Brian J. Ford

Brian J. Ford (born 1939 in Corsham, Wiltshire ) is an independent research biologist, author, and lecturer, who publishes on scientific issues for the general public. He has also been a television personality for more than 40 years.

Education
Ford attended Cardiff University between 1959 and 1961, and left before graduating to set up his own multi-disciplinary laboratory.

Work
Ford has campaigned on the mis-use of forensic data in courts and the misuse of dangerous germs, which have resulted in new laws being passed. Ford's current research interests include e-learning  ,  for which he is based at the University of Leicester.

Ford's other publications range from microbial research and elucidating newly threatening infections to examining scientists' dissatisfaction with their lot. Other areas of his interests are the invention of a space microscope  commissioned by Brunel University, to be used by European Space Agency, safety of the water supply and the rising incidence ofhead lice and  bed bugs , his discovery of new phenomena in blood coagulation , the  of plants excretory mechanisms of plants and investigations of the  'ingenuity' of living cells that alter our understanding of the living cell. Ford's proposal for biohazard legislation led to supportive articles in 'Nature' and 'The Times' and has led to the introduction of world-wide biohazard controls.

He has written papers on the development of science, such as an essay on scientific illustration and an 18,000-word essay on scientific publishing in the eighteenth century. One of his best known discoveries is the original specimens of Antony van Leeuwenhoek. They were sent to the Royal Society of London in the seventeenth century and remained there until 1981 when Ford found the Leeeuwenhoek specimens hidden in the letters  and he then submitted them to extensive microscopical examination using both old and new microscopes.

His scientific papers on the development of science are often remarkably detailed, notably an essay on scientific illustration and an extraordinary 18,000-word essay on scientific publishing in the eighteenth century  which is the definitive source for academics. Ford has been active in diplomacy and politics, travels extensively, and acts as a conference speaker and lecturer. He has also written for The Times, the Daily Telegraph and the Evening Standard, also writing for journals including the British Medical Journal, Nature, and Scientific American. As a student he had a weekly science column on the South Wales Echo and has since contributed columns for the Mensa Magazine, Boz magazine, The Listener and The Guardian.

Ford has been a guest on the BBC's Round Britain Quiz where he partnered Lady Antonia Fraser, and Any Questions?, presented the radio shows Science Now, Where Are You Taking Us? and Kaleidoscope, and was a founder-member of Start the Week on BBC Radio Four with Esther Rantzen and Richard Baker (broadcaster).

Many of his programmes involve proffering unrehearsed answers to the public on scientific topics, as on the Cliff Michelmore series Whatever you think (BBC) and Science Hour with Clive Bull ( for LBC). On television he hosted a game show Computer Challenge and the documentary series Food for Thought in Britain and Jensheits das Kanals in Germany. His recent TV appearances include presenting The Man Behind the da Vinci Code and featuring in Weird Weapons of World War II, based on his two books about WW2 (see below).

In addition to scientific research and academic lectures, Ford lectures extensively to general audiences, in the form of one-man shows on current scientific issues. A long-time science newspaper and magazine columnist, Ford's books have been published in more than 100 editions in many countries.

Fellowships
Ford is a Fellow of Cardiff University, Member of Gonville and Caius College, University of Cambridge, an Honorary member of Keynes College, University of Kent, former Fellow at the Open University and Visiting Professor at the University of Leicester.

Ford is a Fellow of the Linnean Society, serving as a member of their council as their Zoological Secretary and is their honorary surveyor of scientific instruments. He is also a Fellow of the Institute of Biology, a former member of their council and chairman of their history network. Ford edited the book Institute of Biology: The First Fifty Years which is devoted to the history of this Institute.

He is a Fellow of Cambridge Philosophical Society and has lectured to all the above mentioned bodies. In 2004 he was awarded a Fellowship by the National Endowment for Science, Technology and Art, NESTA (London).

Ford is a Fellow of Cardiff University and is the President of the Association of Past Students. Ford is also a Member of the university court.

Other positions
He was the first British President of the European Union of Science Journalists' Associations, founding Chairman of the Science and Technology Authors Committee at the Society of Authors, and the president of the Society for the Application of Research (SAR) in Cambridge. Ford has been a member of Mensa and was a director of British Mensa from 1993-1997, resigning a few months after being elected for a second term. . He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Microscopical Society in the 1960s.

Trivia
Ford's first television appearances included playing boogie piano on "Donald Peers Presents", from Cardiff, Wales. Also in the show was the first appearance of Thomas Woodward, latterly known as Tom Jones. Ford was a newspaper columnist before going to Cardiff University, and has since contributed columns to "Boz" magazine, the "Mensa magazine", "the Listener" (formerly published by the BBC) and has written for "the Guardian", "The Times" and other newspapers.

Ford is a popular celebrity speaker on cruise ships including the Cunard Line ship RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 and for Seabourn Cruise Line has spoken aboard the Seabourn Spirit. He is a guest of P&O on vessels such as MV Aurora and the Arcadia (cruise ship); for Fred. Olsen Cruise Lines on the Black Watch and Braemar (ship); aboard the Regatta on Oceania Cruises, and for Celebrity Cruises among many others. His presentations are dynamic and largely extemporized.

One characteristic manifestation of Ford's iconoclastic streak is displayed in the title of one of his books, which he intentionally gave the longest and most complex title in English-language publishing history: Nonscience and the Pseudotransmogrificationalific Egocentrified Reorientational Proclivities Inherently Intracorporated In Expertistical Cerebrointellectualised Redeploymentation with Special Reference to Quasi-Notional Fashionistic Normativity, The Indoctrinationalistic Methodological Modalities and Scalar Socio-Economic Promulgationary Improvementalisationalism Predelineated Positotaxically Toward Individualistified Mass-Acceptance Gratificationalistic Securipermanentalisationary Professionism, or How To Rule The World, London: Wolfe Publishing (ISBN 0-7234-0449-6). The point of the sesquipedalian title was to poke fun at those who conceal their lack of real expertise by using long and complicated words, whilst making the serious point that more people are fooled by these so-called experts than really should be. The book is commonly referred to simply as Nonscience, which is itself a play on nonsense.

Also worthy of note is that Ford has also been a rock & roll keyboards player. He played with guitarist Dave Edmunds and has occasionally performed in recent years. Ford has been active in the diplomatic and political world and is a trained marksman. He can pilot aeroplanes, ski and scuba-dive. He is also an award-winning photographer.

Authors describing Ford

 * Stewart Williams, describes Ford in his early days as a rhythm and blues pianist. Report is illustrated by a photograph by John Couch.  Reported in "Days and nights of hot jazz in Cardiff", South Wales Echo, November 11, 1977.


 * Kenneth Williams discusses Ford's views on place names in his diary book Back Drops.


 * Germaine Greer quotes Ford's view on sexuality, the famous 'jam squirting a in a donut' concept, from his book Patterns of Sex. Uses the quote also as a chapter heading.  Reported in "Better no sex than bad sex", The Sunday Times (UK) Review, p 33, January 13, 1984.


 * Victor Serebriakoff describes Ford giving his lectures as a "brilliant autodidact".


 * Brian Aldiss describes the effects of Ford lecturing on an audience of other authors in Bury my heart at WH Smith's.


 * David Parry-Jones discusses Brian J. Ford on his early television programs, with a photograph, in Action Replay.


 * Professor Philippe Boutibonnes expands on Ford's important research on the Leeuwenhoek microscopes.


 * Sir Colin Spedding discusses Ford's views on the mechanisms of innovation.

Quote
All my life I have tried to act as a catalyst to cross boundaries, an agent of interdisciplinary innovation.”