Examples of using Hooke in English and their translations into Korean
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went to England where, among others, he met Boyle and Hooke.
including Robert Hooke in London and Vincenzo Viviani in Florence.
In 1664, Robert Hooke proposed the freezing point of water be used as a zero point, with temperatures being measured from this.
John Hooke was left in charge of All Saints.
Yet in practice, because most people were unable to peer through the eyepiece of a microscope, the evidence Hooke collected remained largely reliant on testimony.
According to Robert Gunther and other authorities, it was Boyle's assistant, Robert Hooke, who built the experimental apparatus.
Hooke was never a person who did one thing at a time,
Hooke was fortunate in gaining the respect of Dr Busby and being left to follow his own pursuits of knowledge just as he had before attending Westminster School.
exchange of polite letters, Newton turned in on himself and away from the Royal Society which he associated with Hooke as one of its leaders.
Wilkins gave him a copy of his book Mathematical Magick, or the wonders that may be performed by mechanical geometry which he had published five years before Hooke arrived in Oxford.
Robert Hooke pursued microscopy,
Certainly one could say that his reaction to criticism was irrational, and certainly his aim to humiliate Hooke in public because of his opinions was abnormal.
and Robert Hooke published the seminal Micrographia based on observations with his own compound microscope in 1665.
We can understand a little of Wren's character when we realise that he remained friends with some of the most awkward people of his time, particularly Hooke and Flamsteed.
His attack on these questions was to produce a much more general theory than had previously been attempted based not on heat as random motion of atoms, as Hooke and Boyle had done,
This did not provide the financial security that Hooke might have hoped for, since the Society often did not have sufficient funds to pay him as Curator of Experiments and when he was not paid for his duties as Cutlerian Lecturer in the Mechanical Arts he was forced to go to court to get payment.
The yearly elections of 1675 and 1676 were thought by Hooke to be unfair, and the fact that
In 1664 the Society agreed to pay Hooke a salary of 80 per year but shortly after this they arranged the position of Cutlerian Lecturer in the Mechanical Arts for him at a salary of 50 per year and then reduced his salary as Curator of Experiments to 30 but gave him an appointment for life.
Thus it is Hooke who we can thank for the term"the cell," as he was looking at a piece of cork under his microscope, and the little chambers he saw reminded him of cells,