LitSearch: An Online Literary Database Tyndall, John (18201893) Works by this author Faraday As A Discoverer.Copyright 2001 Keith Ito. All Rights Reserved. Admin Control Panel. http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeAuthor?name=Tyndall, John
LitSearch: An Online Literary Database Keyword Search Motif Search Custom Search Browse Authors Browse Titles. FaradayAs A Discoverer by Tyndall, John (18201893). Copyright 2001 Keith Ito. http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeWork?work=1284
Selected Nineteenth Century Works: T (inscription). Tyndall, John, 18201893. Faraday as a discoverer, byJohn Tyndall. xii, 208 p. ports. 18.5 cm. Tyndall, John, 1820-1893. http://www.thebakken.org/library/books/19t.htm
Extractions: Tarn, H C viii, [5]-188 p. illus. 17 cm. Provenance: W. Beavis, Nelson Street, Newcastle on Tyne (bookplate); W.J. Parlin (inscription) Taylor, George Henry, Paralysis, and other affections of the nerves: their cure by vibratory and special movements, by Geo. H. Taylor. New York, S.R. Wells, 1871. [2], 161 p. 19 cm. Provenance: James A. Throop (bookplate); R.B. Throop, Pleasant Corner, May 1875 (inscription) Taylor, George Henry, Paralysis and other affections of the nerves: their cure by transmitted energy and special movements, by Geo. H. Taylor. New York, American Book Exchange, 1880. [2], 179 p. 16.5 cm. Taylor, T K The medical pocket companion, or domestic adviser; designed for both married and single; containing a brief description of the causes, symptoms, and treatment of the most common and obstinate diseases, which affect humanity; together with many valuable hints upon the preservation of health and the proper management of infancy and childhood, by T.K. Taylor. New stereotype ed. Boston, Published by the author, 1856. 222 p. 16.5 cm.
TYNDALL Tyndall. Tyndall, John (18201893), British natural philosopher,was born in Co. Carlow, Ireland, on the 2nd of August 1820, his http://74.1911encyclopedia.org/T/TY/TYNDALL.htm
Extractions: TYNDALL, JOHN (1820-1893), British natural philosopher, was born in Co. Carlow, Ireland, on the 2nd of August 1820, his father being the son of a small landowner in poor circumstances, but a man of more than ordinary ability, With Darwin and Huxley his name is inseparably connected with the battle which began in the middle of the ipth century for making the new standpoint of modem science part of the accepted philosophy in general life. For many years, indeed, he came to represent to ordinary Englishmen the typical or ideal professor of physics. His strong, picturesque mode of seizing and expressing things gave him an immense living influence both in speech and writing, and disseminated a popular knowledge of physical science such as had not previously existed. But besides being a true educator, and perhaps the greatest popular teacher of natural philosophy in his generation, he was an earnest and original observer and explorer of nature. Tyndall was to a large extent a self-made man; he had no early advantages, but with indomitable earnestness devoted himself to study, to which he was stimulated by the writings of Carlyle. He passed from a national school in Co. Carlow to a minor post (1839) in the Irish ordnance survey, thence (1842) to the English survey, attending mechanics' institute lectures at Preston in Lancashire. He then became for a time (1844) a railway engineer, and in 1847 a teacher at Queenwood College, Hants. Thence with much spirit, and in face of many difficulties, he betook himself, with his colleague Edward Frankland, to the university of Marburg (1848-1851), where, by intense application, he obtained his doctorate in two years. His inaugural dissertation was an essay on screw-surfaces.
All Johns John Tyndall (18201893) English physicist; John Bunyan (1628-1688) Englishclergyman, author; John Jay Chapman (1862-1933) US poet, dramatist, critic http://www.creativequotations.com/qq-john.htm
Extractions: John John Ruskin (1819-1900) English critic, author John Locke (1632-1704) English philosopher John Sculley (1939-) U.S. business executive John Donne (1573-1631) English poet John Clare (1793-1864) English poet John Lenon (1940-1980) English singer, songwriter, muscian John McKay (1923-) U. S. football coach John Heisman (1869-1936) U.S. football coach John Madden (1936-) U.S. football coach, sportscaster 4) Who said . . . The mind is a musical instrument with a certain range of tones, beyond which in both directions we have an infinite silence.
TYMPANON Tyndall, John (18201893), British natural philosopher, was born inCo. Carlow, Ireland, on the 2nd of August 1820, his father being http://72.1911encyclopedia.org/T/TY/TYMPANON.htm
Extractions: TYNDALL Beside the works already named Tyndale wrote A Prologue on the Epistle to the Romans (1526), An Exposition of the ist Epistle of John (1531), An Exposition of Matthew v.-vii. (1532), a treatise on the sacraments (1533), and possibly another (no longer extant) on matrimony (1529). The works of Tyndale were first published along with those of John Frith (q.v.) and Robert Barnes, " three worthy martyrs and principal teachers of the Church of England," by John Day, in 1573 (folio). A new edition of the worKS of Tyndale and Frith, by T. Russell, was published at London (1828-1831). His Doctrinal Treatises and Introductions to Different Portions of the Holy Scripture were published by the Parker Society in 1848. For biography, see Foxe's Acts and Monuments; R. Demaus, William Tyndale (London, 1871); also the Introduction to Mombert's critical reprint of Tyndale's Pentateuch (New York, 1884), where a bibliography is given. TYNDALL, JOHN (1820-1893), British natural philosopher, was born in Co. Carlow, Ireland, on the 2nd of August 1820, his father being the son of a small landowner in poor circumstances, but a man of more than ordinary ability, With Darwin and Huxley his name is inseparably connected with the battle which began in the middle of the ipth century for making the new standpoint of modem science part of the accepted philosophy in general life. For many years, indeed, he came to represent to ordinary Englishmen the typical or ideal professor of physics. His strong, picturesque mode of seizing and expressing things gave him an immense living influence both in speech and writing, and disseminated a popular knowledge of physical science such as had not previously existed. But besides being a true educator, and perhaps the greatest popular teacher of natural philosophy in his generation, he was an earnest and original observer and explorer of nature.
John Tyndall John Tyndall. Life 18201893; b. 20 Aug., Leighlinbridge, Co. Carlow;Associate of Huxley; his Belfast Address to the 1874 meeting http://www.pgil-eirdata.org/html/pgil_datasets/authors/t/Tyndall,J/life.htm
Extractions: 1820-1893; b. 20 Aug., Leighlinbridge, Co. Carlow; Associate of Huxley; his Belfast Address to the 1874 meeting of the British Association drove the last nail into the coffin of the anti-evolutionists; works incl. Heat Considered as a Mode of Motion Mountaineering, and Hours of Exercise in the Alps , 1868; life of Faraday ( Faraday as a Discoverer top Works (Selected), Glaciers of the Alps Heat Considered as a Mode of Motion On Sound Faraday as a Discoverer Fragments of Science for Unscientific People Hours of Exercise in the Alps Forms of Water in Clouds, Ice, Six Lectures on Light Address delivered before the British Association Assembled in Belfast Lessons in Electricity at the Royal Institute Democracy and Religion: Glaadstone and the Liberal Party, 1867-75 (Cambridge UP). top Criticism
Extractions: Spring 2002 Issue of the CHP Newsletter Click directly on the photo to see a larger image and the full caption. Mystery Photo Solved! Left to right: Brian Schwartz, Gil Nussbaum and Richard Frankel demonstrating in Washington, DC, April 30, 1969. In recent months Schwartz has taken the lead, on behalf of the APS, in arranging symposiums of historians and physicists to accompany stagings of the play "Copenhagen" in New York and Washington, DC. AIP Emilio Segrè Visual Archives, Schwartz Collection. W. Patrick McCray, the AIP Center's Postdoctoral Historian, in front of the 8.1-meter mirror of the new Gemini South telescope at Cerro Pachon, Chile. In January 2002 McCray attended the Gemini Observatory's dedication while doing interviews and other research for a forthcoming book on the history of large telescopes and postwar astronomy. Photo Courtesy W.P. McCray.
Spring 2002 Newsletter 1 Spring 2002. John Tyndall (18201893). Many fine portraits of scientistslike this are found in the books in the Niels Bohr Library. http://www.aip.org/history/newsletter/spring2002/pic-tyndall.htm
Caneva Lecture - Foreword Joseph (17751854) Stokes, George Gabriel (1819-1903) Thomson, Thomas (1773-1852)Tilloch, Alexander (1759-1825) Tyndall, John (1820-1893) Whewell, William http://www.sil.si.edu/silpublications/dibner-library-lectures/scientific-discove
Extractions: Dibner Library Lecture, Smithsonian Institution Libraries, November 16, 2000 T he Dibner Library Lectures contribute immeasurably to the Smithsonian Libraries' efforts to acquaint the larger public with the valuable materials in the Dibner Library of the History of Science and Technology, and how they are used by scholars. The creative research done by these lecturers and all users of the Dibner Library speak clearly and unmistakably to the continuing usefulness of the volumes Bern Dibner collected and donated to the nation in his 1976 gift to the Smithsonian. This is the tenth lecture in the Dibner Library Lecture Series, supported by The Dibner Fund, and the second to be published. Kenneth L. Caneva delivered this lecture on "The Form and Function of Scientific Discoveries" in November 2000 and prepared it for the present publication with notes and bibliography. We first met Professor Caneva in 1995 when he was selected to be a Smithsonian Libraries Dibner Library Resident Scholar in the early years of that program. Caneva is one of twenty-five scholars who have benefited from this program also generously supported by The Dibner Fund since 1992. The cover image is a well known illustration of science represented as a ship, boldly sailing beyond the Pillars of Hercules, the emblematic limits of the old world. Appearing on the title page of Francis Bacon's Novum Organum (1620), the image epitomizes the spirit of scientific inquiry that forms the basis of Professor Caneva's observations about the experiments and discoveries of Hans Christian Ørsted, Johann Wilhelm Ritter, and Thomas Johann Seebeck, the subjects of his lecture. Bacon's eminence as a philosopher of science was recognized by Bern Dibner, the creator of the Dibner Library of the History of Science and Technology, who included Bacon in his galaxy of 200 pioneers in the history of science and technology, now celebrated as the "Heralds of Science."
Suche Nach Personen Translate this page ? Tuve, Merle A. (1901-1982) Tyler, Harry W. Tyndall, John (1820-1893) Tyson,Indien 1927. Personen Wissenschaft Jahre Geschäft Druckwerke Institutionen. http://www.lrz-muenchen.de/~Sommerfeld/PersDat/T.html
Scientists CDV. VG. $125. sc5.JPG (10545 bytes) SC5. Elliott Fry, London. John Tyndall (18201893). Gutekunst,Philadelphia. Prof. John Tyndall, Phila. 1872 (1820-1893). http://www.antiquephotographics.com/scientistscdv.htm
Physicists Of Ireland: Passion And Precision George Stokes 18191903, by Alastair Wood. John Tyndall 1820-1893,by Norman McMillan. Sam Haughton 1821-1897, by Norman McMillan. http://bookmarkphysics.iop.org/bookpge.htm?ID=145CKe_ht-GmnE5welU8nvgw&book=1111
Research Collections Ja - Jz DSC MFR 2651. 122. John Tyndall, NATURAL PHILOSOPHER 18201893. CATALOGUE OFCORRESPONDENCE, JOURNALS AND COLLECTED PAPERS. Mansell. 34 microfiche. http://www.bl.uk/services/document/microrescoll/rescolj.html
Extractions: Hardcopy index. These microfilms make available virtually all the manuscript and printed material in the Northampton collection, which contains not only hundreds of Clare's letters and papers, but also the manuscripts of no fewer than 1,350 poems, including nearly all of those of the Northampton Asylum period, as well as many that were published in the poet's life-time.
95.01.31 John Tyndall (18201893). HOURS OF EXERCISE IN THE ALPS. D. Appleton Co., NewYork 1873 pp. (x), 473 + Woodcut frontis and other woodcut plates. 12 mo. http://www.netrax.net/~rarebook/s950131e.htm
Extractions: pp. (x), 473 + Woodcut frontis and other woodcut plates. 12 mo. 20.5 cm. Bound in half calf over marbled boards. Chipped at head and tail. Rubbed at extremities. Marbled endpapers and marbled edges. Text bright and crisp. Tyndall was seized by the mountains, and he became one of the most intrepid and resolute of explorers (among other feats of climbing, he was the first to ascend the Weissborn [1861]). He and his wife Louisa (daughter of Lord Claud Hamilton) maintained a cottage on Bel Alp above the Rhone valley. Tyndall's observations on glacier motion brought him into acute conflict with other scientists, though it was he who identified the essential principles and causes of glacier motion. John Tyndall was born in Ireland in poor circumstances. He was a remarkable self-made man of science. "With Darwin and Huxley his name is inseparably connected with the battle which began in the middle of the 19th century for making the new standpoint of modern science part of the accepted philosophy in general life. For many years indeed, he came to represent to ordinary Englishmen the typical or ideal professor of physics. His strong, picturesque mode of seizing and expressing things gave him an immense living influence both in speech and writing, and disseminated a popular knowledge of physical science such as had not previously existed. But besides being a true educator, and perhaps the greatest popular teacher of natural philosophy in his generation, he was an earnest and original observer and explorer of nature" 11th Ed. EB.
95.01.31 John Tyndall (18201893). LECTURES ON LIGHT. DELIVERED IN THE UNITED STATESIN 1872-'73. D. Appleton Co., New York 1873 pp. 183. Diagrams. http://www.netrax.net/~rarebook/s950131c.htm
Extractions: DELIVERED IN THE UNITED STATES IN 1872-'73. pp. 183. Diagrams. Bound with: "Proceedings at the Farewell Banquet to Professor Tyndall Given at Delmonico's, New York, Feb. 4, 1873." 90p. + Publisher's ads (6p.). 12 mo. 20.5 cm. Bound in half calf over marbled boards. Slightly chipped at tail. Rubbed at extremities. Marbled endpapers and marbled edges. Text bright and crisp. First edition in this form. John Tyndall was born in Ireland in poor circumstances. He was a remarkable self-made man of science. "With Darwin and Huxley his name is inseparably connected with the battle which began in the middle of the 19th century for making the new standpoint of modern science part of the accepted philosophy in general life. For many years indeed, he came to represent to ordinary Englishmen the typical or ideal professor of physics. His strong, picturesque mode of seizing and expressing things gave him an immense living influence both in speech and writing, and disseminated a popular knowledge of physical science such as had not previously existed. But besides being a true educator, and perhaps the greatest popular teacher of natural philosophy in his generation, he was an earnest and original observer and explorer of nature" 11th Ed. EB. This collection of (first?) American editions is an outgrowth of his enormously successful lecture tour of America (1872-3). That trip earned him many thousands of dollars, but he would touch none of it. He placed it instead in the hands of trustees, and directed that it be used for the advancement of American science.
Michael Faraday (1791-1867) Library Of Congress Citations Maxwell, James Clerk, 18311879. Control No. 35010735 //r85 Author Tyndall,John, 1820-1893. Title Faraday as a discoverer. By John Tyndall. http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/cit/citlcfaraday.htm
Extractions: The Little Search Engine that Could Down to Name Citations LC Online Catalog Amazon Search Book Citations [First 20 Records] Author: Jones, Bence, 1814-1873. Title: The life and letters of Faraday. By Dr. Bence Jones ... Published: London, Longmans, Green and co., 1870. Description: 2 v. fronts. (v. 1, port.) illus., 1 pl., diagrs. 23 cm. LC Call No.: QC16.F2 J8 Microfilm 68616 QC Notes: Microfilm. Washington, D.C., Library of Congress. Subjects: Faraday, Michael, 1791-1867. Control No.: 04028110 //r85 Author: Faraday, Michael, 1791-1867. Title: Chemical manipulation; being instructions to students in chemistry, on the methods of performing experiments of demonstration or of research, with accuracy and success. By Michael Faraday ... Published: London, W. Phillips, 1827. Description: vii, ix, 11-656 p. illus. 21 cm. LC Call No.: QD61 .F199 Subjects: Chemistry Manipulation. Control No.: 06005415 //r86 Author: Faraday, Michael, 1791-1867. Title: Chemical manipulation, being instructions to students in chemistry, on the methods of performing experiments of demonstration or of research, with accuracy and success. By Michael Faraday ... Edition: 1st American, from the last London ed., edited by J.K. Mitchell ... Published: Philadelphia, Carey and Lea, 1831. Description: xi, [17]-689 p. illus. 22 cm. LC Call No.: QD61 .F22 Subjects: Chemistry Manipulation. Other authors: Mitchell, John Kearsley, 1793-1858, ed. Control No.: 06005416 //r942
Alfred Russel Wallace Collection1867-1913 feet), Tyndall, John, 18201893, To Wallace, Alfred Russel, 1867 February 9,(ALS, 1p.), Wallace, Alfred Russel, To Macmillan Co. 1869 June, (ALS, 1p.), http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/browser/w/wallacear.htm
Alfred Russel Wallace Collection, 1867-1913 Correspondence, 18671913, 0.25 lin. feet, Tyndall, John, 1820-1893 , To Wallace,Alfred Russel, 1867 February 9, ALS, 1p. Wallace, Alfred Russel , To Macmillan Co. http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/mole/w/wallacear.htm
Extractions: (0.25 linear feet) B W15a American Philosophical Society 105 South Fifth Street * Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386 Table of contents Abstract A prime exponent of evolutionary theory in the late nineteenth century, the British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace arrived independently at the theory of natural selection nearly simultaneously with Charles Darwin. The numerous publications that emerged from his extended field excusions into the Amazon Basin and the Malay Archipelago (Indonesia) Wallace resulted in major contributions to evolutionary theory, biogeography, ecology, and ethnography, and made Wallace, by the end of his life, one of the best known naturalists in Britain. A Socialist, social progressive, and Spiritualist, Wallace's distinctive take on evolutionary change differed from the Darwinian mainstream in significant ways. The Wallace Collection is a miscellaneous assemblage of letters written by and to Alfred Russel Wallace, primarily during the last twenty five years of his life. Varied in content, the letters touch on Wallace's views on evolution, Spiritualism, and to a less degree, his progressive social commitments. Background note Scope and content Administrative information Restrictions on use ... Correspondence, 1867-1913
Portraits Of Science $5.00. Tesla, Nikola (18561943) $5.00. Tyndall, John (1820-1893) $5.00. Van't Hoff,Jacobus (1852-1911) $5.00. Wöhler, Friedrich (1800-1882) $5.00. Young $5.00. http://www.scs-intl.com/portraits.htm
Extractions: Portraits of Science Portraits of th e greatest minds from the history science. Each portrait comes on acid-free glossy paper, 8.5" x 11" (21.6 x 28 cm) in a rich sepia tone, suitable for framing. Only $5.00 each, or the complete set of 30 for $100 a savings of 33%. $100.00 Complete set of the Portraits of Science Bernoulli, Daniel Bernoulli, Johann Berthelot, Pierre Berzelius, Jöns Black, Joseph Boltzmann, Ludwig Boyle, Robert Cannizzaro, Stanislao Curie, Marie Davy, Humphrey Dirac, Paul Dumas, Jean Gibbs, J. Willard Langmuir, Irving Laue, Max Liebig, Justus Maxwell, James Meldeleev, Dmitri Pauli, Wolfgang Pauling, Linus Raman, Chandrasekhara Rayleigh, Lord (Strutt, John)