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  1. Dec 16, 2015 · Hooke first practised microscopy with Christopher Wren, Thomas Willis and others in the experimental circles of Oxford in the 1650s and early 1660s, but he began his observations for Micrographia in earnest after moving to London in 1663. 4 Before getting accommodation in Gresham College in the following year, where he would live for the rest of his life, he lodged with Katherine Jones, Lady Ranelagh, at her house in Pall Mall. 5 This was a decade before Robert Boyle, Lady Ranelagh's brother ...

  2. Robert Hooke made important contributions to numerous areas of science, including some of the first studies of living things using microscopes. Hooke was a major player in the newly-founded Royal ...

  3. Transcript. Prior to 1665, most humans were unaware that the microscopic world existed. But that year, Robert Hooke published his groundbreaking Micrographia—a book that revealed this previously unseen and unknown world. Hooke was one of a small handful of scientists to embrace the first microscopes, improve them, and use them to discover ...

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  4. Robert Hooke aláírása. A Wikimédia Commons tartalmaz Robert Hooke témájú médiaállományokat. Robert Hooke ( Freshwater, Wight-sziget, 1635. július 18. – London, 1703. március 3.) angol tudós, polihisztor, a Royal Society tagja, fontos szerepet játszott a tudományos forradalomban mind kísérleti, mind elméleti munkásságával.

  5. Jul 31, 2019 · The life of Robert Hooke (July 28, 1635 – March 3, 1703) is the classic tale of a self-made man who went from humble origins in the middle of the English Channel to rubbing shoulders with 17th-century London society. The son of an Anglican curate from the Isle of Wight, his father died when Hooke was 13 and he was left with an inheritance of ...

  6. Dec 22, 2020 · Just because you’re studying by yourself, it doesn’t mean you’re studying alone. Learn about Robert Hooke and the first microscope with Encyclopaedia Britann...

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    • Encyclopaedia Britannica
  7. Louisiane Ferlier shares her excitement at the launch of the Royal Society's digital version of Robert Hooke’s classic book 'Micrographia' (1665). This week, the Royal Society is bringing you Summer Science Online. And as we celebrate science from home, I’m very excited to launch our digital version of Robert Hooke’s Micrographia (1665).

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