbage
was considered to be one of England's pre-eminent intellectuals
in an era replete with brilliant minds.
Babbage was known as a lover of the created object, finding
great beauty in things manufactured by man, stamped buttons,
stomach pumps, railways and tunnels, all man's mastery over
nature. This love for intricate creation can be seen in his
designs. His Difference Engine, a device for calculating and
printing mathematical tables by machine consisted of two tons
of brass, hand-fitted steel and pewter clockwork. Babbage
seemed to go against what was described as the era's "growing
divorce between academic science and engineering practice".
Babbage loved practical science, and was among the first to
apply higher mathematics to commercial and industrial problems.
Babbage, along with his draftsmen, conducted pioneering work in
the field of precision engineering. Since the conventional
mechanical drawing used at the time proved inadequate for his
engines, he developed his own abstract notation. He called this
work with mechanical notation "one of the most important
additions I have made to human knowledge". With the die-cast
pewter gear wheels of his Difference Engine, and with his
design of lathes and tool-shapers, Babbage had a huge influence
on the British machine tool industry. The foreman in Babbage's
shop, Sir Joseph Whitworth was responsible for the introduction
of the first series of standard screw threads.
In addition to his great love for the mechanical,
Babbage was enthralled with the field of statistics, and made
great study of statistics of all sorts, everything from his
"Table of Constants of the Class Mammalia" measuring such
constants as the heartbeat of a pig, to an attempt to
mathematically handicap horse races (at which he was notable
unsuccessful).
Despite his great contributions to many fields of study in
Victorian England, Babbage was not a universally popular figure
in his lifetime, being held in great disrespect by the general
public in London. This was due in large part to the popular
belief that he had been supported in his research by large
grants from the government during a time when the ever growing
industrial revolution was creating a large underclass of poor
and disposed. Babbage was widely known to have hated "street
musicians", and one way in which the public vented their
displeasure with his was by ensuring that he never lacked for
the attention of an unending parade of fiddlers, Punch-and-Judy
shows, and the like. Some neighbours hired musicians to play
outside his windows, while others annoyed him with worn-out or
out of tune wind instruments.
Despite his lack of public popularity, Babbage was a great
mind, and although never fully developed, his work with digital
computing devices was revolutionary. As a prominent Victorian,
his place in history is assured. Babbage died in 1871, and is
buried in Kensal Green Cemetery in London.
In 1985, the Science Museum in
London began construction of the Difference Engine No. 2 using
Babbage's original designs of his work during 1846 to 1848. It
took six years to build the calculating device, just in time
for the bicentennial of Babbage's birth. The device consists of
4000 parts and weighs over three metric tons. Its first
calculation at the London Science Museum returned results to 31
digits, far more than the average modern pocket calculator.
The Conway Stewart Babbage edition is a spectacular celebration
of the life and work of Charles Babbage. With a simple and
straightforward cylindrical cap and barrel, the Babbage pays
homage to the underlying structure of Babbage's work. Both the
cap and barrel are covered in an intricate pattern of engine
turned engraving in a concentric circular pattern. The result
is at once simple and intricate, a perfect reflection on the
work of Charles Babbage.
The Conway Stewart Babbage
edition is being made as a roller ball, an eminently practical
choice for today's lover of fine writing instruments. Roller
ball pens offer the luxurious feel of the fountain pen's liquid
ink combined with the rugged practicality of the ball-point
pen. The Babbage is also designed as a clipless pen, intended
to be carried in a briefcase, organiser or handbag, and sized
to fit the pen loops built into these. In keeping with the life
of Charles Babbage, practicality and attention to detail form
the pre-eminent aspects of this design.
Types: Rollerball
My
Price:
|