All Thinkers

Thinkers Timeline

Key thinkers across history — grouped by era, colour-coded by discipline. Click any card to explore ideas, quotations, and classroom contexts.

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Modern — 1800 to 1950
Ada Lovelace 1815-1852 · England
Augusta Ada King, Countess of Lovelace (1815-1852), usually known as Ada Lovelace, was an English mathematician widely regarded as the author of the first published algorithm intended to be run on a machine. She was the only legitimate child of the poet Lord Byron and Annabella Milbanke, a mathematically inclined aristocrat who separated from Byron a month after Ada's birth. Annabella worried that her daughter might inherit her father's volatility and insisted that Ada be given a rigorous education in mathematics and science — unusual for a girl of her class at the time. Ada studied with tutors including the mathematician Augustus De Morgan and the scientist Mary Somerville. In 1833, at seventeen, she met Charles Babbage, the mathematician designing mechanical calculating machines. She became his close intellectual collaborator over the next two decades. In 1843 she translated an article on Babbage's proposed Analytical Engine from French, adding her own extensive notes that more than tripled the length of the original. These notes, published under her initials AAL, contain the first detailed algorithm designed for machine execution and a remarkable philosophical discussion of what such a machine could and could not do. She married William King, later Earl of Lovelace, and had three children. She died of uterine cancer at thirty-six, having published only the one major work but having thought further into the future of computing than almost anyone of her century.
"The Analytical Engine has no pretensions whatever to originate anything. It can do whatever we know how to order it to perform."
Millicent Fawcett 1847-1929 · United Kingdom
Dame Millicent Garrett Fawcett was an English political activist and writer. She led the largest peaceful campaign for British women's right to vote for over twenty years. She was born on 11 June 1847 in Aldeburgh, a small town on the coast of Suffolk, England. Her father, Newson Garrett, was a successful businessman and political radical. He believed strongly in education for his daughters, which was unusual at the time. The Garrett family produced several remarkable women. Millicent's older sister Elizabeth Garrett Anderson became Britain's first qualified woman doctor. Their cousin Rhoda Garrett was a pioneer interior designer. Millicent herself married Henry Fawcett in 1867, when she was 19. He was a politician, professor of political economy at Cambridge, and blind from a shooting accident. They were intellectual partners. Their daughter Philippa later became one of the first women to score top marks in mathematics at Cambridge. Millicent's interest in women's right to vote (called 'suffrage') began very early. She attended her first suffrage meeting at age 19 in 1866, after hearing the philosopher John Stuart Mill speak on women's equality. She became active in campaigns at once. When her husband died in 1884, Millicent was 38. She turned her grief into political work. In 1897 she became leader of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS), Britain's largest peaceful suffrage organisation. She led it for 22 years. In 1918, when British women over 30 finally won the vote, she was 71. In 1928, full equal voting rights for women were achieved. She died the next year, on 5 August 1929, aged 82.
"Courage calls to courage everywhere, and its voice cannot be denied."