From the magazine

How French absolutism powered a techno-progressive revolution

An unabashed celebration of genius at the Science Museum. Is this a sign of things to come?

Nina Power
‘Clock of the Creation of the World’, 1754, by Claude-Siméon Passemant, François-Thomas Germain and Jospeh-Léonard Roques.  © Musée du Louvre, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais
EXPLORE THE ISSUE 04 January 2025
issue 04 January 2025

The Enlightenment is back. Despite the best efforts of the past decade of handwringing about cultural imperialism and wailing over machismo, money and majesty, the future keeps crashing in. The Science Museum has now laid its cards on the table with Versailles: Science and Splendour. Think gilt, not guilt.

Is there anything in our lives that could compare to witnessing the first successfully grown pineapple?

It’s marvellous, and unusual these days, to visit an exhibition and feel the colossal force of history without anyone bashing you over the head with infantile morality tales.

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