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         Hooke Robert:     more books (100)
  1. Robert Hooke: Natural Philosopher and Scientific Explorer (Signature Lives: Scientific Revolution series) by Burgan, Michael, 2008-01-01
  2. The Forgotten Genius: The Biography Of Robert Hooke 1635-1703 by Stephen Inwood, 2005-05-03
  3. Micrographia - Some Physiological Descriptions of Minute Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses with Observations and Inquiries Thereupon by Robert Hooke, 2010-07-12
  4. Micrographia or Some Physiological Descriptions of Minute Bodies by Robert Hooke, 2007-11-01
  5. England's Leonardo: Robert Hooke and the Seventeenth-Century Scientific Revolution by Allan Chapman, 2004-11-30
  6. The Curious Life of Robert Hooke: The Man Who Measured London by Lisa Jardine, 2004-02
  7. Man Who Knew Too Much: The Strange & Inventive Life of Robert Hooke 1635-1703 by Stephen Inwood, 2002-09
  8. Robert Hooke: Tercentennial Studies
  9. Robert Hooke: Creative Genius, Scientist, Inventor (Great Minds of Science) by Mary Gow, 2006-12
  10. Micrographia by Robert Hooke, 2010-03-07
  11. The Diaries of Robert Hooke: The Leonardo of London, 1635-1703 by Richard Hooke, 1994-09
  12. London's Leonardo: The Life and Work of Robert Hooke by Jim Bennett, Michael Cooper, et all 2003-05-29
  13. Micrographia: Some Physiological Descriptions of Minute Bodies M by Robert Hooke, 2007-03-13
  14. Restless Genius: Robert Hooke and His Earthly Thoughts by Ellen Tan Drake, 1996-07-11

1. Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke (16351703). No portrait survives of Robert Hooke. His name paleontology.Relatively little is known about Robert Hooke's life. He
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/hooke.html
R obert H ooke (1635-1703) No portrait survives of Robert Hooke. His name is somewhat obscure today, due in part to the enmity of his famous, influential, and extremely vindictive colleague, Sir Isaac Newton. Yet Hooke was perhaps the single greatest experimental scientist of the seventeenth century. His interests knew no bounds, ranging from physics and astronomy, to chemistry, biology, and geology, to architecture and naval technology; he collaborated or corresponded with scientists as diverse as Christian Huygens, Antony van Leeuwenhoek , Christopher Wren, Robert Boyle, and Isaac Newton. Among other accomplishments, he invented the universal joint, the iris diaphragm, and an early prototype of the respirator; invented the anchor escapement and the balance spring, which made more accurate clocks possible; served as Chief Surveyor and helped rebuild London after the Great Fire of 1666; worked out the correct theory of combustion; devised an equation describing elasticity that is still used today ("Hooke's Law"); assisted Robert Boyle in studying the physics of gases; invented or improved meteorological instruments such as the barometer, anemometer, and hygrometer; and so on. He was the type of scientist that was then called a virtuoso able to contribute findings of major importance in any field of science. It is not surprising that he made important contributions to biology and to paleontology.

2. Hooke
Robert Hooke. Born Robert Hooke's father was John Hooke who was a curateat All Saints Church in Freshwater on the Isle of Wight. Although
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Hooke.html
Robert Hooke
Born: 18 July 1635 in Freshwater, Isle of Wight, England
Died: 3 March 1703 in London, England
Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Robert Hooke 's father was John Hooke who was a curate at All Saints Church in Freshwater on the Isle of Wight. Although formally a curate, since the minister was also Dean of Gloucester Cathedral and of Wells, John Hooke was left in charge of All Saints. It was a well off church being in the patronage of St John's College, Cambridge. As well as his duties in the church, John Hooke also ran a small school attached to the church and acted as a private tutor. Robert had a brother named John, the same as his father, who was five years older. Relatively few details of Robert's childhood are known. What we record here is information which he mentioned to his friends later in his life. Robert, like many children of his day, had poor health and was not expected to reach adulthood. His father was from a family in which it was expected that all the boys joined the Church (John Hooke's three brothers were all ministers) so had Robert enjoyed good health as a child there is no doubt that he would have followed the family tradition. As it was Robert's parents did begin to set up his education with this in mind but he continually suffered from headaches which made studying hard. Lacking confidence that he would reach adulthood, Robert's parents gave up on his education, leaving him much to his own devices.

3. WIEM: Hooke Robert
hooke robert (16531703), angielski fizyk, biolog i konstruktor, sformuowa prawo opisujce wasnoci spryste cia staych (Hooke'a prawo
http://www.encyklopedia.pl/wiem/008500.html
wiem.onet.pl napisz do nas losuj: has³a multimedia Fizyka, Technika, Biologia, Wielka Brytania
Hooke Robert widok strony
znajd¼ podobne

poka¿ powi±zane
Hooke Robert (1653-1703), angielski fizyk, biolog i konstruktor, sformu³owa³ prawo opisuj±ce w³asno¶ci sprê¿yste cia³ sta³ych ( ), pos³uguj±c siê udoskonalonym przez siebie mikroskopem Odkry³ komórki ro¶linne (w korku ), wynalaz³ deszczomierz poziomnicê oraz udoskonali³ mechanizm sprê¿ynowy. Powi±zania Anatomia ro¶lin wiêcej zobacz wszystkie serwisy do góry Encyklopedia zosta³a opracowana na podstawie Popularnej Encyklopedii Powszechnej Wydawnictwa Fogra

4. Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke Natural Philosopher, inventor, architect, Old Westminster England'sLeonardo. Hooke memorial window, St. No likeness exists of Robert Hooke.
http://www.roberthooke.org.uk/robert_hooke.htm
Hooke memorial window, St. Helen's, Bishopsgate, City of London. Robert Hooke was born at Freshwater, Isle of Wight, son of John Hooke, curate at All Saints' Church. The church stands at the end of what is now Hooke Road, which also has the Hooke Museum. Robert Hooke was one of the most brilliant and versatile of seventeenth-century English scientists, but he is also one of the lesser known; his persona and his contributions are far outweighed in public perception by those of Newton and of Wren. This is unfair. No likeness exists of Robert Hooke. The picture at left is formulaic; it was the commemorative window in St Helen's Bishopsgate, lost in the IRA Bishopsgate bombing. Hooke was origianlly buried there, but his bones were moved to 'somewhere in North London' in the 19th century, so his final burial place is unknown. He is described by two people. Firstly his friend John Aubrey, on Hooke in middle life: 'He is but of midling stature, something crooked, pale faced, and his face but little below, but his head is lardge, his eie full and popping, and not quick; a grey eie. He haz a delicate head of haire, browne, and of an excellent moist curle. He is and ever was temperate and moderate in dyet, etc.' Richard Waller knew the elderly Hooke, embittered by his controversies with Christiaan Huyghens and his feeling that he had been cheated by Newton:

5. WIEM: Hooke Robert
(encyklopedia.pl)Category World Polska Leksykon Encyklopedia encyklopedia.pl H......hooke robert (16531703), angielski fizyk, biolog i konstruktor, sformulowalprawo opisujace wlasnosci sprezyste cial stalych (Hooke'a prawo
http://wiem.onet.pl/wiem/008500.html
wiem.onet.pl napisz do nas losuj: has³a multimedia Fizyka, Technika, Biologia, Wielka Brytania
Hooke Robert widok strony
znajd¼ podobne

poka¿ powi±zane
Hooke Robert (1653-1703), angielski fizyk, biolog i konstruktor, sformu³owa³ prawo opisuj±ce w³asno¶ci sprê¿yste cia³ sta³ych ( ), pos³uguj±c siê udoskonalonym przez siebie mikroskopem Odkry³ komórki ro¶linne (w korku ), wynalaz³ deszczomierz poziomnicê oraz udoskonali³ mechanizm sprê¿ynowy. Powi±zania Anatomia ro¶lin wiêcej zobacz wszystkie serwisy do góry Encyklopedia zosta³a opracowana na podstawie Popularnej Encyklopedii Powszechnej Wydawnictwa Fogra

6. HOOKE ROBERT (1635-1702)
Translate this page hooke robert (1635-1702). Savant anglais qui fut l’un des espritsles plus féconds du XVII e siècle. Élève à Oxford, Robert
http://histoirechimie.free.fr/Lien/HOOKE.htm
HOOKE ROBERT (1635-1702) e A Description of Helioscopes and Some Others Instruments Micrographia, or Some Physiological Descriptions of Minute Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses Attempt to Prove the Motion of the Earth Lampas or Descriptions of Some Mechanical Improvements of Lamps and Waterpoises, together with Some Others Physical and Mechanical Discoveries

7. Hooke Robert Lectures And Discourses Of Earthquakes And Subterraneous Eruptions
hooke robert Lectures and Discourses of Earthquakes and SubterraneousEruptions. Author hooke robert. Title Lectures and Discourses
http://www.novel-mall.com/Hooke-Robert-Lectures-and-Discourses-of-Ear-040510443X
Hooke Robert Lectures and Discourses of Earthquakes and Subterraneous Eruptions
Author: Hooke Robert
Title: Lectures and Discourses of Earthquakes and Subterraneous Eruptions
Subject:
Lumiansky, Robert Malory's Ori...

MacKinney, Loren Early Medieva...

Martin-Clarke, Daisy F. Cultur...

Home
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8. Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke. Robert Hooke, 16351703, English chemist, mathematician,physicist, and inventor. Hooke's remarkable engineering abilities
http://www.english.upenn.edu/~jlynch/Frank/People/hooke.html
Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke, 1635- , English chemist, mathematician, physicist, and inventor. Hooke's remarkable engineering abilities enabled him to invent and improve many mechanical devices, including timepieces (for which he invented the spiral spring), the quadrant, and the Gregorian telescope. Perhaps even more intriguing than his actual inventions are the devices he designed but never built: he anticipated the invention of the steam engine, and as early as 1684 he described a working telegraph system. At Oxford , he met Robert Boyle , who used his air pump to investigate the physical properties of gases. Hooke balanced his inventions with more pure research. In Micrographia (1665), he coined the word cell to describe the features of plant tissue he was able to discover under the microscope. He put his extensive mathematical knowledge in formulating the theory of planetary movement, which provided a basis for Sir Isaac Newton 's theories of gravitation. In 1667 he discovered the role of oxygenation in the respiratory system. Hooke was a member of the Royal Society . After the Great Fire of 1666, he was chosen to design New Bethlehem Hospital in London, better known as Bedlam.

9. Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke Natural Philosopher, inventor, architect, Old Westminster England'sLeonardo. Hooke memorial window, St. Chronology of Robert Hooke.
http://www.rod.beavon.clara.net/robert_hooke.htm
Hooke memorial window, St. Helen's, Bishopsgate, City of London. Chronology of Robert Hooke. Robert Hooke was born at Freshwater, Isle of Wight, son of John Hooke, curate at All Saints' Church. The church stands at the end of what is now Hooke Road, which also has the Hooke Museum. Robert Hooke was one of the most brilliant and versatile of seventeenth-century English scientists, but he is also one of the lesser known; his persona and his contributions are far outweighed in public perception by those of Newton and of Wren. This is unfair. No likeness exists of Robert Hooke. The picture at left is formulaic; it was the commemorative window in St Helen's Bishopsgate, lost in the IRA Bishopsgate bombing. Hooke was origianlly buried there, but his bones were moved to 'somewhere in North London' in the 19th century, so his final burial place is unknown. He is described by two people. Firstly his friend John Aubrey, on Hooke in middle life: 'He is but of midling stature, something crooked, pale faced, and his face but little below, but his head is lardge, his eie full and popping, and not quick; a grey eie. He haz a delicate head of haire, browne, and of an excellent moist curle. He is and ever was temperate and moderate in dyet, etc.' Richard Waller knew the elderly Hooke, embittered by his controversies with Christiaan Huyghens and his feeling that he had been cheated by Newton:

10. England's Leonardo - Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke (1635 1703) - inventor, Natural Philosopher, architect, friend andcollaborator with Wren, can justifiably be claimed as England's Leonardo.
http://www.rod.beavon.clara.net/leonardo.htm
This lecture is from Proceedings of the Royal Institution of Great Britain, 239 - 275 (1996). It was also given at Westminster School as the 1997 Sir Henry Tizard Memorial Lecture. England's Leonardo: Robert Hooke (1635-1703) and the art of experiment in Restoration England ALLAN CHAPMAN No portrait or contemporary visual likeness survives of Robert Hooke, though when the German antiquarian and scholar Zacharias von Uffenbach visited the Royal Society in 1710, he specifically mentioned being shown the portraits of 'Boyle and Hoock', which were said to be good likenesses. Though Boyle's portrait survives, we have no idea what has happened to that of Hooke. It is curious, furthermore, that when Richard Waller edited Hooke's Posthumous Works for the Royal Society in 1710 he did not have this picture engraved to form a frontispiece to the sumptuous folio volume. On the other hand, we do possess two detailed pen-portraits of Hooke written by men who knew him well. The first was that recorded by his friend John Aubrey, and describes Hooke in middle life and at the height of his creative powers: He is but of midling stature, something crooked, pale faced, and his face but little below, but his head is lardge, his eie full and popping, and not quick; a grey eie. He haz a delicate head of haire, browne, and of an excellent moist curle. He is and ever was temperate and modera.te in dyet, etc.

11. OneLook® Search Results: Hooke
Phrases that include the word hooke hooke, robert, hooke robert, robert hooke,hooke, luke joseph, hooke joint, more Additional links for hooke
http://www.onelook.com/?w=hooke

12. CheatHouse.com - Biography On Robert Hooke
indeed the first microscopical pores I ever saw what Robert saw were the cell wallsin cork tissue which with great drawings ROBERT hooke robert Hooke was born
http://www.cheathouse.com/eview/7321_biography_on_robert_hooke.html
ROBERT HOOKE Robert Hooke was born on July 18, 1635, in Freshwater, on Wight Island. His father was a minister who was his home-school teacher. He was an art Apprentice while being taught at home also. When he was thirteen years old Robert attended Westminster School, and later Oxford where some
Biography on Robert Hooke
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13. Rocky Road: Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke. A century before Cuvier, Robert Hooke considered the possibility thatfossils could have belonged to organisms no longer living on this planet.
http://www.strangescience.net/hooke.htm
Robert Hooke
The name most often associated with the concept of extinction is Georges Cuvier's. But while Cuvier succeeded in getting the scientific community to accept extinction, he wasn't the first to think about it. A century before Cuvier, Robert Hooke considered the possibility that fossils could have belonged to organisms no longer living on this planet. Hooke's insight is all the more remarkable considering the times in which he lived. The prevailing belief was that fossils were made by some creative force in the earth, capable of creating any shape out of stone. To Hooke, this idea simply made no sense. As he put it, nature "does nothing in vain." Perhaps the first person to use a microscope to examine the origin of fossils, Hooke recognized the similarity between modern wood and petrified wood, as shown in this illustration from his book Micrographia . What might have had an even greater impact on his views, however, was the shell of a modern nautilus. Hooke recognized the similarity between the modern nautilus and the extinct ammonite (with a corrugated rather than smooth shell) and he concluded that the ammonite fossils had also possessed protective shells. Yet Hooke also saw the differences between nautiluses and ammonites, and this raised a nagging question: Where were the ammonites now? That any of God's creations could perish from the earth was an idea considered untenable by the science community of the 17th century. Cuvier was more successful in promoting the concept of extinction in the late 18th and early 19th century, probably because the French Revolution had made society or at least some scientists more willing to accept unorthodox ideas.

14. Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke 16351702 Experimental Philosopher It’s unfortunateto note that no portrait of Robert Hooke is known to exist. A
http://www.ilt.columbia.edu/projects/bluetelephone/html/hooke.html
Nineteenth Century Music Michael Faraday Charles ... Yeates Robert Hooke
Experimental Philosopher
In his youth he studied several languages such as Latin and Chinese and had a fascination for secret codes. After his education at Christ Church in Oxford, 1653, he was elected in January of 1665 to the post of "Curator of Experiments" for the Royal Society, and would hold this position for life. Later that same year he secured a spot at as the professor of geometry in Gresham Collage where he taught for 30 years.
Hooke is most famous for his experiment which used a series of telescopes to design a "telegraphic" visual communication system, which worked over great distances. Many other experiments were conducted by him. His investigation of air began with 75 questions, which provided the direction of exploration. He devised a method of supplying air to a diving bell, he constructed a double barreled air pump and the conical pendulum, as well as an engine for cutting clock and watch wheels. As a hearing aid for the hard of hearing he developed an ear trumpet. He studied the number of vibrations made by a musical chord. He also conducted numerous experiments on acoustics, magnetism, metallurgy, and geography, as well as the anatomy of muscles and histology of plant cells.
It is important to note that Hooke took part in the great Oxford movement, which resulted in the foundation of the Royal Society, and in fact his "Micrographia," was renowned as one of the early gems of the Society. This work animated his discoveries on respiration, the composition of atmosphere, and the nature of light. It was in this work the word "cell" was first used.

15. Robert Hooke - Wikipedia
Robert Hooke. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Robert Hooke (16351703) wasone of the greatest experimental scientists of the seventeenth century.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Hooke
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Robert Hooke
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Robert Hooke July 18 March 3 ) was one of the greatest experimental scientists of the seventeenth century, and hence one of the key figures in the Scientific revolution Born in Freshwater , on the Isle of Wight , Hooke received his early education at Westminster School . In 1653, Hooke won a place at Oxford . There, he met Robert Boyle , and was employed as his assistant. In 1660, he discovered Hooke's Law of elasticity , which describes the linear variation of tension with extension in an elastic spring. In 1662, Hooke was appointed Curator of Experiments to the newly founded Royal Society , and was responsible for experiments performed at its meetings. In 1665, he published a book entitled

16. Robert Hooke - Wikipedia NL
Robert Hooke. Robert Hooke (16351703) was een Brits sterrenkundige, natuurkundigeen architect. In 1658 werd Hooke assistent van Robert Boyle?
http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Hooke
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Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke (1635-1703) was een Brits sterrenkundige natuurkundige en architect . Hij is voornamelijk bekend door zijn wet van Hooke , die het verband aangeeft tussen de kracht op een lichaam en de vervorming van dat lichaam. Hooke was een begenadigd uitvinder en bracht ons zowel de spiraalveer als de fotografische iris. Hij introduceerde de term ' cel ' in de biologie na zijn microscopische waarnemingen van kurkweefsel. Hij was een tijdgenoot van de architect Christopher Wren waarmee hij samenwerkte aan de heropbouw van Londen na de Grote brand van Londen , en eeuwig rivaal van Isaac Newton . Toch bereikte hij nooit de roem van die laatsten.
Biografie
Robert Hooke werd geboren op 18 juli te Freshwater, op het eiland Wight

17. Home Page
Site devoted to the life and work of robert hooke, one of the leading scientists of 17th century England, and first Curator of Experiments at the Royal Society.
http://www.roberthooke.org.uk/
Robert Hooke (18 July 1635 - 3 March 1703) - natural philosopher, inventor, architect.... Robert Hooke is one of the most neglected natural philosophers of all time. The inventor of, amongst other things, the iris diaphragm in cameras, the universal joint used in motor vehicles, the balance wheel in a watch, the originator of the word 'cell' in biology, he was Surveyor of the City of London after the Great Fire of 1666, architect, experimenter, worked in astronomy - yet is known mostly for Hooke's Law. He fell out with Newton, and certainly had a difficult temperament. He deserves more from History than he received in his lifetime. Contents Contact NEW: link to Christ Church Oxford concerning the
2003 Tercentenary Commemoration of Hooke's death. The 2003 Tizard Lecture, entitled 'Exotic Evidence: Robert Hooke, armchair anthropologist'
was given at Westminster School by Professor Lisa Jardine,
Professor of Renaissance Studies at Queen Mary University of London

18. Hooke, Robert
Catalog of the Scientific Community. hooke, robert. Note the creators of the Galileo Project and this catalogue cannot
http://es.rice.edu/ES/humsoc/Galileo/Catalog/Files/hooke.html
Catalog of the Scientific Community
Hooke, Robert
Note: the creators of the Galileo Project and this catalogue cannot answer email on genealogical questions.
1. Dates
Born: Freshwater, Isle of Wight, 18 July 1635
Died: London, 3 March 1703
Dateinfo: Dates Certain
Lifespan:
2. Father
Occupation: Cleric
John Hooke was a minister, curate of Freshwater; he died in 1648.
No fully clear information on financial status. I am tempted to guess. Curates were notoriously underpaid, and Hooke was apparently left without much when his father died. However, a dead father is a different affair from a living one, and I see enough uncertainty that I will mark financial status as unknown.
3. Nationality
Birth: English
Career: English
Death: English
4. Education
Schooling: Oxford
Westminster School, 1648.
Oxford University, Christ Church, 1658.
He was initially a chorister and then a servitor. Hooke did not take a B.A. He was nominated for the M.A. by Lord Clarendon, the Chancellor of the university, 1663; I am not going to list it.
M.D. at Doctors' Commons, 1691this also by patronage, and not listed.

19. Encyclopædia Britannica
Encyclopædia Britannica. hooke, robert. Encyclopædia Britannica Article
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=41878

20. Seeing Further, The Legacy Of Robert Hooke
hooke, robert, * 1635 in Freshwater (Isle of Wight), + 1703 in London. Immer war er kränkelnd, wahrscheinlich verkrüppelt.
http://earthspace.net/~kmiles/spec/hooks.html
Seeing Further,
The Legacy of Robert Hooke
"He was of an active, restless, indefatigable Genius even almost to the last, and always slept little to his death, seldom going to sleep till two three, or four a Clock in the Morning, and seldomer to Bed, often continuing his Studies all Night, and taking a nap in the day. His temper was Melancholy...." Robert Hooke was a significant influence in the advancement of science as well as Newton. An established physicist and astronomer, Hooke was with the Royal Society from its inception, and served it tirelessly and loyally for over forty years; it was he who had worded the society's credo "To improve the knowledge of natural things, and all useful Arts, Manufactures, Mechanic practices, Engines and Inventions by Experiments (not meddling with divinity, Metaphysics, Morals, Politics, Grammar, Rhetoric or Logic)." But the rancor between Newton and Hooke did much to tarnish Hooke's reputation. Hooke was born on the Isle of Wight, July 18, 1635. As a child he survived smallpox, but was scarred physically and emotionally for life. When Hooke was thirteen years old, his father, John Hooke, a clergyman hanged himself. Young Robert had much emotional pain in his youth. Receiving a 100 pound inheritance from his father, Robert Hooke became an orphan of sorts, being sent off to London. In London was the painter Sir Peter Lely, and there, Hooke was to develop his artistic skills.

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