Founding Fraudster?: Did Ben Franklin really fly that kite--or was this the first instance of scientific misconduct in North America?
Title: Founding Fraudster?: Did Ben Franklin really fly that kite--or was this the first instance of scientific misconduct in North America?
Category: History / North American History
Details: Words: 852 | Pages: 3.6 (approximately 235 words/page)
Founding Fraudster?: Did Ben Franklin really fly that kite--or was this the first instance of scientific misconduct in North America?
Benjamin Franklin: Statesman, author, post-master, inventor of the bifocal, the lending library and the Franklin stove. Most Americans know the highlights of this polymath's life. Few, though, know that he was also a prolific prankster. In Bolt of Fate: Benjamin Franklin and His Electric Kite Hoax, author Tom Tucker audaciously argues that one of history's most celebrated scientific experiments was a fiction. In Franklin's own account of his experiment, a kite fashioned from a silk
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the lighting strike--and got results comparable to those Ben described. It's possible, says Moore, that Franklin confused a direct strike with a remote one. Does Tucker prove his case? No. Ben most likely sent his kite aloft, but misunderstood, or misdescribed, what happened. That hardly makes him a fraud. Tucker, though, is to be congratulated for having launched a spirited, well-researched assault. History only grows more robust when our most sacrosanct tales are challenged.
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