Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Things Most of Us Don't Think About

“Imagine trying to learn biology without ever using the word “organism.” Or studying to become a botanist when the only way of referring to photosynthesis is to spell the word out, letter by painstaking letter.”
I've been asked to write an article about deaf scientists for my agency.  I have to say that I never thought about the communication issue in science fields.  There was just a vague sense of sign language without thought to how tedious and/or difficult lectures could be for both the lecturer and those in the audience.

I don't want the article to be just a listing of deaf scientists, so I've been poking around the web and trying to condense some history as well as reading biographies.  I don't recognize most of the names, of course, but one did surprise me - Thomas Edison. He wasn't totally deaf, but very hard of hearing.  The Q&A at the website of the Thomas Edison National Historical Park says this:
Was Edison deaf?
That is how Edison described himself, but in fact he was not totally deaf. It is more accurate to say he was very hard of hearing. He once wrote, "I have not heard a bird sing since I was twelve years old."
So, why didn't Edison invent a hearing aid? He often told reporters that he was working on one; sometimes he tested hearing aids designed by others. But it seems that Edison saw advantages to being deaf. For example, he said that it helped him concentrate on his work. In 1927 he told a group of 300 hard-of-hearing adults, "Deaf people [like himself] should take to reading. It beats the babble of ordinary conversation."

I guess that surprised me because I associate Edison with music, particularly with record players.  And that would be because I own one of these:



A part of my fond memories of Grandma's house, it's an Edison Amberola 30, and until fairly recently it still played.  This series was built between 1915 and 1929 - I think I traced the serial number to a manufacture date of 1918.  There's more than 100 "records" with it:  celluloid cylinders around a plaster core.  Some are in rough condition - my Dad and uncles knew that if you knocked the plaster out the right way they could play them backwards.


I really ought to catalog the cylinders properly.  And I really ought to figure out how to get it back in working order.  There's some great stuff in there - the one shown is "Alexander's Rag Time Band".  Lot's of Hawaiian - apparently that was real big in the early 20s.  A speech by Teddy Roosevelt.  "Darktown Strutter's Ball" would probably get me into trouble with the PC crowd.  

Novelty songs were popular, as well. My favorite of the ones I have has always been "Barney Google",  written for  Eddie Cantor in 1923 and based on a comic by the same name.  (Although "Yes We Have No Bananas" runs a close second.)



You can probably see why the song was written for Cantor.  My version is the Billy Jones and Ernest Hare one, I think.  You can give a listen here because I'm too lazy to try to attach it to the comic image.

Hours of listening, limited only by how often I want to crank it.  Yeah, I'd really like to be able to do that again.  Time for some more web surfing. 

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Note - I know about Beethoven going deaf, but Edison still surprised me.  As did the fact that a mathematician whose major contribution was to acoustics, including giving us the word for the science, Joseph Sauveur (1653 - 1716), appears to have been either born deaf or so seriously impaired that he didn't speech until he was 7.



13 comments:

  1. Nice PH! Let me know if I can help!

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    1. Thanks. I thought of you, actually. Part of the issue will be diagnosing it's needs. It would be nice to listen to it again. I love that old music from the teens and 20s and it's best in its original crackly form.

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  2. Interesting. I did know about Edison~not that I am some know it all~but deafness is something I know about. My brother UJ has hearing issues and I have grown up with that, and I am slowly losing my hearing. I worked at the Ohio School for the Deaf while in college and I am forever thankful as sign language helped me. I had one son that has a similar issue as my brother and we used sign language with him until he was 9. His speech is a bit as if he has a slight impediment but NO one would guess and he is now a fireman!

    Have fun with your article.

    Jennifer

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    1. Interesting. But as far as males are concerned - how do you tell if they are hard of hearing or just have selective hearing?:-)

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    2. I am glad that I was not taking a drink when I read that!! Hahahaha!! Too funny!

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  3. The model number dates it to after the factory fire in 1914. The "30" was the retail price as well as the model number. You know the records are flammable (Nitrocellulose) right?

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    1. I knew about the first two (something like $460 in todays money) but not about the flammable. Never thought about it - I know it's not modern plastic but it looks and feels like plastic so it sort of sits in my mind as plastic.

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  4. So times with me it can be selective hearing.
    My hearing is slowly fading it is getting harder and harder to hear somethings.
    Good Luck with your project

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    1. What happens when I get a new phone in April will determine whether or not I should think about going to an audiologist. I'm having trouble understanding people on the phone, but the phone is old in technology years.

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  5. Good luck! And I hope it works out. Edison had hearing problems that probably DID contribute to his ability to concentrate! :-)

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    1. At least that's what he told his wife when she was yelling for him.:-)

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  6. "Deaf people [like himself] should take to reading. It beats the babble of ordinary conversation."
    lmao.
    So there is a silver lining to hearing loss.

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    1. I found several deaf scientists who felt being deaf was a positive good since it helped their concentration.

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