I watched and recommend “How simple ideas lead to scientific discoveries” by Adam Savage. Adam Savage cites two examples of how great scientific discoveries came about because of the simple thoughts from now famous researchers. A letter from a man curious as to how he was able to see his reflection perfectly in the water at the bottom of a well led Eratosthenes to think of another location where the angle of the Sun was noticeably different. Using geometry he was able to come up with an accurate estimate for the circumference of the Earth. Hippolyte Fizeau’s curiosity about determining the speed of light led him to develop a device from a wheel that allowed him to measure it within 2 percent. The important message Savage gets across is
Making revolutionary discoveries that some only dreamed of Galileo did extraordinary things and pushed the limit of science.
Galileo once stated, “All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered; the point is to discover them.” Galileo Galilei was a well-known astronomer and scientist during the Scientific Revolution, a time period where thought and reason the old philosophies, who made many important contributions to astronomy and physics. As a major contribution to astronomy, Galileo proved the heliocentric theory, a theory which stated that the sun was the center of the universe and all objects moved around it. He also developed new physics theories which included the universal law of acceleration and created new inventions to enhance daily human life. Galileo Galilei was an important individual who influenced the advancement of science and expanded
Lisa Jardine’s Ingenious Pursuits: Building the Scientific Revolution provides a comprehensive breakdown of the discoveries that defined the Scientific Revolution and the history behind them. The story of the scientific revolution truly begins with a separation between the Catholic Church and the denizens of Europe brought on by the Protestant Reformation. This separation led directly to the questioning of the church and what they deemed to be true. The growing suspicion of the church applied not only to the politics and religious views but the scientific “facts” the church was built upon. The suspicion of these scientific facts quickly grew to an open challenging of these facts, The Scientific Revolution. The Scientific Revolution is something we have all studied in our grade school years and the discoveries of people such as Isaac Newton and Galileo Galilei are well documented and arguably common knowledge but Jardine’s book Ingenious Pursuits encapsulates the scientific revolution in a new light. Jardine accomplishes this by telling the stories of some of the greatest achievements of the Scientific Revolution. These stories reveal the collaborations of some of histories most brilliant minds as well as the secrecy amongst them and uncover the motives that fueled many of these accomplishments.
Scientists and scholars such as Nicolaus Copernicus, Rene Descartes, and Francis dedicated their lives to scientific progress. Even though much of their careers were spent on improving human understanding of the world, many of their discoveries, due to their aberrative nature, faced challenges from third parties such as the Church. During the period between 1550 and 1750, they, alongside many other scholars, fueled the Scientific Revolution, introduced new perceptions of the universe and mankind to all levels of society, restructured long believed religious views, philosophical ideas, and thus lay the foundation to a new European perspective.
Most ideas and discoveries come from previous discoveries. For example, to discover the cure for cancer, you
Sir Isaac Newton made some pretty good discoveries And he was also very intelligent that is how he made them.The first thing that he made was a telescope and he studied it but not only that he also studied the solar system and found out how the planets have faces on them. When Isaac Newton got a little bit older he moved to britain. He also made one of the most important books in the history of science. The telescope he discovered wasn't an ordinary telescope it was a reflecting telescope. He also mad the three laws of motion which is one of the most important things to do while doing science if you don't do that you can't do science.
Discoveries can manifest themselves in many ways and can be evoked by one's curiosity, necessity or wonder. The
Science is any branch of knowledge or study dealing with a body of facts or truths systematically arranged and showing the operation of general laws gained through observation and experimentation; generally the name of which ends in the suffix -ology ("Science"). Many major scientific breakthroughs occurred during Mary Shelley’s lifetime and several found their way into her work. It has been noted that, "[i]n many of her stories there are thinly veiled parallels between people, places, and events in Shelley's life and her characters, settings, and plots" (Greenfield 288). Erasmus Darwin, Humphry Davy, and Luigi Galvani and their various, famous experiments held great
Great discoveries come at a price. There are everyday people in this world but, some of them come up with the craziest discoveries and change their lives around. People should take the risk because it is completely worth it. Percy Spencer was just an average man working at Raytheon and later discovered microwave popcorn. Heinrich Schliemann was an archaeologist in the 1800s and in 2017 people still know his as a liar. In some purposes great discoveries can someone hurt or even killed at the worst. That is how everyday people can change their lives around for the better.
Thought history scientists’ finding have been ignored, only to be discovered that their information was beneficial. In the 1600s and 1700s, many astronomers and mechanics were focused on finding a way to find the longitude of a ship’s position at sea. John Harrison, a self-taught carpenter and clockmaker was able to create a solution, but no one with enough power to enforce his studies would listen to his ideas. Similar to this, when Nicolaus Copernicus discovered that the earth revolved around the sun, no one believed him because the belief at the time was that the earth was the center of the universe. Despite no one appreciating what the two had discovered, several years after they had died, their theories surfaced again and people began
Who was one of the biggest influences on the Scientific Revolution? Some may say it was Galileo, Descartes or even Kepler. Though all great contributors to the Scientific Revolution, one person stood out among the rest during the climax of this exciting time of creative thinking and exchange of ideas: Isaac Newton. Born in the mid 1600s, Newton was a mathematician, astronomer and a physicist but in his time he would have been known as a “natural philosopher”. Through his research of optics, mathematics and dynamics, Isaac Newton established himself as one of the most, if not most, influential people during the Scientific Revolution.
One scientist that helped the push the Scientific Revolution forward is Galileo Galilei. His discoveries were the foundation for many others who followed him. One of these discoveries that helped the Scientific Revolution is the telescope. This invention improved on by Galileo allowed scientists to carefully study
In summer of 1609, Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) pointed his revolutionary astronomical telescope to the heavens under the starry Venetian sky; his greatly important observations unveiled the mysteries of universe and would end up changing the course of scientific thought forever. Galileo lived in an age where there was much status quo, when scientists and philosophers would accept scientific and religious doctrine that had stood for hundreds, if not thousands, of years instead of challenging the accepted knowledge in favor of intellectual progress. Galileo’s scientific methods lead to significant discoveries explaining key scientific laws, such as the
Galileo Galilei built a telescope in 1609, and he studied the night sky, observing the earthlike features of the Moon, moons orbiting Jupiter, and sun spots. He published his work, which later earned him a trial by the church and a house arrest for life. “According to a story that began to circulate shortly afterward, as he left the court for house arrest he stamped his foot and muttered defiantly, looking down at the earth: Still, it moves” (page 530, Chapter 16). Francis Bacon and René Descartes established standards of practice and scientific evidence, and they were true believers in human thinking. Physician, William Harvey contributed to science by observing dissected living animals and experimented on himself that the blood circulates in our bodies through veins, heart, and arteries. Inventor and experimenter Robert Hooke introduced microscope into the laboratory and studied the structure of plants on the cellular level. Isaac Newton gave us laws of motion, universal gravity, the reflecting telescope, optic theories,
Isaac Newton was born in a time were a lot of ideas and concepts were being discovered but he discovered one of the