A short history of natural science |
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Side xi
... sides would be just , yet it seemed better to give even a few of the leading discoveries and theories of our own time than to leave the student with such crude ideas of many branches of science as he must have had if the history had ...
... sides would be just , yet it seemed better to give even a few of the leading discoveries and theories of our own time than to leave the student with such crude ideas of many branches of science as he must have had if the history had ...
Side 10
... side towards you ; pass it slowly round your head , you will find that you see first a bright edge appearing , then more and more of the bright side , till when the stone is on one side of your head and the sun the other , you will see ...
... side towards you ; pass it slowly round your head , you will find that you see first a bright edge appearing , then more and more of the bright side , till when the stone is on one side of your head and the sun the other , you will see ...
Side 12
... side and three - fifths on the other , then the notes were separated by an interval of a fifth . In this way , by marking a scale of divisions on the sounding board , the Greek musicians were able to produce a whole series of musical ...
... side and three - fifths on the other , then the notes were separated by an interval of a fifth . In this way , by marking a scale of divisions on the sounding board , the Greek musicians were able to produce a whole series of musical ...
Side 23
... side of the vessel the height to which the water rose . Next , taking out the gold , he put in the silver , which , though it weighed the same , yet , being larger , made the water rise higher ; and this height he also marked . Lastly ...
... side of the vessel the height to which the water rose . Next , taking out the gold , he put in the silver , which , though it weighed the same , yet , being larger , made the water rise higher ; and this height he also marked . Lastly ...
Side 48
... sides , bend the rays inwards , so that they come to a focus in the eye . To understand this , draw a line of any kind , say a little arrow , on a sheet of paper , and bring your eye near to it . Your arrow being so close would look ...
... sides , bend the rays inwards , so that they come to a focus in the eye . To understand this , draw a line of any kind , say a little arrow , on a sheet of paper , and bring your eye near to it . Your arrow being so close would look ...
Indhold
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325 | |
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456 | |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
acid Alhazen anatomy animals astronomers atoms battery began bodies Boerhaave born botany called caused CENTURY CONTINUED chemical chemistry chemists colours comet Cuvier cylinder dark Descartes died discovered discoveries earth eighteenth century electric current electric telegraph Encyclopædia exactly experiments explained facts famous fixed air Flavio Gioja fossils Galileo gases Geber Geology glass globe Greeks Halley's method heat Herschel Huyghens hydrogen John Herschel Jupiter Kepler Lamarck lines Linnæus living magnet mercury metals moon move round named nature needle Newton observations oxygen pass piece plants prism produced Professor proved Ptolemy refracted remember rocks Roger Bacon round the sun showed side sodium spectrum stamens stars steam string substances telescope theory tion travels tricity tube turn Tycho Tycho Brahe Uranus vapour Vesalius vibrations Voltaic Pile waves weight whole wire
Populære passager
Side 99 - ... that the squares of the periodic times of the planets are proportional to the cubes of their mean distances from the sun.
Side 123 - Our business was (precluding matters of Theology and state affairs) to discourse and consider of Philosophical Enquiries, and such as related thereunto : as physick, anatomy, geometry, astronomy, navigation, staticks, magneticks, chymicks, mechanicks, and natural experiments ; with the state of these studies, as then cultivated at home and abroad.
Side 123 - Saturn, the spots in the sun, and its turning on its own axis", the inequalities and selenography of the moon, the several phases of Venus and Mercury, the improvement of telescopes, and grinding of glasses for that purpose, the weight of air, the possibility, or impossibility of vacuities, and nature's abhorrence thereof, the Torricellian experiment in quicksilver, the descent of heavy bodies, and the degrees of acceleration therein ; and divers other things of like nature.
Side 170 - I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.
Side 123 - Jupiter, the oval shape (as it then appeared) of Saturn, the spots in the sun, and its turning on its own axis, the inequalities and selenography of the Moon, the several phases of Venus and Mercury, the improvement of telescopes...
Side 344 - It would be difficult to describe the surprise and astonishment expressed in the countenances of the bystanders on seeing so large a quantity of water heated, and actually made to boil, without any fire.
Side 52 - For we can give such figures to transparent bodies, and dispose them in such order with respect to the eye and the objects, that the rays shall be refracted and bent towards any place we please ; so that we shall see the object near at hand, or at a distance, under any angle we please. And thus from an incredible distance we may read the smallest letters, and may number the smallest particles of dust and sand, by reason of the greatness of the angle under which we may see them...
Side 92 - Alas ! your dear friend and servant has become totally and irreparably blind. These heavens, this earth, this universe, which by wonderful observation I had enlarged a thousand times beyond the belief of past ages, are henceforth shrunk into the narrow space I myself occupy. So it pleases God, it shall therefore please me also.
Side 351 - It may exist in one of two forms — either as potential or stored-up energy, which is unseen by us, or as visible energy, when it is actually performing work ; but while it changes from one form to another its amount never alters. Thus in Joule's experiment the energy stored up in the i Ib.
Side 417 - A dreadful affair,' I answered; 'but what else could be expected under the circumstances, and with such a ministry, except that it would end in the expulsion of the present royal family ? ' ' We do not seem to understand each other...