Jagadish Chandra Bose: The Reluctant Physicist (ISBN 9389136997) is a contemporary biography of the Indian polymath, Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose, modern India’s first scientist, an eclectic pioneer in radio science, and the father of Plant Neurobiology.[1] Written by the Indian author, Sudipto Das, this marks Das's debut in non-fiction after three novels.[2] Published in November 2023 by Niyogi Books, it was launched in Bangalore[2] at the Bangalore Literature Festival[3] on December 3, 2023, and in Calcutta on January 11, 2024.[4][5]
The book poignantly chronicles Bose's championing of India’s self-reliance through scientific research[6][7] despite British racism and prejudice against Indian science.[8] Bose indigenously designed innovative instruments for his experiments, prioritising open sharing over patents—a forerunner of today’s open innovation.[6] Already a poster boy of the India Semiconductor Mission, hailed as a trailblazer in the technology that was a precursor to semiconductors,[9][10] Bose’s depiction in the book resonates well with the government’s emphasis on self-reliance in the Science, Technology, and Innovation (STI) ecosystems in the country.[6]
Sudipto Das, an IIT Kharagpur alumnus and a veteran in the semiconductor industry, is also an entrepreneur,[11][12] musician,[13] social worker,[14] columnist,[11] and speaker at TED events.[15]
Born in Calcutta in 1973 to a family that fled Bangladesh during the partition riots of 1947, Sudipto grew up listening to horrid stories of the partition, something he extensively used later in his debut novel, The Ekkos Clan, published in 2013.[16] A violinist trained in Western classical music, Sudipto debuted as a music composer in 2014 when he recreated Eastern European melodies of the 1940s for the war musical Schweyk in the Second World War by Bertolt Brecht.[17]
A forgotten genius, Sir J. C. Bose defied norms in science and life. A co-inventor of radio and pioneer in semiconductors and wireless communication, he fascinated Einstein yet faded from memory. Das's book delves into Bose's remarkable life, intertwined with India's struggle for freedom, and explores his complex relationships, especially with Sister Nivedita and Sara Chapman Bull, that defied easy definition.[18]
Praised for its captivating narrative, the book transcends the boundaries of a conventional scientific chronicle by exploring India’s socio-political milieu.[19] The poetic eloquence that makes the book read more like a novelistic story[20] bridges the gap between science writing and a broader readership.[8]
Bose lived in the best of times and the worst of times, in many ways. It is the high noon of the British Empire, a defining time for great science and innovation, yet major European powers battle for global dominance and hurtle unwittingly towards devastating wars.[21][22][23] Bose’s story unfurls against this and the rising ferment of Indian nationalism.[24] On the one hand, we see glimpses of a young Rabindranath Tagore leading the first non-violent mass resistance against the imperial decree of partitioning Bengal,[24] and, on the other hand, the enigmatic figure of Sister Nivedita, aka Margaret Noble, an Irish-Scottish who, inspired by the firebrand monk Swami Vivekananda, converts to the cause of Hindu nationalism and sparks an armed revolution against British rule.[25][26] At the same time, Nivedita is liaising with the unitarian and pacifist Bose, often acting as his scientific secretary and editing his papers.[27]
The book explores this odd partnership of very antipodal characters, collaborating and influencing each other in unseeming ways, not always in mutual agreement, yet in ways that, nevertheless, transcend their differences in a grand and unified vision to make India independent and self-reliant.
The book expertly contextualises Bose’s life within the broader canvas of India’s struggle for independence.[19]
The book is divided into four parts, each exploring the theme of unity.[7]
Bose belonged to the Unitarian Brahmo fraternity, like Rabindranath Tagore, Raja Rammohan Roy, and other eminent Bengalis. Brahmoism was founded on the principles of Advaita Vedanta, the genesis of which is in these words from a verse in the Rig Veda: "Ekam sat, vipra vahudha vadanti,” there exists only One, the wise call it variously. Das gives vivid records of how, driven by this idea of universal unity, Bose explored similarities in plant and human life. He even predicted plant sentience, paving the way for plant neurobiology and cognition.[7]
Das delves deep into the controversy surrounding the invention of radio or wireless, which, for a very long time, was attributed solely to the genius of Marconi, but not any more. IEEE has formally acknowledged that Bose is the father of wireless communication with millimetre-waves,[28] used again in 5G. It is his work, done in the late 19th century, that forms the foundation of technologies that power devices ranging from cellphones to microwave ovens, radios to radar, satellite television to the world’s most powerful space telescopes.[8]
At a lit-fest,[23] Das highlighted that Jagadish Bose embodied the pinnacle of Bengal Renaissance, championing India's scientific revival and putting it on par with Western science. Culturally, the book suggests, Bose collaborated with Sister Nivedita in resurrecting ancient Indian art, organising the first Ajanta painting exhibition at his home.[5]
A reviewer pointed out that the subtitle of the book, “The Reluctant Physicist,” bears significant semblance to Mohsin Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist. The reviewer conjectured that Das might have taken some inspiration from the metafictional elements and autodiegetic narration of Hamid’s original. However, bearing in mind the rather “defiant” nature of Bose and his work, which outweighs his “reluctance” to follow narrow lines of inquiry, the reviewer suggested that “The Defiant Physicist” would seem like a much more apt subtitle.[29]
Some readers critique factual liberties in the book in the form of creative licence.[8] Academics wish for more scientific references.[4]