March 25th, 2014 | RESEARCH
Accounts of the life of Scottish engineer James Watt have tended to take a rather monocular approach to his life’s work – primarily concentrating on the steam engine. However, the evidence of Watt’s workshop, preserved at the Science Museum, points to the diverse nature of his interests, and particularly to the close integration of philosophical and pragmatic elements in his work. Here is the workplace of one of the savant-fabricants that Britain’s ‘Industrial Enlightenment’ depended upon. All was, however, underpinned by physical work and the creation of tangible artefacts that took into account a range of factors at once technological, entrepreneurial, aesthetic and consumer-driven, a point worth emphasising in consideration both of Britain’s industrial revolution and the recent debate about a re-balancing of the UK economy towards manufacturing.
Document
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Team Members
Ben Russell, Author, Science Museum, LondonCitation
Identifier Type: DOI
Identifier: 10.15180/140106
Publication: Science Museum Group Journal
Volume: 1
Number: 1
Related URLs
Full Text via Science Museum Group
Tags
Audience: General Public | Museum | ISE Professionals
Discipline: Engineering | History | policy | law | Technology
Resource Type: Peer-reviewed article | Research Products
Environment Type: Exhibitions | Museum and Science Center Exhibits