Before the modern specialization and
professionalization of science, there was often little distinction between "science" and "popular science", and works intended to share scientific knowledge with a general reader existed as far back as Greek and Roman antiquity. Without these popular works, much of the scientific knowledge of the era might have been lost. For example, none of the original works of the Greek astronomer
Eudoxus (4th century BC) have survived, but his contributions were largely preserved due to the didactic poem
Phenomena written a century later and commented on by
Hipparchus. Explaining science in poetic form was not uncommon, and as recently as 1791,
Erasmus Darwin wrote
The Botanic Garden, two long poems intended to interest and educate readers in botany. Many Greek and Roman scientific handbooks were written for the lay audience, and this "handbook" tradition continued right through to the invention of the printing press, with much later examples including
books of secrets such as
Giambattista Della Porta's
Magia Naturalis (1558) and
Isabella Cortese's
Secreti (1561). The 17th century saw the beginnings of the modern scientific revolution and the consequent need for explicit popular science writing. Although works such as
Galileo's
The Assayer (1632) and
Robert Hooke's
Micrographia (1665) were read by both scientists and the public,
Newton's Principia (1687) was incomprehensible for most readers, so popularizations of Newton's ideas soon followed. Popular science writing surged in countries such as France, where books such as
Fontenelle's
Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds (1686) were best-sellers. By 1830, astronomer
John Herschel had recognized the need for the specific genre of popular science. In a letter to philosopher
William Whewell, he wrote that the general public needed "digests of what is actually known in each particular branch of science... to give a connected view of what has been done, and what remains to be accomplished." Indeed, as the British population became not just increasingly literate but also well-educated, there was growing demand for science titles.
Mary Somerville became an early and highly successful science writer of the nineteenth century. Her
On the Connexion of the Physical Sciences (1834), intended for the mass audience, sold quite well. Arguably one of the first books in modern popular science, it contained few diagrams and very little mathematics. Ten editions of the book were published, and it was translated into multiple languages. It was the most popular science title from the publisher
John Murray until
On the Origin of Species (1859) by
Charles Darwin. == Role ==