I saw the review below and thought members of the SHOE list might be
interested.
If you see reviews or other material relevant to the history of
economics, broadly defined, please consider sharing it by sending it to
the list at [log in to unmask]
Humberto Barreto
Source:
Powell's Review-a-Day
July 9, 2009
http://www.powells.com/blog/?p=7321
Newton and the Counterfeiter: The Unknown Detective Career of the
World's Greatest Scientist
by Thomas Levenson
Isaac Newton to the rescue
A Review by Paul Collins
There are any number of settings where we might imagine Isaac Newton
holding forth in February of 1699 -- under his famed apple tree, say, or
before an august assembly of the Royal Society. Draining drams with
counterfeiters in a lowlife London pub called the Dogg, though, seems
less likely. But that's just what Britain's greatest scientist was doing
-- and in Newton and the Counterfeiter: The Unknown Detective Career of
the World's Greatest Scientist, Thomas Levenson has done an admirable
job of explaining how that odd scene came about.
Although Newton's fame comes from physics, Levenson points out that much
of his life was in fact dedicated to studying alchemy, or figuring out
how to transmute dross into gold. That fascination, so often regarded as
oddly inconvenient by Newton scholars, becomes the hinge of Levenson's
tale -- for by 1695, King William III's royal Mint was in such a dire
state that it could have used a little alchemy itself. Because the
silver in British coins was now worth more in continental Europe than
the coins' face value, speculators were melting them down, shipping the
metal abroad, and then using the proceeds to procure ... more coins. "It
was the nearest thing imaginable," Levenson writes, "to a financial
perpetual motion machine. "
But that motion came at the expense of British coffers. Soon the few
coins remaining were either clipped -- that is, subtly shaved down for
their silver -- or were counterfeits made from cheap alloys. Brits found
themselves unable to pay for everyday basics, and the government,
struggling to finance the Nine Years' War, found foreign bankers
disenchanted with the country's literally flimsy currency: at one test
conducted in Oxford, a sack of coins that should have tipped the scales
at 400 ounces proved to weigh a mere 104.
And so the government called on the era's greatest mind to run the royal
Mint -- a move roughly equivalent to asking Stephen Hawking to manage a
TARP bailout. It is here that Levenson's book especially shines: for, as
unlikely a figure as Newton appears for the job, Levenson shows that his
deep experience of precious metals -- and his decisive grasp of
mathematics -- actually made him an ideal choice.
Which brings us back to the dirty confines of the Dogg pub. Along with
revamping the nation's currency through both the first time-motion study
and modern coining techniques, Newton still faced the continued menace
of counterfeiters. His solution was to create perhaps the greatest
undercover force in the city, one that methodically snared low-level
informants to aim upward at London's counterfeiting gangs.
The one man remaining out of reach all this time was the extraordinary
William Chaloner; in him, Levenson has a cinematic figure of cunning and
opportunistic criminality. Trained in metalworking as a nail maker,
Chaloner fled his apprenticeship to a London life of hawking sex toys,
fake timepieces and quack medicine. But when he returned to his old
talent at metals, he found his real stock in trade as a crook.
Chaloner is an endlessly slippery presence in Newton and the
Counterfeiter -- making and blowing fortunes at illicit coining, sending
his accomplices to the gallows when that proves more profitable and even
attempting to infiltrate the Mint itself with pamphlets passing himself
off as a policy "expert." (This last bit of chutzpah, Levenson muses,
was " a bit like John Gotti weighing in on Social Security.") When
Chaloner attempts one last big score -- one that could bring down the
national currency -- the result is a well-plotted game of cat-and-mouse
with Isaac Newton.
Newton and the Counterfeiter is as finely struck as one of Newton's
shillings, and just as shiny in its use of new technology; it owes much
to Levenson's canny use of the digitized records of the Old Bailey court
system, as well as the online Newton Project, which has digitized
Newton's notebooks. The result is a history that, if it doesn't change
Newton's primary reputation, certainly shows that there's more than
meets the eye in our familiar genius. We are accustomed to enshrining
Newton in the sciences: But G-men and bankers, it turns out, owe him a
debt of gratitude as well.
Paul Collins' latest book is The Book of William: How Shakespeare's
First Folio Conquered the World.
|