Joseph Needham (born Dec. 9, 1900, London, England—died March 24, 1995, Cambridge) was an English biochemist, embryologist, and historian of science who wrote and edited the landmark history Science and Civilisation in China, a comprehensive study of Chinese scientific development.
The son of a physician, Needham earned a doctoral degree in 1924 from the University of Cambridge, then joined its new Dunn Institute of Biochemistry. His interest in the history of science was evident from the long preface to his three-volume Chemical Embryology (1931), which he published separately as A History of Embryology in 1934. In the late 1930s his collaboration with Chinese biochemists sparked his interest in China’s language and civilization, and as head of a British scientific mission in China (1942–46) Needham traveled throughout the country collecting rare scientific books and manuscripts. After serving as director of natural sciences for UNESCO (1946–48), he returned to Cambridge and began work on Science and Civilisation in China.
Science and Civilisation in China surveys the history of Chinese chemistry, mechanics, navigation, medicine, and other disciplines. As the massive work progressed, additional scholars assisted Needham in its writing; six of its seven planned volumes were completed by Needham and his colleagues at the time of his death. The work examined the relationship between the Confucian and Taoist traditions and Chinese scientific innovation and explored the differences between Chinese and Western philosophies of scientific inquiry.