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1660s and Newton
It was independently developed by Gottfried Leibniz and Isaac Newton starting in the 1660s.
In the late 1660s and early 1670s, Newton expanded Descartes ' ideas into a corpuscle theory of light, famously showing that white light, instead of being a unique colour, was really a composite of different colours that can be separated into a spectrum with a prism.
They also involved the combination of tangential and radial displacements, which Newton was making in the 1660s.
Newton also clearly expressed the concept of linear inertia in the 1660s: for this Newton was indebted to Descartes ' work published 1644.
Newton himself had shown in the 1660s that for planetary motion under a circular assumption, force in the radial direction had an inverse-square relation with distance from the center.
Newton himself had shown in the 1660s that for planetary motion under a circular assumption, force in the radial direction had an inverse-square relation with distance from the center.
During the mid 1660s with his work on the theory of colour, Newton came to the conclusion that this defect was caused by the lens of the refracting telescope behaving the same as prisms he was experimenting with, breaking white light into a rainbow of colors around bright astronomical objects.

1660s and studied
Thévenot studied astronomy, physics, medicine, and magnetism, and demonstrated in the 1660s the possibility that atmospheric pulsations had something to do with human and animal respiration.

1660s and motion
Surviving manuscripts of the 1660s also show Newton's interest in planetary motion and that by 1669 he had shown, for a circular case of planetary motion, that the force he called ' endeavour to recede ' ( now called centrifugal force ) had an inverse-square relation with distance from the center.

1660s and centre
Lee Green Farm occupied the south-east quadrant from the 1660s ( roughly on the site of the present Leegate shopping centre ).

1660s and two
The two first male censuses was conducted during the 1660s and 1701.
The drama of the 1660s and 1670s was vitalised by the competition between the two patent companies created at the Restoration, as well as by the personal interest of Charles II, and the comic playwrights rose to the demand for new plays.
Turnpiking reduced the journey from London-Portsmouth from two days in the 1660s to 10 hours in 1819.
Its true provenance was clarified by Pope Alexander VII's excavations in the 1660s, which cleared the vegetation that had overgrown the pyramid, uncovered the inscriptions on its faces, tunnelled into the tomb's burial chamber and found the bases of two bronze statues that had stood alongside the pyramid.
The collecting grew and attained more permanent lodgings in the 1660s, when Louis XIV constructed two new menageries: one at Vincennes, next to a palace on the eastern edge of Paris, and a more elaborate one, which became a model for menageries throughout Europe, at Versailles, the site of a royal hunting lodge two hours ( by carriage ) west of Paris.
Another resident was Peg Fyfe, a local witch, who reputedly skinned a young local resident alive in the 1660s and was later hanged for the crime, but swallowed a spoon to save herself only to be " finished off " by two passing knights.
In the late 1660s, there were thus three troops in England, one in Ireland, and two in Scotland of which one was ceremonial for attendance of Lord High Commissioner ( named after John Middleton, 1st Earl of Middleton and after John Leslie, 7th Earl of Rothes ).
We know Legrenzi had two brothers and two sisters, though one of the brothers, Marco, apparently a talented musician who performed with his father and brother in the 1660s, is not mentioned in Legrenzi ’ s will: it is presumed that he died young.
The lake was dammed to serve the Lesja Iron Works in the 1660s and now has two outlets.

1660s and .
They were produced in huge numbers, with over 400, 000 being sold in England annually by the 1660s.
His great-grandson, Miklós Zrínyi, poet and general became of the better known stratagems of 1660s.
During the latter part of the 1660s, the Portuguese tried to gain control of Kongo.
It was not until the 1660s and 1670s that the microscope was used extensively for research in Italy, The Netherlands and England.
In the 1660s, a man named Thomas Walgensten used his so-called " lantern of fear " to summon ghosts.
Starting in the late 1660s she retired from her courtesan lifestyle and concentrated more on her literary friends — from 1667, she hosted her gatherings at l ' hôtel Sagonne, which was considered " the " location of the salon of Ninon de l ' Enclos despite other locales in the past.
For instance, the New York Sheriff's Office was founded in 1626, and the Albany County Sheriff's Department in the 1660s.
A Tudor fortress guarded the neck of water between the eastern Hoe and Mount Batten and some sheer granite and limestone cannon points remain, however in the late 1660s, following The Restoration, a massive star-shaped stone fortress known as the Royal Citadel, was constructed to replace it.
It is an important account of London in the 1660s.
As well as providing a first-hand account of the Restoration, Pepys's diary is notable for its detailed accounts of several other major events of the 1660s, along with the lesser known Diary of John Evelyn.
His most significant remaining architectural work is the anatomical theatre, which was added to Gustavianum in the 1660s and crowned with the characteristic cupola for which the building is today known.
The role was played in French as Arlequin in the 1660s by, who combined the zanni types, " making his Arlecchino witty, neat, and fluent in a croaking voice, which became as traditional as the squawk of Punch.
In the 1660s the Crown granted Soho Fields to Henry Jermyn, 1st Earl of St Albans.
Laudanum remained largely unknown until the 1660s when an English physician named Thomas Sydenham ( 1624-1689 ) compounded a proprietary opium tincture that he also named laudanum, although it differed substantially from the laudanum of Paracelsus.
He was in fact the most popular king England had known since the earlier 1660s.
The 1660s saw the final collapse of Magdeburg's aim, to which von Guericke had devoted some twenty years of diplomatic effort, of achieving the status of a Free City within the Holy Roman Empire.

Newton and studied
Isaac Newton studied these effects and attributed them to inflexion of light rays.
During his teens, Kurt studied Gabelsberger shorthand, Goethe's Theory of Colours and criticisms of Isaac Newton, and the writings of Immanuel Kant.
‪ File: Ernst Mach 01. jpg ‬‬| Ernst Mach ( 1838-1916 ): contributed the Mach number, studied shock waves and how airflow is disturbed at the speed of sound, influenced logical positivism, forerunner of Einstein ’ s relativity through his criticism of Newton ‬‬‬‬
He studied mathematics, metaphysics, and philosophy under Professor William Small, who introduced the enthusiastic Jefferson to the writings of the British Empiricists, including John Locke, Francis Bacon, and Isaac Newton.
Newton had studied these books, or, in some cases, secondary sources based on them, and taken notes entitled Quaestiones quaedam philosophicae ( Questions about philosophy ) during his days as an undergraduate.
Instead Newton studied the accounts of ancient writers like Pliny to obtain the approximate size and location of the memorial, then bought a plot of land in the most likely location.
Newton had studied the cubic curves, in the general description of the real points into ' ovals '.
New scientific discoveries found by Sir Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin and many others were increasingly added to the school curriculum and studied by an increasingly widening student body.
" Dr Warton, in his observations upon Pope's line, " Unthought-of frailties cheat us in the wise ," says, " Who could imagine that Locke was fond of romances ; that Newton once studied astrology ; that Dr Clarke valued himself on his agility, and frequently amused himself in a private room of his house in leaping over the tables and chairs?
Newton studied and wrote extensively upon the Temple of Solomon, dedicating an entire chapter of " The Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms " to his observations regarding the temple.
Historically, the phenomena of this crystal were studied at length by Christiaan Huygens and Isaac Newton.
Encouraged by his science teacher, Newton H. Black, in September of that year he entered Harvard, where he studied physical chemistry under Theodore W. Richards and organic chemistry under Elmer P. Kohler.
Kline was born near Newton, New Jersey in 1858 and studied at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts but did not attend college.
He studied theology from 1876 to 1879 at the Andover Newton Theological School.
His works were avidly studied by other natural philosophers, such as Isaac Newton.
Born in West Newton, Massachusetts, brother of CalTech physicist Richard Chace Tolman, Edward C. Tolman studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and received his Ph. D. from Harvard University in 1915.
Debarred, as a Jew, from a university education, he studied on his own from an early age, in the writings of Isaac Newton, Colin Maclaurin, and William Emerson.
It was first introduced by Claude Perrault in 1670, and later studied by Sir Isaac Newton ( 1676 ) and Christiaan Huygens ( 1692 ).
The phenomenon of Newton's rings, named after Isaac Newton, who first studied them in 1717, is an interference pattern caused by the reflection of light between two surfaces – a spherical surface and an adjacent flat surface.
In her introduction to the 1985 facsimile edition E. J. Ashworth writes that " The young Isaac Newton studied Sanderson's logic at Cambridge, and as late as 1704 " Thomas Heywood of St. John's College, Ashworth adds, recommended Newton " Sanderson or Aristotle himself ".
In 1777 he studied theology under the evangelical John Newton at Olney.
< small > This PDF document also contains birth and death dates .< small ></ ref > He studied at Oxford, became experimental assistant to Sir Isaac Newton, and later popularized Newtonian theories and their practical applications.
Newton also drew several Captain Marvel / Marvel Family stories, and was a fan of the character, having studied under Captain Marvel co-creator C. C. Beck.

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