Successful?

When you think of the word “successful,” who’s the first person that comes to mind and why?

It’s taken me ages to decide on a person or group of people to represent this.

I could have chosen a single person, a musician, an actor, sportsperson, vet, doctor, or a news caster, and of course the richest people in the world.

But no, I’ve decided scientists would be the best choice. There success has bought us so many inventions and knowledge. Yes there have been bad inventions too, but these are because of political influence to some extent? Yes, there are bad scientists that either create bad things, or alter the results of research to allow bad things to happen. For example Thalidomide was originally being used for elderly arthritic patients, but to sell more of the drug it was sold to pregnant women as a tablet that would stop morning sickness, with the resultant tetaragenic damage to babies (see the Sunday? Times report into it’s effects).

But then these are weighed against chemistry’s inventions such as the creation of analine dye that led to the discovery of quinine? The invention of batteries, using chemistry and physics. The use of x rays following discoveries by Marie Curie. And biological knowledge including genetic treatments, monoclonal antibodies, knowledge of how our behaviour is damaging the environment.

As with all successes they are balanced with failures. Each person will have their own opinions on this.

Marie Curie

WordPress free image. They don’t have pictures of Marie Curie, only Marie Antoinnett!

Who is your favorite historical figure?

Marie Salomea Skłodowska–Curie was a Polish and naturalized-French physicist and chemist who conducted pioneering research on radioactivity. She was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the first person to win a Nobel Prize twice, and the only person to win a Nobel Prize in two scientific fields. Wikipedia

I had to look up some of her details as I could not remember the spelling of her maiden name. She won the Nobel prizes for Chemistry and Physics. She found both Radium and Polonium within tons of a mineral called Pitchblende. She slowly dissolved and precipitated the mineral so that the Radium and Polonium was washed out. She and her husband Pierre Curie worked in an old shed attached to the Paris University to do the work.

It took her a long time to be accepted on her University course because she was a woman. And after her husband died after being run over by a horse drawn omnibus she continued to work on the discoveries of radiation. She worked with Ernest Rutherford who had discovered Gamma rays when he found photographic plates had been fogged despite not being exposed to light. Curie managed to concentrate Radium which was used to paint onto watch dials and hands. The paintresses who used the luminous paint used to point their brushes with their lips and many of them got cancer in their mouth and Jaws because the damaging effects of radiation were not understood.

Marie Curie had daughters who ran an Xray ambulance in the first world war, I can’t remember if Marie Curie was involved with that.

I’m sorry I don’t know all the details, but she was certainly a strong roll model for female scientists and helped grow a whole new branch of Chemistry and Physics.

International Womens Day

It is International Womens day until midnight. Someone asked me which three women from the present or history I would like to meet?

Queen Elizabeth the first. Henry the eighths daughter, known as the Virgin Queen, famous for the first Elizabethan age.

Marie Curie, who discovered through long and hard research Radium and other radioactive elements.

Jo Brand, a wonderful and hilarious comedian. She has been on British TV for years and has an acerbic wit.