Gulliver's Travels
by Jonathan Swift

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Links: Science in The Travels


This page provides pointers to Web sites useful for reading and study of Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels. Sources in print are listed in a separate Bibliography. To add or correct items to the page below, use the handy comment form.

General

Biology and Chemistry

  • Chemistry in 18th-century Italy. The institutional setting by Raffaella Seligardi
  • La botanique au XVIIIème siècle U. de Montréal

  • Stephen Hales 1677-1761, English botanist and chemist

  • Aging Time magazine: "When Lemuel Gulliver encountered the Struldbruggs..."

    Linguistics and Language

    Mathematics

    Astronomy  

    "They have likewise discovered two lesser Stars, or Satellites, which revolve about Mars..." (III:3;9)
    The Martian moons Gulliver reports were not discovered for another 150 years after the publication of the Travels. Further, Gulliver's description of their size and orbits was uncannily close to reality. Coincidence? Not really. Swift probably copied speculation by others, especially Kepler, about the planets and their moons. Still...

    Health and Medicine

    Engineering

    Psychology

    Other Sciences


    Gulliver Home Page || Online Source page || Bibliography
    Comments to Lee Jaffe
    Comments or questions?
    updated: 29 October 2001