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Index
BOOK CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
THE BEGINNING OF SCIENCE 600 BCE–1400 CE
Eclipses of the Sun can be predicted • Thales of Miletus
Now hear the fourfold roots of everything • Empedocles
Measuring the circumference of Earth • Eratosthenes
The human is related to the lower beings • Al-Tusi
A floating object displaces its own volume in liquid • Archimedes
The Sun is like fire, the Moon is like water • Zhang Heng
Light travels in straight lines into our eyes • Alhazen
SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION 1400–1700
At the centre of everything is the Sun • Nicolaus Copernicus
The orbit of every planet is an ellipse • Johannes Kepler
A falling body accelerates uniformly • Galileo Galilei
The globe of the Earth is a magnet • William Gilbert
Not by arguing, but by trying • Francis Bacon
Touching the spring of the air • Robert Boyle
Is light a particle or a wave? • Christiaan Huygens
The first observation of a transit of Venus • Jeremiah Horrocks
Organisms develop in a series of steps • Jan Swammerdam
All living things are composed of cells • Robert Hooke
Layers of rock form on top of one another • Nicolas Steno
Microscopic observations of animalcules • Antonie van Leeuwenhoek
Measuring the speed of light • Ole Rømer
One species never springs from the seed of another • John Ray
Gravity affects everything in the Universe • Isaac Newton
EXPANDING HORIZONS 1700–1800
Nature does not proceed by leaps and bounds • Carl Linnaeus
The heat that disappears in the conversion of water into vapour is not lost • Joseph Black
Inflammable air • Henry Cavendish
Winds, as they come nearer the equator, become more easterly • George Hadley
A strong current comes out of the Gulf of Florida • Benjamin Franklin
Dephlogisticated air • Joseph Priestley
In nature, nothing is created, nothing is lost, everything changes • Antoine Lavoisier
The mass of a plant comes from the air • Jan Ingenhousz
Discovering new planets • William Herschel
The diminution of the velocity of light • John Michell
Setting the electric fluid in motion • Alessandro Volta
No vestige of a beginning and no prospect of an end • James Hutton
The attraction of mountains • Nevil Maskelyne
The mystery of nature in the structure and fertilization of flowers • Christian Sprengel
Elements always combine the same way • Joseph Proust
A CENTURY OF PROGRESS 1800–1900
The experiments may be repeated with great ease when the Sun shines • Thomas Young
Ascertaining the relative weights of ultimate particles • John Dalton
The chemical effects produced by electricity • Humphry Davy
Mapping the rocks of a nation • William Smith
She knows to what tribe the bones belong • Mary Anning
The inheritance of acquired characteristics • Jean-Baptiste Lamarck
Every chemical compound has two parts • Jöns Jakob Berzelius
The electric conflict is not restricted to the conducting wire • Hans Christian Ørsted
One day, sir, you may tax it • Michael Faraday
Heat penetrates every substance in the Universe • Joseph Fourier
The artificial production of organic substances from inorganic substances • Friedrich Wöhler
Winds never blow in a straight line • Gaspard-Gustave de Coriolis
On the coloured light of the binary stars • Christian Doppler
The glacier was God’s great plough • Louis Agassiz
Nature can be represented as one great whole • Alexander von Humboldt
Light travels more slowly in water than in air • Léon Foucault
Living force may be converted into heat • James Joule
Statistical analysis of molecular movement • Ludwig Boltzmann
Plastic is not what I meant to invent • Leo Baekeland
I have called this principle natural selection • Charles Darwin
Forecasting the weather • Robert FitzRoy
Omne vivum ex vivo – all life from life • Louis Pasteur
One of the snakes grabbed its own tail • August Kekulé
The definitely expressed average proportion of three to one • Gregor Mendel
An evolutionary link between birds and dinosaurs • Thomas Henry Huxley
An apparent periodicity of properties • Dmitri Mendeleev
Light and magnetism are affectations of the same substance • James Clerk Maxwell
Rays were coming from the tube • Wilhelm Röntgen
Seeing into the Earth • Richard Dixon Oldham
Radiation is an atomic property of the elements • Marie Curie
A contagious living fluid • Martinus Beijerinck
A PARADIGM SHIFT 1900–1945
Quanta are discrete packets of energy • Max Planck
Now I know what the atom looks like • Ernest Rutherford
Gravity is a distortion in the space-time continuum • Albert Einstein
Earth’s drifting continents are giant pieces in an ever-changing jigsaw • Alfred Wegener
Chromosomes play a role in heredity • Thomas Hunt Morgan
Particles have wave-like properties • Erwin Schrödinger
Uncertainty is inevitable • Werner Heisenberg
The Universe is big… and getting bigger • Edwin Hubble
The radius of space began at zero • Georges Lemaître
Every particle of matter has an antimatter counterpart • Paul Dirac
There is an upper limit beyond which a collapsing stellar core becomes unstable • Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar
Life itself is a process of obtaining knowledge • Konrad Lorenz
95 per cent of the Universe is missing • Fritz Zwicky
A universal computing machine • Alan Turing
The nature of the chemical bond • Linus Pauling
An awesome power is locked inside the nucleus of an atom • J Robert Oppenheimer
FUNDAMENTAL BUILDING BLOCKS 1945–PRESENT
We are made of stardust • Fred Hoyle
Jumping genes • Barbara McClintock
The strange theory of light and matter • Richard Feynman
Life is not a miracle • Harold Urey and Stanley Miller
We wish to suggest a structure for the salt of deoxyribose nucleic acid (DNA) • James Watson and Francis Crick
Everything that can happen happens • Hugh Everett III
A perfect game of noughts and crosses • Donald Michie
The unity of fundamental forces • Sheldon Glashow
We are the cause of global warming • Charles Keeling
The butterfly effect • Edward Lorenz
A vacuum is not exactly nothing • Peter Higgs
Symbiosis is everywhere • Lynn Margulis
Quarks come in threes • Murray Gell-Mann
A theory of everything? • Gabriele Veneziano
Black holes evaporate • Stephen Hawking
Earth and all its life forms make up a single living organism called Gaia • James Lovelock
A cloud is made of billows upon billows • Benoît Mandelbrot
A quantum model of computing • Yuri Manin
Genes can move from species to species • Michael Syvanen
The soccer ball can withstand a lot of pressure • Harry Kroto
Insert genes into humans to cure disease • William French Anderson
Designing new life forms on a computer screen • Craig Venter
A new law of nature • Ian Wilmut
Worlds beyond the solar system • Geoffrey Marcy
DIRECTORY
GLOSSARY
CONTRIBUTORS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
COPYRIGHT
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