In 1827, seeking to unlock the secrets of human perception, the young Belgian physicist Joseph Plateau stared directly into the sun?a reckless, self-sacrificial act that eventually cost him his sight.
This biography tells the story of a mind that refused to be extinguished. Plateau's career is a study in extraordinary resilience, famously split into two acts:
First, his research on visual persistence led directly to the invention of the Phenakistiscope, the device that demonstrated the scientific foundation for all moving images, establishing him as the father of modern cinema.
Second, after total blindness descended in 1843, Plateau entered a conceptual laboratory of the mind. For thirty years, he dictated and directed complex geometric experiments on soap films, culminating in Plateau's Laws, which define the geometry of minimal surfaces. This sightless work remains a cornerstone of physics, mathematics, and advanced engineering today.
From the fleeting moment of visual perception to the eternal stability of a soap bubble, Plateau sought the quantitative laws of the universe. This book is a comprehensive journey through his life, exploring his tragic heroism, his intellectual triumphs, and the enduring lesson that true scientific vision is an internal light that cannot be dimmed. Approx.155 pages, 31000 word count