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ROBERT See also: English experimental philosopher, was See also: born on the 18th of See also: July 1635 at See also: Freshwater, in the Isle of See also: Wight, where his See also: father, See also: John
See also: Hooke, was See also: minister of the parish
.
After working for a See also: short See also: time with See also: Sir See also: Peter See also: Lely, he went to See also: Westminster school; and in 1653 he entered Christ See also: Church,
See also: Oxford, as servitor
.
After 1655 he was employed and patronized by the Hon
.
Robert Boyle, who turned his skill to account in the construction of his air-See also: pump
.
On the 12th of See also: November 1662 he was appointed curator of experiments to the Royal Society, of which he was elected a See also: fellow in 1663, and filled the office during the See also: remainder of his See also: life
.
In 1664 Sir John See also: Cutler instituted for his benefit a See also: mechanical lectureship of £5o a See also: year, and in the following year he was nominated professor of See also: geometry in Gresham See also: College, where he subsequently resided
.
After the See also: Great Fire of 1666 he constructed a See also: model for the rebuilding of the city, which was highly approved, although the design of Sir C
.
Wren was preferred
.
During the progress of the See also: works, however, he acted as surveyor, and accumulated in that lucrative employment a sum of several thousand pounds, discovered after his See also: death in an old iron chest, which had evidently lain unopened for above See also: thirty years
.
He fulfilled the duties of secretary to the Royal Society during five years after the death of See also: Henry
See also: Oldenburg in 1677, See also: publishing in 1681–1682 the papers read before that See also: body under the title of Philosophical Collections
.
A protracted controversy with Johann Hevelius, in which Hooke urged the advantages of telescopic over plain See also: sights, brought him little but discredit
.
His reasons were See also: good; but his offensive See also: style of See also: argument rendered them unpalatable and himself unpopular
.
Many circumstances concurred to embitter the latter years of his life . The death, in 1687, of his niece, Mrs See also: Grace Hooke, who had lived with him for many years, caused him deep affliction; a See also: law-suit with Sir John Cutler about his See also: salary (decided, however, in his favour in 1696) occasioned him prolonged anxiety; and the repeated anticipation of his discoveries inspired him with a morbid jealousy
.
Marks of public respect were not indeed wanting to him
.
A degree of M.D. was conferred on him at Doctors' See also: Commons in 1691, and the Royal Society made him, in 1696, a See also: grant to enable him to
See also: complete his philosophical inventions
.
While engaged on this task he died, worn out with disease, on the 3rd of See also: March 1703 in
See also: London, and was buried in St See also: Helen's Church, Bislropsgate Street
.
In See also: personal appearance Hooke made but a sorry show
.
His
figure was crooked, his limbs shrunken; his hair hung in dishevelled locks over his See also: haggard countenance
.
His temper was irritable, his habits penurious and solitary
.
He was, however, 'blameless in morals and reverent in See also: religion
.
His scientific achievements would probably have been more striking if they had been less varied
.
He originated much, but perfected little
.
His See also: optical investigations led him to adopt in an imperfect See also: form the undulatory theory of See also: light, to anticipate the See also: doctrine of interference, and to observe, independently of though subsequently to F
.
M . Grimaldi (1618–1663), the phenomenon of diffraction . He was the first toSee also: state clearly that the motions of the heavenly bodies must be regarded See also: asa mechanical problem, and he approached in a remarkable manner the See also: discovery of universal gravitation
.
He invented the See also: wheel barometer, discussed the application of barometrical indications to meteorological forecasting, suggested a See also: system of optical telegraphy, anticipated E.F.F
.
Chladni's experiment of strewing a vibrating See also: bell with See also: flour, investigated the nature of See also: sound and the See also: function of the air in respiration and combustion, and originated the idea of using the pendulum as a measure of gravity
.
He is credited with the invention of the anchor escapement for clocks, and also with the application of See also: spiral springs to the balances of watches, together with the explanation of their See also: action by the principle Ut lensio sic vis (1676)
.
His See also: principal writings are Micrographia (1664); Lectiones Cutlerianae (16i4–16i9); and See also: Posthumous Works, containing a sketch of his Philosophical Algebra," published by R
.
Waller in 1705
.
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