Laura Bassi

Laura Bassi, the first woman in the world to earn a university chair in a scientific field of studies

Credit: Wikimedia Commons/Mailsapartbassimore

Minerva's laboratory

26 May 2021
Public talks and lectures
Time
Venue
Online
Speaker(s)

Professor Paula Findlen, Stanford University

Seminar series
Departmental colloquia
Knowledge of physics?
No, knowledge of physics not required

Minerva's laboratory: Laura Bassi and the pursuit of science in 18th-century Italy

Join us to hear from Professor Paula Findlen, Ubaldo Pierotti Professor of History and Professor, by courtesey, of French and Italian, Stanford University.

In the eighteenth century, Laura Bassi (1711-78) was one of the most well-known physics professors, and the only woman to occupy this position in the century of Newton. This seminar will discuss Bassi’s life and work in the university, her home laboratory, and the Bologna Academy of Sciences. How did she become the first woman to have a paid scientific career within the institutions of her time? What did it mean to be a woman of science in the eighteenth century?

Paula Findlen is Ubaldo Pierotti Professor of Italian History and Director of the Suppes Center for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology at Stanford University. A Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, she received the 2016 Premio Galileo for her contributions to the history of Italian science and culture. She has written on Bassi and her world for many years.

This event is part of the public colloquia series hosted in our Department, on this occasion with the collaboration of the Italian Embassy in London and the Association of Italian scientists in the UK.

Everybody is welcome! This event is free however registration is required.