Mad scientist
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A mad scientist is a stock character of popular fiction, either villainous, or benign and scatterbrained. Whether insane, eccentric, or simply bumbling, the mad scientist is often working with some utterly fictional technology in order to forward their evil schemes. Alternatively, they don't see the evil that will ensue from the hubris of "playing God". Because of recent profusion of geek culture, modern mad scientist depictions are often satirical and humorous rather than critical. Not all mad scientists are evil or villains. Some are actually protagonists, such as Dexter in the animated series Dexter's Laboratory or Washu in Tenchi Muyo.
Defining characteristics
Mad scientists are typically characterized by obsessive behaviour and the employment of extremely dangerous or unorthodox methods. They often are motivated by revenge, seeking to settle real or imagined slights, typically related to their unorthodox studies.Their laboratories often hum with Tesla coils, Van de Graaff generators, Jacob's ladders, perpetual motion machines, and other visually impressive electrical oddments, or are decorated with test tubes and complicated distillation apparatus containing strangely-colored liquids with no obvious purpose. Very often there will be chemicals heating over the yellow flame of a Bunsen burner despite the fact this produces soot and little heat.
Other traits include:
- Pursuit of science without regard to its destructive or even ethical implications (such as violating the Nuremberg Code).
- Self-experimentation.
- Playing God, tinkering with nature.
- Absent-mindedness, often manifested in careless grooming.
- Lack of normal social relations, often to the point of being hermits.
- Physical deformity, either a birth defect or the result of maiming in some past incident.
- In English-language works: Speaking with a German or Eastern European accent. (This was in large part the result of many scientists from Germany and Eastern Europe emigrating to the United States in two waves: one before World War II comprising refugees from Nazism, and one after the war comprising refugees from the Soviet Union and, in some cases, former Nazi employees. See: Operation Paperclip and Manhattan Project).
- In villains, maniacal laughter, especially pronounced when their experiments reach their climax.
- Ranting monologues about mistreatment by their more orthodox peers, and their plans for revenge.
- They have some academic title, usually Doctor or Professor .
- They are almost invariably white males.
The mad scientist is the anti-thesis of the heroic scientist and is considerably more popular.
History
Precursors
Since ancient times, popular imagination has circulated on archetypal figures who wielded esoteric knowledge. Shamans and witch doctors were held in reverence and fear of their rumored abilities to conjure beasts and create demons. They shared many of the same perceived characteristics that have been passed onto mad scientists such as eccentric behavior, living as hermits, and the ability to create life.When the Catholic Church supressed these animistic beliefs, a strain survived by passing itself off as a rational inquiry into nature, alchemy. Alchemists were well known for behaving strangely, usually a result of mercury poisoning as in the case of Isaac Newton. A common ambition was to create the homunculus, an artificial human. Alchemy declined with the advent of modern science during the Enlightenment.
Birth of science and science fiction
Since the 19th century, fictitious depictions of science have vacillated between notions of science as the salvation of society or its doom. Consequently, depictions of scientists in fiction ranged between the virtuous and the depraved, the sober and the insane. Until the 20th century, optimism about progress was the most common attitude towards science, but latent anxieties about disturbing "the secrets of nature" would surface following the increasing role of science in wartime affairs.The prototypical fictional mad scientist was Victor Frankenstein, creator of Frankenstein's monster, who made his first appearance in 1818, in the novel Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus by Mary Shelley. Though Frankenstein is a sympathetic character, the critical element of conducting forbidden experiments that cross "boundaries that ought not to be crossed", heedless of the consequences, is present in Shelley's novel. Frankenstein was trained as both alchemist and modern scientist which makes him the bridge between two eras of an evolving archetype. His monster is essentially the homunculus of a new form of literature, science fiction.
1927's Metropolis, directed by Austrian expressionist director Fritz Lang, brought the archetypical mad scientist to movie audiences in the form of Rotwang, the evil genius whose machines gave life to the dystopian city of the title. Rotwang's laboratory influenced many subsequent movie sets with its electrical arcs, bubbling apparatus, and bizarrely complicated arrays of dials and controls. Portrayed by actor Rudolf Klein-Rogge, Rotwang himself is the prototypically conflicted mad scientist; though he is master of almost mystical scientific power, he remains slave to his own desires for power and revenge. Rotwang's appearance was also influential -- the character's shock of flyaway hair, wild-eyed demeanor, and his quasi-fascist laboratory garb have all been adopted as shorthand for the mad scientist "look". Even his mechanical right hand has become a mark of twisted scientific power, echoed notably in Stanley Kubrick's [[Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb|Dr. Strangelove]].
Nevertheless, the essentially benign and progressive impression of science in the public mind continued unchecked, exemplified by the optimistic "Century of Progress" exhibition in Chicago, Illinois, 1933, and the "World of Tomorrow" at the New York World's Fair of 1939. However after the first World War, public attitudes began to shift, if only subtly, when chemical warfare and the airplane were the terror weapons of the day. As an example, of all science fiction before 1914 which dealt with the end of the world, two-thirds were about naturalistic endings (such as collision with an asteroid), and the other third was devoted to endings caused by humans (about half were accidental, half purposeful). After 1914, the idea of any human actually killing the remainder of humanity became a more imaginable fantasy (even if it was still impossible), and the ratio switched to two-thirds of all end-of-the-world scenarios being the product of human maliciousness or error. Though still drowned out by feelings of optimism, the seeds of anxiety had been thoroughly sown.
The most common tool of mad scientists in this era was electricity. It was viewed widely as a quasi-mystical force with chaotic and unpredictable properties by an ignorant public.
After 1945
Mad scientists had their heyday in popular culture in the period after World War II. The sadistic medical experiments of the Nazis and the invention of the atomic bomb gave rise in this period to genuine fears that science and technology had gone out of control. The scientific and technological build up during the Cold War, with its increasing threats of unparalleled destruction, did not lessen the impression. Mad scientists frequently figure in science fiction and motion pictures from the period. The movie [[Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb]], in which Peter Sellers plays the titular Dr. Strangelove, is perhaps the ultimate expression of this fear of the power of science, or the misuse of this power.In more recent years, the mad scientist as a lone investigator of the forbidden unknown has tended to be replaced by mad corporate executives who plan to profit from defying the laws of nature and humanity regardless of who suffers; these people hire a salaried scientific staff to pursue their twisted dreams. This shift is typified by the revised history of Superman's archenemy, Lex Luthor: originally conceived in the 1930s as a typically solitary mad scientist, a major retcon of the character's origins in the early 1980s made him the head of a megacorporation who also plays a leading role in his R & D department. Bob Page, the master villain in the computer game Deus Ex, is another example. Still, the pose has been used whimsically by popular science writers to attract readers.
The techniques of mad science also changed after Hiroshima. Electricity was replaced by radiation as the new tool to create, enlarge, or deform life (e.g., Godzilla). As audiences became more savvy, quantum mechanics, genetic engineering, and artificial intelligence have taken the spotlight (e.g., Blade Runner).
Mad scientists, and the relationship between man and technology in general, are the focus of the current webcomic A Miracle of Science [link]. In the series, mad scientists are in fact victims of Science Related Memetic Disorder, a contagious memetic disease that causes obsessive behavior focused on some form of technology.
Quotations
- A recent survey of 1000 horror films distributed in the UK between the 1930s and 1980s reveals that mad scientists or their creations have been the villains of 30 percent of the films; that scientific research has produced 39 percent of the threats; and, by contrast, that scientists have been the heroes of a mere 11. (Christopher Frayling, New Scientist, 24 September 2005)
Fields of research
- Archaeology, at least where magical artifacts are involved
- Astrophysics
- Biochemistry, especially biotechnology
- Biology, especially genetics, eugenics, cybernetics and revival of the dead
- Botany
- Chemistry
- Chemical engineering
- Cloning (e.g. The 6th Day)
- Cryptozoology, astrobiology
- Electrical engineering
- Entomology
- Eugenics (e.g. Gattaca)
- Genetic engineering, molecular genetics
- Mechanical engineering and mechatronics
- Nuclear technology
- Physics, especially nuclear physics
- Psychology, particularly its application to mind control and similar topics
- Relativity theory, with a special emphasis on time travel
- Robotics
- Surgery
Untouched fields
Fields largely untapped by mad scientists include:
- Civil engineering, excepting demolitions.
- Geology, except where trying to destroy the world, where physics is more involved than true geology.
- Meteorology, except in the case of creating weather control machines, which would more properly belong in the area of physics
- Metallurgy, unless trying to make armor and the like, when metals with rather implausible strength may be used. Or, unless you consider the case of robot creation, where a knowledge of metals is fundamentally important. Or nuclear physics, for which metallurgy is crucial.
- Pure mathematics, though the main protagonist in the film Pi is a mathematician who arguably embodies some aspects of this archetype. Real-life Unabomber Ted Kaczynski, who was a mathematician, also springs to mind.
- Social sciences
- Archaeology, subjective, unless you consider Beloq, from Raiders of the Lost Ark, as the mad archaeologist archetype.
Real-life prototypes
The scientists of literature and popular imagination have better defined our image of "mad science" than have actual scientists, because that is their function: to reflect back our own prejudices. "Popular belief and behavior are influenced more by images than by demonstrable facts" (Roslynn Doris Haynes, 1994). Some real-life scientists, not necessarily madmen, whose personalities (and sometimes, appearances) have contributed to the stereotype:
- Albert Einstein, physicist, whose hairstyle (or perhaps lack thereof...) is commonly given to mad scientists.
- B. F. Skinner, behaviorist and utopian.
- Edward Teller, nuclear physicist who worked to develop the hydrogen bomb.
- Francis Galton, British scientist who developed statistics and eugenics.
- Gerald Bull, engineer.
- Dr. Gunther von Hagens, inventor of plastination (to halt decomposition after death), and performer of public autopsies.
- Harry Harlow, psychologist who wanted to study love through its deprivation.
- Professor Heinz Wolff, Berlin-born Emeritus Professor of Bioengineering at Brunel University, and popular radio and television presenter.
- Herman Kahn, futurist who articulated policy of mutually assured destruction.
- Horace Donisthorpe, myrmecologist.
- Dr. Ishii Shiro, Lieutenant General of Unit 731 of the Imperial Japanese Army.
- Jack Parsons, rocket propulsion researcher and Thelemic occultist.
- Jeremy Bentham, British philosopher who had himself mummified.
- Dr. Josef Mengele, Nazi "Angel of Death", doctor at Auschwitz.
- Professor Julius Sumner Miller.
- Dr. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, "Missile Man" and President of India.
- Magnus Pyke, British TV presenter.
- Nikola Tesla, Serbian-American physicist, mathematician, inventor, and electrical engineer noted for highly eccentric personal habits.
- Oliver Heaviside, British scientist who replaced his furniture with giant granite blocks.
- Patrick Moore, British astronomer.
- Philo Farnsworth, inventor of television, and the first nuclear fusion device.
- Stanley Milgram, psychologist who pioneered work on obedience studies, sometimes considered an example of ethically risky social science research.
- Thomas Alva Edison, "The Wizard of Menlo Park", inventor.
- Trofim Lysenko, Soviet biologist who terrorized Russian genetics.
- Wernher von Braun, development of rocket technology in Germany and the United States; particularly as described in the Tom Lehrer song bearing his name.
- Sidney Gottlieb, American CIA chemist who administered drugs to unwitting patients as an attempted form of mind control while heading Project MKULTRA.
See also
Related lists
References analyzing the cultural motif
- Haynes, Roslynn Doris (1994). From Faust to Strangelove: Representations of the Scientist in Western Literature. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-4801-6.
- Christopher Frayling - Mad, Bad and Dangerous?: The Scientist and the Cinema (Reaktion Books, 2005) ISBN 1861892551
- Junge, Torsten; Doerthe Ohlhoff (2004). ''Wahnsinnig genial: Der Mad Scientist Reader. Aschaffenburg: Alibri. ISBN 3-9332710-79-7.
- Tudor, Andrew (1989). Monsters and Mad Scientists: A Cultural History of the Horror Movie. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-15279-2.
- Weart, Spencer R. (1988). Nuclear Fear: A History of Images. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
External links
- Analyzing the culture motif
- * [Gary Hoppenstand, "Dinosaur Doctors and Jurassic Geniuses: The Changing Image of the Scientist in the Lost World Adventure"]
- * [The Scarecrow’s Brain - images of the scientist in film, Christopher Frayling]
- * [Breaking Down the Stereotypes of Science by Recruiting Young Scientists]
- Within the genre
- * [Luxuriant Flowing Hair Club for Scientists]
- * [The International Society of Mad Scientists]
- * [The League of Mad Scientists]
- * [The Ernest Glitch Chronicles] - fictional stories of a Victorian mad scientist discovering modern phenomena
- * [Bookproject about the Difference between Madness and Science]
- * [Online community dedicated to the propagation of 'Mad Science']
- * [MadSci Network] - collective group of scientists answering science questions
- * [Denver Mad Scientists Club] - Developers of the "Critter Crunch", widely credited as the first real-life Robot combat contest
- * [Homepage of a freelance mad scientist.]
- * [MAD About U.] humor webcomic about a college for Mad Scientists.
- *[Girl Genius] Eisner-nominated Web comic featuring "Adventure, Romance, and Mad Science", by Phil and Kaja Foglio.
- * [Dr. Steel] Modern day Mad Scientist.
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