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Newton, Mary

Be sure that the antecedents of pronouns are clear in other words, when you use a pronoun (for example, he she , it , or they ), the noun to which the pronoun refers should be obvious (for example, Isaac Newton , Marie Curie ,... [Pg.45]

Boas, Marie. "Newton s chemical papers." In Isaak Newton s papers and letters on natural philosophy, eds. J. B. Cohen and R.E. Schofield, 241-248. Cambridge (MA) , 1958. [Pg.74]

Boas, Marie and Alfred Rupert Hall. Newton s chemical experiments. Arch IntHist Sci 11, no. 43 (Apr-Jun 1958) 113-152. [Pg.74]

Newton, Isaac.Unpublished scientific papaers of Isaac Newton. Edited by A. Rupert Hall and Marie Boas Hall. Cambridge Cambridge Univ P, 1962. [Pg.75]

Hall, Alfred Rupert and Marie Boas Hall. Newton s theory of matter. Isis 51 (Mar 1960) 163. [Pg.273]

Hall, Marie Boas. "Newton s voyage in the strange seas of alchemy." In Reason, experiment, and mysticism in the scientific revolution, eds. M.L.R. Bonelli and W.R. [Pg.273]

Antoine Laurent Lavoisier (1743-94), the Newton of chemistry , and his wife and sometime assistant Marie Anne Lavoisier... [Pg.23]

Sruarr Clark, The Scientific Status of Demonology , in Vickers (ed.), Occult and Scientific Mentalities 351-74 Clark, Demons and Disease Clark, Thinkingwith Demons, 233-50 Daston and Park, Wonders and the Order of Nature, esp. chs. 3, 4 MacDonald, Mystical Bedlam, 174 Michael MacDonald, Witchcraft and Hysteria in Elizabethan London Edward Jorden and the Mary Glover Case (1991), p. xxxii Erik Midelfort, A History of Madness in Sixteenth-Century Germany (Stanford, Calif, 1992), 153-7 passim-, Webster, Paracelsus to Newton. [Pg.115]

Benjamin Franklin and Mme. Marie Curie were experimental physicists. Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein were theoretical physicists, perhaps the greatest. In the earlier days, the tools, both experimental and mathematical, were so simple that a single man or woman could become skilled in the use of both kinds. Isaac Newton not only made the thrilling experiment of breaking sunlight into colors with a prism, but actually invented for his own use one of the most useful forms of mathematics, the calculus. Franklin contributed to electrical theory. Nowadays some of the tools are so complex that few physicists are versatile enough to become masters of them all. [Pg.90]

In 1900 Rutherford married Mary Newton, and they had one daughter. [Pg.240]

Mary Chitty Cambridge Healthtech Institute, Newton Upper Falls, Massachusetts, U.S.A. [Pg.310]

The person who planted and cultivated this habit was a first cousin, Mary Witherbee. Twenty years older than Doc, she taught English at Lasell Seminary, now Lasell Junior College, in Newton, Massachusetts, but spent each summer at the Delaware farm where Doc was bom and grew up. Of the thousand imaginative ways in which she nurtured the habit I will mention only one. Her wedding present to Rosalind Kenway and Doc was the Temple edition of Shakespeare (16), Each play was in a separate pocket-size volume. For years, whenever Doc went on a business trip, he slipped one of these volumes in his pocket to read on the... [Pg.132]

Acknowledgements The author thanks Mary Malcolm Newton for the artwork and Charlotte Bagenstose for help with the references. He is indebted to Dr R. D. MacKenzie for comments on the section on thromboembolism and to Dr Dorsey E. Holtkamp for valuable advice. [Pg.221]

Rutherford was poor. He was engaged to Mary Newton, the daughter of his University of New Zealand landlady, but the couple had postponed marriage until his fortunes improved. Working to improve them, he wrote his fiancte in the midst of his midwinter research The reason I am so keen on the subject [of radio detection] is because of its practical importance. If my next week s experiments come out as well as I anticipate, I see a chance of making cash rapidly in the future. ... [Pg.38]

Ampere am- pir, -per n [Andre-Marie Ampere] (1881) (A) The primary electrical unit of the SI system, upon which all other electrical units are based. The ampere itself is defined as that current which, if maintained in two long, parallel, fine wires located 1 m apart in a vacuum, will produce between these conductors a force of 2 x 10 newton per meter of length. Practically, an ampere is the current that flows between two points connected with an electric resistance of 1 ohm when their potential difference is 1 V. [Pg.36]

Plate 60 Sir Isaac Newton. He is shown using a prism to decompose light. See Electromagnetic Radiation. Reproduced with permission from Mary Evans Picture Library. [Pg.4]

Scott Mandelbrote, Fatio, Nicolas, of Duillier (1664—1753) , ODNB Charles Andrew Domson, Nicolas Fatio de Duillier and the Prophets of London An Essay in the Historical Interaction of Natural Philosophy and Millennial Belief in the Age of Newton (PhD thesis, 1972). Fatio s niece, Marie Huber (1695-1753), became a prominent female Pietist theologian in the eighteenth century. [Pg.235]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.180 ]




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