Ben Waber reviewed The Franklin Stove by Joyce Chaplin
A Holistic, Enlightening History
5 stars
This book uses Benjamin Franklin as a lens into larger scientific, political, social, and entrepreneurial trends around heating and climate. Chaplin masterfully demonstrates how Franklin's entrepreneurial journey - from printing, to climate, to developing his now eponymous stove - was influenced by a huge variety of factors. The little ice age and concerns about climate change and deforestation echo throughout, deeply bound up with Franklin's proto-eugenics philosophizing about the inevitable disappearance Native Americans that he regularly interacted with. The effects of other types of stoves and scientific discoveries, not to mention political changes that altered industrial trajectories, play a major role here as well. This is one of the best examples of biographical-driven technological and scientific histories I've ever read. Highly recommend
This book uses Benjamin Franklin as a lens into larger scientific, political, social, and entrepreneurial trends around heating and climate. Chaplin masterfully demonstrates how Franklin's entrepreneurial journey - from printing, to climate, to developing his now eponymous stove - was influenced by a huge variety of factors. The little ice age and concerns about climate change and deforestation echo throughout, deeply bound up with Franklin's proto-eugenics philosophizing about the inevitable disappearance Native Americans that he regularly interacted with. The effects of other types of stoves and scientific discoveries, not to mention political changes that altered industrial trajectories, play a major role here as well. This is one of the best examples of biographical-driven technological and scientific histories I've ever read. Highly recommend