Admired long after his death by the likes of Lord Rayleigh and Einstein, Thomas Young (1773 1829) was the definition of a polymath. By the age of fourteen he was proficient in thirteen languages, including Greek, Hebrew and Persian. After studies in Edinburgh, London, Gottingen and Cambridge he established himself as a physician in London, and over the course of his life made contributions to science, linguistics and music. He was the first to prove that light is a wave rather than molecular, his three-colour theory of vision was confirmed in the twentieth century, and his work in deciphering...
Admired long after his death by the likes of Lord Rayleigh and Einstein, Thomas Young (1773 1829) was the definition of a polymath. By the age of four...