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Robert Hooke’s Experimental Philosophy

A critical biography of the seventeenth-century scientist’s expansive life and work.
 
Robert Hooke was England’s first professional scientist and a pioneer of science communication. He was also one of the earliest to write a guide for how others might become “experimental philosophers” like himself. In this new biography, Felicity Henderson takes Hooke’s scientific method as a starting point for an expedition into what Hooke himself saw as key aspects of a scientific life.
 
Tracing this expansive life, the story draws readers through marketplaces, bookshops, construction sites, and coffee houses—even into the King’s royal presence at Whitehall Palace. Henderson explains how Hooke’s observations and conversations with the workmen, colleagues, craftsmen, and patrons he met through his work underpinned Hooke’s research in significant ways. The result is a fresh portrait of the scientist as a champion of the mundane, whose greatest gift was to help the world see even the smallest parts of everyday life with new eyes.

192 pages | 10 color plates, 17 halftones | 5.43 x 8.5 | © 2024

Renaissance Lives

Biography and Letters

History of Science


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Table of Contents

Introduction: Mad, Foolish and Phantastick

1 The Present Deficiency of Natural Philosophy

2 A city, where all the noises and business in the world do meet

3 Much Love and Service to all My Friends

4 These My Poor Labours

5 A Man Who Is Mechanically Minded

6 Curiosity and Beauty

7 An Excellent System of Nature

8 A Discourse of Earthquakes

Epilogue: The Teeth of Time


Chronology

References

Select Bibliography

Acknowledgements

Photo Acknowledgements

Index

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