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Mary Jackson and the Inclusivity in Science

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  Science or mathematics, at its core, is inclusive. It is a space where logic matters the most, where curiosity and brilliance outrank prejudices. An equation doesn't care who solves it, a wind test tunnel doesn't ask for your skin colour. And yet, for so long, the laboratories and research centres of the world have been reserved for the privileged few. In this context, it is interesting to examine how women entered scientific institutions like NASA in the first place. “Computing” — the painstaking process of doing mathematical calculations by hand during that time — was seen as dull, mechanical work. Male engineers found it exhausting, and as an experiment, labs began hiring women instead. They were reliable, precise, and, in the eyes of the institution, inexpensive. It also freed male engineers to do what they considered “real science.” The experiment became a quiet revolution. Women excelled. Many had university degrees in mathematics but had been denied opportunities else...