Profs & Pints Northern Virginia: The Genius of Benjamin Franklin

Sunday, Apr 27, 2025 at 5:30pm
Crooked Run Fermentation
22455 Davis Dr #120
Adv:$13.50, Door:$17, w/Student ID:$15

Profs and Pints Northern Virginia presents: The Genius of Benjamin Franklin,” with Richard Bell, associate professor of history at the University of Maryland.

Benjamin Franklin’s genius is a puzzle. Born the tenth and youngest son of a decidedly humble family of puritan candle-makers, his rise to the front ranks of science, engineering, and invention was as unexpected as it was meteoric. Despite having only two years of formal schooling, he would end up receiving honorary degrees from Harvard, Yale, Oxford, and St. Andrews, as well as the 18th century’s equivalent of a Nobel Prize for Physics.

Like his hero, Isaac Newton, Franklin was driven by a perpetual dissatisfaction with the world as he knew it. He optimized, tinkered, and improved. Hardly the tortured genius, he took a schoolboy’s pleasure in everything he made. Experimenting was a constant source of beauty, pleasure, and amusement for him, even when things went wrong (which they did all the time).

In this talk Bell will examine many of Franklin’s ideas to make life simpler, cheaper, and easier for himself and everyone else. It turns out that those ideas encompassed not only natural science and engineering—the kite experiments and the bifocals for which he is justly remembered—but also all sorts of public works, civic improvements, political innovation, and fresh new business ideas. His experimenter’s instinct, his relentless drive to build a better world one small piece at a time, even encompassed innovations in medical device design, in music, in cookery, and in ventriloquism.

Be on hand as Richard Bell, a favorite of Profs and Pints fans who previously has given a host of excellent talks, returns to the stage to discuss what lessons—and great intellectual habits—we all can learn by examining Benjamin Franklin’s life. (Advance tickets: $13.50 plus sales tax and processing fees. Doors: $17, or $15 with a student ID. Listed time is for doors. The talk starts 30 minutes later.)

Image: Benjamin Franklin near a bust of Isaac Newton as painted by David Martin in 1767 (Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts).