Great Astronomers

Great Astronomers

by Robert Stawell Ball

19 chapters9h 15mEnglish1895

About this book

Of all the natural sciences there is not one which offers such sublime objects to the attention of the inquirer as does the science of astronomy. From the earliest ages the study of the stars has exercised the same fascination as it possesses at the present day. Among the most primitive peoples, the movements of the sun, the moon, and the stars commanded attention from their supposed influence on human affairs. From the days of Hipparchus down to the present hour the science of astronomy has steadily grown. One great observer after another has appeared from time to time, to reveal some new phenomenon with regard to the celestial bodies or their movements, while from time to time one commanding intellect after another has arisen to explain the true import of the facts of observations. The history of astronomy thus becomes inseparable from the history of the great men to whose labours its development is due. In the ensuing chapters we have endeavoured to sketch the lives and the work of the great philosophers, by whose labours the science of astronomy has been created. (from the Introduction)

Chapters (18)

1Ptolemy
2138
2Copernicus
1127
3Tycho Brahe
1700
4Galileo
2606
5Kepler
1697
6Isaac Newton
2672
7Flamsteed
1354
8Halley
2323
9Bradley
1310
10William Herschel
1428
11Laplace
1280
12Brinkley
1284
13John Herschel
2222
14The Earl of Rosse
1292
15Airy
1312
16Hamilton
3112
17Le Verrier
1982
18Adams
1782

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