The Intellectual Rise in Electricity: A History |
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amber ancient appears Arabs Aristotle asserts attractive power Bacon became believed bodies Boyle Cabæus Cardan cause century Chinese compass needle Descartes direction discovery doctrine draw earth effect Egyptian electric electrified Etruscans existence experiments fact field of force followed Fracastorio Galileo Gilbert glass globe Greek Guericke hand heat heavens hence Hist hypothesis induction invention iron Klaproth knowledge known learned light lodestone London Lucretius magnetic attraction magnetite matter ment merely metal modern motion moved nature navigation Neckam netic north pole observed Olaus Magnus original Paracelsus Peregrinus phenomena philosophers physical polarity Pole star Porta probably Ptolemy reason regarded repelled ring Robert Boyle Robert Hooke Royal rubbed Samothrace Sarpi says ships sphere stone substance terrella Thales Theophrastus theory things tion treatise tube turn variation vessel virtue voyages William Gilbert writing
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Page 569 - I'd divide, And burn in many places ; on the top-mast. The yards, and bowsprit, would I flame distinctly, Then meet, and join. Jove's lightnings, the precursors O' the dreadful thunder-claps, more momentary And sight-out-running were not.
Page 5 - OUTLINES OF THEORETICAL CHEMISTRY. By LOTHAR MEYER, Professor of Chemistry in the University of Tubingen. Translated by Professors P. PHILLIPS BEDSON, D.Sc., and W. CARLETON WILLIAMS, B.Sc. 8vo., 9s. MILLER. -INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY.
Page 419 - Heat is a very brisk agitation of the insensible parts of the object, which produces in us that sensation from whence we denominate the object hot ; so what in our sensation is heat, in the object is nothing but motion.
Page 9 - SMITH.— GRAPHICS, or the Art of Calculation by Drawing Lines, applied especially to Mechanical Engineering. By ROBERT H. SMITH, Professor of Engineering, Mason College, Birmingham. Part I. With separate Atlas of 29 Plates containing 97 Diagrams. 8vo. , 15$.