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Astronomical Dialogues between a Gentleman and a Lady - Wherein the Doctrine of the Sphere, Uses of the Globes, and the Elements of Astronomy and Geography Are Explain'd (Paperback)
Loot Price: R677
Discovery Miles 6 770
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Astronomical Dialogues between a Gentleman and a Lady - Wherein the Doctrine of the Sphere, Uses of the Globes, and the Elements of Astronomy and Geography Are Explain'd (Paperback)
Series: Cambridge Library Collection - Astronomy
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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An Anglican clergyman and fellow of the Royal Society, John Harris
(c.1666-1719) was an important promulgator of Newtonian science,
through private teaching, public lectures and published writing.
His Lexicon Technicum (1704) may be considered the first
encyclopaedia in English. In the present work, published in 1719,
Harris presents for his well-to-do readership a series of didactic
conservations between a gentleman of science and an aristocratic
lady. He aims to induce 'persons of birth and fortune' to dedicate
some of their 'happy leisure ... to the improvement of their
minds', and uses quotes from poets such as Samuel Butler and John
Dryden to help elucidate scientific concepts. In particular, Harris
explains the use of contemporary scientific apparatus (and
expensive status symbols) such as terrestrial and celestial globes.
The book ends with a description of the ultimate contemporary
symbol of scientific refinement: the orrery, a working model of the
solar system.
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