Philosophical Experiments and Observations
eBook - ePub

Philosophical Experiments and Observations

  1. 398 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Philosophical Experiments and Observations

About this book

Shortly after Hooke died in 1703, his miscellaneous papers and unpublished manuscripts were entrusted to Richard Waller, who edited and published some of them in a volume titled The Posthumous Works of Robert Hooke (1705; reprinted, Frank Cass, 1968). Waller himself died, however, before he was able to complete the task of republishing Hooke's papers and they were eventually handed on to William Derham. After delaying for what some of Hooke's followers thought to be a scandalously long time, Derham finally published this volume in 1726. It contains numerous papers and notes by Hooke as well as a number of important papers and letters written by Hooke's contemporaries and found, evidently, among Hooke's literary remains.

This is an exact facsimile reproduction of Derham's edition of the Philosophical experiments and Observations of the late Eminent Dr. Rober Hooke (1726) except that an analytical table of contents, prepared by the General Editor, has been added.

First Published in 1967. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

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Yes, you can access Philosophical Experiments and Observations by Robert Hooke,W. Derham in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & World History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2014
eBook ISBN
9781136230295
Edition
1
Topic
History
Index
History
image
THE
INDEX.
A.
AEYSS, what, Pag.228
Instruments to found it, 225
Aged Woman, 80
Air weighed, 6
Its Resistance, 23
Healthful and un-bealthful, 373
Condensed by Tartar, 375
Artificial, 310
Alexandrian Latitude, &c. 300, 301
Amber, 315, 322, 329
Its Specifick Gravity, 338
Ambergnece, 213
Animalcules in Water, 55
Apoplexy, 361
Aqua Fortis, 192
Regia, ibid.
Arteries, 368
King Arthur, 242
Atmosphere’s Refractions, 338
B.
Bacon Lord Chancellor, 264
— Roger, p. 257, 264
Bangue, 210
Baracunda, 282
Barometer invented 1
Disputes about it, 3
Improved, 169, 302
Bartoli, 289
Bat, its Anatomy, 81
Bee, its Figure, 267
Wax, how whitened, 37
Belland, a Disease, ibid.
how cured, 41
Bezoar Stones, 212
Bile, 376
Blood, Experiments about it 373, 376
Blows, on the Head 369
on the Stomach, ibid.
Bolognian Phosphoros, 174
Bonani 271
Borelli’s Telescope, 261
Boyle, 291
Brain’s Structure 68, 362
Anatomy 363
— ...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright Page
  5. Publisher's Note to the 1967 Edition
  6. Editor's Note to the 1967 Edition
  7. Table of Contents
  8. Amendments
  9. Reader
  10. Of the Invention of the Barometer
  11. Kingkardine's Observations of Pendulum Clocks at Sea
  12. Hooke's Experiment of Weighing Air
  13. A Brief Account of the Experiments tried before the Royal Society, with Glass Balls
  14. The Pressures of Bodies on Different Mediums
  15. Hooke's Enquiries for Greenland
  16. Hooke's Enquiries for Iceland
  17. Hooke's Proposals on the Resistance of Air
  18. Hooke's Experiment on the Refraction of Ice and Crystal
  19. Hooke's Method of Making Experiments
  20. Oldenburg's Letter to Hooke, 23 August 1665
  21. Powell's Letter to Daniell, 6 January 1665/66
  22. Powell's Letter to Daniell, 27 September 1666
  23. Brown's Account of Petrified Bone, &c
  24. Towneley's Observations of Water
  25. Fran's Letter on Earthquakes
  26. On Bees-Wax
  27. Carte on the Belland
  28. Hooke's Weather-Clock
  29. Hooke's Self-Emptying Vessel
  30. Toinard on Longitude
  31. Toinard on the Eclipses of Jupiter
  32. Hooke on Hailstones
  33. Paschall's Letter to Hooke, 4 January 1680
  34. Leuwenhoek on Animalcules
  35. Reiselius' Letter to Grew, 6 March 1680
  36. Pigot's Letter to Hooke, 26 November 1681
  37. Leuwenhoek on the Structure of Hair, &c
  38. Hooke's Letter to Trapham, 18 February 1681/82
  39. Leuwenhoek on the Fibres of Muscles
  40. Carte on Worms in the Stomach
  41. Yonge's Letter to Hooke
  42. Molyneux's Anatomical Observations
  43. Hooke on the Rule of False Position
  44. Hooke on Earths, Salts, &c
  45. Hooke's Experiments on Floating of Lead
  46. Hooke's Experiments on the Pressure of Water in Pipes
  47. Experiments on the Elasticity of the Air
  48. Experiments on Compression
  49. Observations of Sound
  50. Hooke's Windmill
  51. Hooke's Contrivance to Stop Great Weights Falling
  52. Hooke on Impressions of Medals
  53. Hooke on Reproducing Pictures
  54. Hooke on the Improvement of Scales, &c.
  55. Japanese Scales
  56. Hooke on the Weight of Liquors
  57. Hooke on Magnetism in Drills
  58. Hooke on the Strength of Ice
  59. Hooke on the Expansion of Water by Freezing
  60. Hooke on the Specific Gravity of Ice
  61. Hooke on the Phaenomena of Ice
  62. Hooke on Long-Distance Communication
  63. Hooke's Discourse of Carriages
  64. Houses Paying Chimney-Money
  65. Hooke on the Barometer
  66. Bolognian Phosphorus
  67. Liquid Phosphorus
  68. Metallic Phosphorus
  69. Brandt on Phosphoros Elementaris
  70. Baldwyn on Phosphorus
  71. De Germinatione Metalli
  72. Baldwyn on Tin
  73. On Orvietano
  74. Ink for Printing
  75. Divers Curious Recepts, Collected by Hooke
  76. Caswell's Discourse on the Sun-Dial
  77. Hooke's Way of finding the true Meridian
  78. Hooke on Dimensions in the Mixture of Vitriol and Fair Water
  79. An Account of the Plant called Bangue
  80. Hooke on Gems
  81. Wallis' Account of Printing in Oxford
  82. Hooke on Instruments for Sounding the great Depths of the Sea
  83. Hooke's Observations on the Lake-Wetter in Swedeland
  84. Hooke's Discourse Concerning Telescopes and Microscopes
  85. Hooke's Invention of a Reflecting Telescope
  86. Waller's Observations on Hooke's Discourse on Telescopes and Microscopes
  87. Hooke's Account of an Earthquake at Deal
  88. Southwell's Contrivance for speedy Conveyance of Earth
  89. Hooke on the Quantity of Gold up the River Gambay
  90. Hooke's Experiments and Observations on Heated Iron
  91. Hooke's Account of De la Hire's Discourse of Frost
  92. Hooke on a Draughting Instrument
  93. Hooke on a Way to measure Heights and Distances
  94. Smith's Letter to Halley, 12 June 1695
  95. Hooke on the Improvement of the Barometer
  96. Hooke's Conjectures on Shell-Fish
  97. Hooke's Discourses concerning Amber
  98. Lowthorp on Atmospheric Refraction
  99. Gray on a Solar Eclipse
  100. Geoffroy's Observations on the Nostock
  101. Waller on the Burning-Glasses of the Ancients
  102. Waller's Account of Mistichelli's Trattato dell' Apoplessia
  103. The Pores of Sensitive Plants
  104. Mechanical Ways of Drawing Conical Figures
  105. Cotton Mather's Letter to Waller, I December 1713
  106. Waller's Relation of petrified Bodies of Men, &c
  107. Hooke's Answer to some Claims of Cassini
  108. Index