In this engagingly written biography, Tamara Plakins Thornton delves
into the life and work of Nathaniel Bowditch (1773-1838), a man Thomas
Jefferson once called a "meteor in the hemisphere." Bowditch was a
mathematician, astronomer, navigator, seafarer, and business executive
whose Enlightenment-inspired perspectives shaped nineteenth-century
capitalism while transforming American life more broadly. Enthralled
with the precision and certainty of numbers and the unerring regularity
of the physical universe, Bowditch operated and represented some of New
England's most powerful institutions--from financial corporations to
Harvard College--as clockwork mechanisms. By examining Bowditch's
pathbreaking approaches to institutions, as well as the political and
social controversies they provoked, Thornton's biography sheds new light
on the rise of capitalism, American science, and social elites in the
early republic.
Fleshing out the multiple careers of Nathaniel Bowditch, this book is at
once a lively biography, a window into the birth of bureaucracy, and a
portrait of patrician life, giving us a broader, more-nuanced
understanding of how powerful capitalists operated during this era and
how the emerging quantitative sciences shaped the modern experience.