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	<title>Famous Scientists &#187; Physics Scientists</title>
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		<title>Stephen William Hawking &#8211; The Theoretical Physicist</title>
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				<category><![CDATA[New Scientists]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Stephen William Hawking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Theoretical Physicist]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Stephen William Hawking, CH, CBE, FRS, FRSA (born 8 January 1942) is a British theoretical physicist, whose world-renowned scientific career spans over 40 years. His books and public appearances have made him an academic celebrity and he is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a lifetime member of the Pontifical Academy of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-134" style="margin-left: 7px; margin-right: 7px;" title="Stephen William Hawking" src="http://scientists.penyet.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/Stephen-William-Hawking.jpg" alt="Stephen William Hawking" width="200" height="287" />Stephen William Hawking, CH, CBE, FRS, FRSA (born 8 January 1942) is a British theoretical physicist, whose world-renowned scientific career spans over 40 years. His books and public appearances have made him an academic celebrity and he is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a lifetime member of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, and in 2009 was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian award in the United States.</p>
<p>Hawking was the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at the University of Cambridge for thirty years, taking up the post in 1979 and retiring on 1 October 2009. He is also a Fellow of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge and a Distinguished Research Chair at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Waterloo, Ontario.  He is known for his contributions to the fields of cosmology and quantum gravity, especially in the context of black holes. He has also achieved success with works of popular science in which he discusses his own theories and cosmology in general; these include the runaway best seller A Brief History of Time, which stayed on the British Sunday Times bestsellers list for a record-breaking 237 weeks.</p>
<p>Hawking&#8217;s key scientific works to date have included providing, with Roger Penrose, theorems regarding singularities in the framework of general relativity, and the theoretical prediction that black holes should emit radiation, which is today known as Hawking radiation (or sometimes as Bekenstein-Hawking radiation).</p>
<p><span id="more-133"></span>Hawking has a neuro-muscular dystrophy that is related to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a condition that has progressed over the years and has left him almost completely paralysed.</p>
<h2><span id="Early_life_and_education">Early life and education</span></h2>
<p>Stephen Hawking was born to Dr. Frank Hawking, a research biologist, and Isobel Hawking. He had two younger sisters, Philippa and Mary and an adopted brother, Edward.<sup id="cite_ref-Current_Biography_1984_9-0"><a target="_blank" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Hawking#cite_note-Current_Biography_1984-9"><span> </span><span> </span></a></sup> Though Hawking&#8217;s parents were living in North London, they moved to Oxford while Isobel was pregnant with Stephen, desiring a safer location for the birth of their first child (London was under attack at the time by the Luftwaffe).<sup id="cite_ref-mactutor_10-0"><span> </span></sup> According to Hawking, a German V-2 missile struck only a few streets away.<sup id="cite_ref-11"><span> </span></sup></p>
<p>After Hawking was born, the family moved back to London, where his father headed the division of parasitology at the National Institute for Medical Research. In 1950, Hawking and his family moved to St Albans in Hertfordshire where he attended St Albans High School for Girls from 1950 to 1953. (At that time, boys could attend the Girls school until the age of 10.) From the age of 11, he attended St Albans School, where he was a good, but not exceptional, student. When asked later to name a teacher who had inspired him, Hawking named his Mathematics teacher, Dikran Tahta. He maintains his connection with the school, giving his name to one of the four houses and to an extracurricular science lecture series. He has visited to deliver one of the lectures and has also granted a lengthy interview to pupils working on the school magazine, <em>The Albanian</em>.</p>
<p>Hawking was always interested in science. Inspired by his mathematics teacher, he originally wanted to study mathematics at university. However, Hawking&#8217;s father wanted him to apply to University College, Oxford, the college that his father had attended. As University College did not have a mathematics fellow at that time, it would not accept applications from students who wished to read mathematics. Hawking therefore applied to read natural sciences, in which he gained a scholarship. Once at University College, Hawking specialised in physics. His interests during this time were in thermodynamics, relativity, and quantum mechanics. His physics tutor, Robert Berman, later said in <em>The New York Times Magazine</em>:</p>
<blockquote><p><em>It was only necessary for him to know that something could be done, and he could do it without looking to see how other people did it. [...] He didn&#8217;t have very many books, and he didn&#8217;t take notes. Of course, his mind was completely different from all of his contemporaries</em>.<sup id="cite_ref-Current_Biography_1984_9-4"><a target="_blank" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Hawking#cite_note-Current_Biography_1984-9"></a></sup></p></blockquote>
<p>Hawking was passing, but his unimpressive study habits resulted in a final examination score on the borderline between first and second class honours, making an &#8220;oral examination&#8221; necessary. Berman said of the oral examination:</p>
<blockquote><p><em>And of course the examiners then were intelligent enough to realize they were talking to someone far more clever than most of themselves</em>.<sup id="cite_ref-Current_Biography_1984_9-5"><a target="_blank" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Hawking#cite_note-Current_Biography_1984-9"></a></sup></p></blockquote>
<p>After receiving his B.A. degree at Oxford University in 1962, he stayed to study astronomy. He decided to leave when he found that studying sunspots, which was all the observatory was equipped for, did not appeal to him and that he was more interested in theory than in observation. He left Oxford for Trinity Hall, Cambridge, where he engaged in the study of theoretical astronomy and cosmology.</p>
<h2><span id="Career_in_theoretical_physics">Career in theoretical physics</span></h2>
<p>Almost as soon as he arrived at Cambridge, he started developing symptoms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (known colloquially in the US as Lou Gehrig&#8217;s disease), a type of motor neuron disease which would cost him almost all neuromuscular control. During his first two years at Cambridge, he did not distinguish himself, but, after the disease had stabilized and with the help of his doctoral tutor, Dennis William Sciama, he returned to working on his Ph.D.</p>
<p>Hawking was elected as one of the youngest Fellows of the Royal Society in 1974, was created a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1982, and became a Companion of Honour in 1989. Hawking is a member of the Board of Sponsors of <em>The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists</em>.</p>
<p>Hawking&#8217;s achievements were made despite the increasing paralysis caused by the ALS. By 1974, he was unable to feed himself or get out of bed. His speech became slurred so that he could only be understood by people who knew him well. In 1985, he caught pneumonia and had to have a tracheotomy, which made him unable to speak at all. A Cambridge scientist built a device that enables Hawking to write onto a computer with small movements of his body, and then have a voice synthesizer speak what he has typed.</p>
<h3><span id="Research_fields">Research fields</span></h3>
<p>Hawking&#8217;s principal fields of research are theoretical cosmology and quantum gravity.</p>
<p>In the late 1960s, he and his Cambridge friend and colleague, Roger Penrose, applied a new, complex mathematical model they had created from Albert Einstein&#8217;s general theory of relativity. This led, in 1970, to Hawking proving the first of many singularity theorems; such theorems provide a set of sufficient conditions for the existence of a singularity in space-time. This work showed that, far from being mathematical curiosities which appear only in special cases, singularities are a fairly generic feature of general relativity.</p>
<p>He supplied a mathematical proof, along with Brandon Carter, Werner Israel and D. Robinson, of John Wheeler&#8217;s &#8220;No-Hair Theorem&#8221; – namely, that any black hole is fully described by the three properties of mass, angular momentum, and electric charge.</p>
<p>Hawking also suggested that, upon analysis of gamma ray emissions, after the Big Bang, primordial mini black holes were formed. With Bardeen and Carter, he proposed the four laws of black hole mechanics, drawing an analogy with thermodynamics. In 1974, he calculated that black holes should thermally create and emit subatomic particles, known today as Hawking radiation, until they exhaust their energy and evaporate.</p>
<p>In collaboration with Jim Hartle, Hawking developed a model in which the universe had no boundary in space-time, replacing the initial singularity of the classical Big Bang models with a region akin to the North pole: One cannot travel north of the North Pole, as there is no boundary there. While originally the no-boundary proposal predicted a closed universe, discussions with Neil Turok led to the realisation that the no-boundary proposal is also consistent with a universe which is not closed.</p>
<p>Hawking&#8217;s many other scientific investigations have included the study of quantum cosmology, cosmic inflation, helium production in anisotropic Big Bang universes, large N cosmology, the density matrix of the universe, topology and structure of the universe, baby universes, Yang-Mills instantons and the S matrix, anti de Sitter space, quantum entanglement and entropy, the nature of space and time, including the arrow of time, spacetime foam, string theory, supergravity, Euclidean quantum gravity, the gravitational Hamiltonian, Brans-Dicke and Hoyle-Narlikar theories of gravitation, gravitational radiation, and wormholes.</p>
<p>At a George Washington University lecture in honour of NASA&#8217;s 50th anniversary, Prof. Hawking theorised on the existence of extraterrestrial life, believing that &#8220;primitive life is very common and intelligent life is fairly rare.&#8221;</p>
<h3><span id="Losing_an_old_bet">Losing an old bet</span></h3>
<p>Hawking was in the news in July 2004 for presenting a new theory about black holes which goes against his own long-held belief about their behaviour, thus losing a bet he made with Kip Thorne and John Preskill of Caltech. Classically, it can be shown that information crossing the event horizon of a black hole is lost to our universe, and that thus all black holes are identical beyond their mass, electrical charge and angular velocity (the &#8220;no hair theorem&#8221;). The problem with this theorem is that it implies the black hole will emit the same radiation regardless of what goes into it, and as a consequence that if a pure quantum state is thrown into a black hole, an &#8220;ordinary&#8221; mixed state will be returned. This runs counter to the rules of quantum mechanics and is known as the black hole information paradox.</p>
<h3><span id="Mankind.27s_future_in_space">Mankind&#8217;s future in space</span></h3>
<p>At the 50th Anniversary of NASA in 2008, Hawking gave a keynote speech on the final frontier exhorting and inspiring the space technology community on why we (the human race) explore space.</p>
<p>At the celebration of his 65th birthday on 8 January, 2007, Hawking announced his plan to take a zero-gravity flight in 2007 to prepare for a sub-orbital spaceflight in 2009 on Virgin Galactic&#8217;s space service. Billionaire Richard Branson pledged to pay all expenses for the latter, costing an estimated £100,000. Stephen Hawking&#8217;s zero-gravity flight in a &#8220;<em>Vomit Comet</em>&#8221; of Zero Gravity Corporation, during which he experienced weightlessness eight times, took place on 26 April 2007. He became the first quadriplegic to float in zero-gravity. This was the first time in 40 years that he moved freely, without his wheelchair. The fee is normally US$3,750 for 10–15 plunges, but Hawking was not required to pay the fee. A bit of a futurist, Hawking was quoted before the flight saying:</p>
<blockquote><p>Many people have asked me why I am taking this flight. I am doing it for many reasons. First of all, I believe that life on Earth is at an ever-increasing risk of being wiped out by a disaster such as sudden nuclear war, a genetically engineered virus, or other dangers. I think the human race has no future if it doesn&#8217;t go into space. I therefore want to encourage public interest in space.</p></blockquote>
<p>In an interview with the British newspaper <em>Telegraph</em>, he suggested that space was the Earth&#8217;s long term hope. He continued this theme at a 2008 Charlie Rose interview.</p>
<h2><span id="Illness">Illness</span></h2>
<p>Stephen Hawking is severely disabled by motor neuron disease, likely a variant of the disease known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (or ALS). Most neuromuscular specialists believe he has spinal muscular atrophy type IV. Hawking&#8217;s illness is markedly different from typical ALS in the fact that his form of ALS would make for the most protracted case ever documented. A survival for more than 10 years after diagnosis is uncommon for ALS; the longest documented durations are 32 and 39 years and these cases were termed benign because of the lack of the typical progressive course.<sup id="cite_ref-26"><a target="_blank" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Hawking#cite_note-26"></a></sup></p>
<p>When he was young, he enjoyed riding horses and playing with other children. At Oxford, he coxed a rowing team, which, he stated, helped relieve his immense boredom at the university. Symptoms of the disorder first appeared while he was enrolled at Cambridge; he lost his balance and fell down a flight of stairs, hitting his head. Worried that he would lose his genius, he took the Mensa test to verify that his intellectual abilities were intact. The diagnosis of motor neuron disease came when Hawking was 21, shortly before his first marriage, and doctors said he would not survive more than two or three years. Hawking gradually lost the use of his arms, legs, and voice, and as of 2009 was almost completely paralyzed.</p>
<p>During a visit to the research centre CERN in Geneva in 1985, Hawking contracted pneumonia, which in his condition was life-threatening as it further restricted his already limited respiratory capacity. He had an emergency tracheotomy, and as a result lost what remained of his ability to speak. He has since used an electronic voice synthesizer to communicate.</p>
<p>The DECtalk DTC01 voice synthesizer he uses, which has an American accent, is no longer being produced. Asked why he has still kept it after so many years, Hawking mentioned that he has not heard a voice he likes better and that he identifies with it. Hawking is said to be looking for a replacement since, aside from being obsolete, the synthesizer is both large and fragile by current standards. As of mid 2009, he was said to be using NeoSpeech&#8217;s VoiceText speech synthesizer.</p>
<p>In Hawking&#8217;s many media appearances, he appears to speak fluently through his synthesizer, but in reality, it is a tedious drawn-out process. Hawking&#8217;s setup uses a predictive text entry system, which requires only the first few characters in order to auto-complete the word, but as he is only able to use his cheek for data entry, constructing complete sentences takes time. His speeches are prepared in advance, but having a live conversation with him provides insight as to the complexity and work involved. During a Technology, Entertainment, &amp; Design Conference talk, it took him seven minutes to answer a question.</p>
<p>He describes himself as lucky despite his disease. Its slow progression has allowed him time to make influential discoveries and has not hindered him from having, in his own words, &#8220;a very attractive family.&#8221; When Jane was asked why she decided to marry a man with a three-year life expectancy, she responded, &#8220;Those were the days of atomic gloom and doom, so we all had a rather short life expectancy.&#8221;</p>
<p>On 20 April 2009, Cambridge University released a statement saying that Hawking was &#8220;very ill&#8221; with a chest infection, and was admitted to Addenbrooke&#8217;s Hospital. The following day, it was reported that his new condition is &#8220;comfortable&#8221; and he should make a full recovery from the infection.</p>
<p>In 2009, Investor&#8217;s Business Daily (IBD) claimed in an editorial, &#8220;People such as scientist Stephen Hawking wouldn&#8217;t have a chance in the UK, where the National Health Service would say the life of this brilliant man, because of his physical handicaps, is essentially worthless.&#8221; This caused widespread criticism, as Hawking does in fact live in the UK, and has received NHS treatment. Hawking personally replied that, &#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t be here today if it were not for the NHS,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I have received a large amount of high-quality treatment without which I would not have survived.&#8221;<sup id="cite_ref-36"><a target="_blank" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Hawking#cite_note-36"></a></sup> Eventually, IBD issued a correction,<sup id="cite_ref-37"><a target="_blank" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Hawking#cite_note-37"></a></sup> but continued to defend the original editorial, calling the mention of Hawking a &#8220;bad example&#8221; and accusing those that mentioned their error of &#8220;chang[ing] the subject.&#8221;<sup id="cite_ref-38"><a target="_blank" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Hawking#cite_note-38"></a></sup></p>
<h2><span id="As_popular_science_advocate">As popular science advocate</span></h2>
<p>Hawking has played as himself on many television shows and has been portrayed in many more. He has played himself on a <em>Red Dwarf</em> anniversary special, played a hologram of himself on the episode &#8220;Descent&#8221; of <em>Star Trek: The Next Generation</em>, appeared in a skit on <em>Late Night with Conan O&#8217;Brien</em>, and appeared on the Discovery Channel special <em>Alien Planet</em>.He has also played himself in several episodes of <em>The Simpsons</em> and <em>Futurama</em>. When he was portrayed on episodes of <em>Family Guy</em>, the voice was actually done by a speech synthesizer on a Macintosh computer, according to DVD Commentary. He has also appeared in an episode of the <em>Dilbert</em> cartoon. His actual synthesizer voice was used on parts of the Pink Floyd song &#8220;Keep Talking&#8221; from the 1994 album <em>The Division Bell</em>, as well as on Turbonegro&#8217;s &#8220;Intro: The Party Zone&#8221; on their 2005 album <em>Party Animals</em>, Wolfsheim&#8217;s &#8220;Kein Zurück (Oliver Pinelli Mix)&#8221;. As well as being fictionalised as nerdcore hip hop artist MC Hawking, he was impersonated in duet with Richard Cheese on a cover of &#8220;The Girl Is Mine&#8221;. In 2008, Hawking was the subject of and featured in the documentary series <em>Stephen Hawking, Master of the Universe</em> for Channel 4. He was also portrayed in the movie &#8220;Superhero Movie&#8221; by Robert Joy. In the TV series Dark Angel Logan&#8217;s technology savvy colleague Sebastian is characterized with many similarities to the actual physicist. In September 2008, Hawking presided over the unveiling of the &#8216;Chronophage&#8217; Corpus Clock (time eating) clock at Corpus Christi College Cambridge.<sup id="cite_ref-40"><a target="_blank" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Hawking#cite_note-40"></a></sup></p>
<h3><span id="Religious_views">Religious views</span></h3>
<p>Hawking takes an agnostic position on matters of religion. He has repeatedly used the word &#8216;God&#8217; (in metaphorical meanings) to illustrate points made in his books and public speeches. His ex-wife Jane however said he was an atheist during their divorce proceedings, Hawking has stated that he is &#8220;not religious in the normal sense&#8221; and he believes that &#8220;the universe is governed by the laws of science. The laws may have been decreed by God, but God does not intervene to break the laws.&#8221;</p>
<h2><span id="Recognition">Recognition</span></h2>
<h3><span id="Acclaim">Acclaim</span></h3>
<p>On 19 December 2007, a statue of Professor Stephen Hawking by renowned late artist Ian Walters was unveiled at the Centre for Theoretical Cosmology, Cambridge University. In May 2008 the statue of Hawking was unveiled at the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences in Cape Town. The Stephen W. Hawking Science Museum in San Salvador, El Salvador is named in honour of Stephen Hawking, citing his scientific distinction and perseverance in dealing with adversity. Stephen Hawking Building in Cambridge, opened on 17 April 2007. The building belongs to Gonville and Caius College and is used as an undergraduate accommodation and conference facility<sup id="cite_ref-48">.</sup></p>
<h3><span id="Distinctions">Distinctions</span></h3>
<p>Hawking&#8217;s belief that the lay person should have access to his work led him to write a series of popular science books in addition to his academic work. The first of these, <em>A Brief History of Time</em>, was published on 1 April 1988 by Hawking, his family and friends, and some leading physicists. It surprisingly became a best-seller and was followed by <em>The Universe in a Nutshell</em> (2001). Both books have remained highly popular all over the world. A collection of essays titled <em>Black Holes and Baby Universes</em> (1993) was also popular. His most recent book, <em>A Briefer History of Time</em> (2005), co-written by Leonard Mlodinow, aims to update his earlier works and make them accessible to an even wider audience. He and his daughter, Lucy Hawking, have recently published a children&#8217;s book focusing on science that has been described to be &#8220;like <em>Harry Potter</em>, but without the magic.&#8221; This book is called <em>George&#8217;s Secret Key to the Universe</em> and includes information on Hawking radiation.</p>
<p>Hawking is also known for his wit; he is famous for his oft-made statement, &#8220;When I hear of Schrödinger&#8217;s cat, I reach for my pistol.&#8221; This was a deliberately ironic paraphrase of &#8220;Whenever I hear the word culture&#8230; I release the safety-catch of my Browning&#8221;, from the play <em>Schlageter</em> (Act 1, Scene 1) by German playwright and Nazi Poet Laureate Hanns Johst. His wit has both entertained the non-specialist public and helped them to understand complex questions. Asked in October 2005 on the British daytime chat show Richard &amp; Judy, to explain his assertion that the question &#8220;What came before the Big Bang?&#8221; was meaningless, he compared it to asking &#8220;What lies north of the North Pole?&#8221;</p>
<p>Hawking has generally avoided talking about politics at length, but he has appeared on a political broadcast for the United Kingdom&#8217;s Labour Party. He supports the children&#8217;s charity SOS Children&#8217;s Villages UK.<sup id="cite_ref-49"><span>[</span>50<span>]</span></sup></p>
<h3><span id="Awards_and_honours">Awards and honours</span></h3>
<div style="-moz-column-width: 30em;">
<ul>
<li>1975 Eddington Medal</li>
<li>1976 Hughes Medal of the Royal Society</li>
<li>1979 Albert Einstein Medal</li>
<li>1982 Order of the British Empire (Commander)</li>
<li>1985 Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society</li>
<li>1986 Member of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences</li>
<li>1988 Wolf Prize in Physics</li>
<li>1989 Prince of Asturias Awards in Concord</li>
<li>1989 Companion of Honour</li>
<li>1999 Julius Edgar Lilienfeld Prize of the American Physical Society</li>
<li>2003 Michelson Morley Award of Case Western Reserve University</li>
<li>2006 Copley Medal of the Royal Society</li>
<li>2008 Fonseca Price of the University of Santiago de Compostela</li>
<li>2009 Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honour in the United States</li>
</ul>
</div>
<h2><span id="Personal_life"><br />
</span></h2>
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		<title>Abu Marwan Abd al-Malik ibn Zuhr, the father of experimental surgery</title>
		<link>http://scientists.penyet.net/abu-marwan-abd-al-malik-ibn-zuhr-the-father-of-experimental-surgery.html</link>
		<comments>http://scientists.penyet.net/abu-marwan-abd-al-malik-ibn-zuhr-the-father-of-experimental-surgery.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jul 2009 03:37:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>famous scientists</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Famous Scientists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Medicine Scientists]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[parasitologist]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[physician]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[surgeon]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ Ibn Zuhr was one of the greatest physicians and clinicians of the Muslim golden era and has rather been held by some historians of science as the greatest of them. Contrary to the general practice of the Muslim scholars of that era, he confined his work to only one field : medicine. This enabled [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote><p><a target="_blank" title="Abu Marwan Abd al-Malik ibn Zuhr" rel="external nofollow" href="http://images.myfilehost.us/viewer.php?id=viu1247715077j.jpg" ><img src="http://images.myfilehost.us/images/viu1247715077j.jpg" border="0" alt="Abu Marwan Abd al-Malik ibn Zuhr" hspace="5" width="176" height="247" align="left" title="Abu Marwan Abd al Malik ibn Zuhr, the father of experimental surgery" /></a> <em>Ibn Zuhr was one of the greatest physicians and clinicians of the Muslim golden era and has rather been held by some historians of science as the greatest of them. Contrary to the general practice of the Muslim scholars of that era, he confined his work to only one field : medicine. This enabled him to produce works of everlasting fame.</em></p>
<p><em>As a physician, he made several discoveries and breakthroughs. He described correctly, for the first time, scabies, the itch mite and may thus be regarded as the first parasitologist. Likewise, he prescribed tracheotomy and direct feeding through the gullet and rectum in the cases where normal feeding was not possible. He also gave clinical descriptions of mediastinal tumors, intestinal phthisis, inflammation of the middle ear, pericarditis, etc.</em></p></blockquote>
<p>Abu Marwan Abd al-Malik ibn Zuhr (Arabic: أبو مروان عبد الملك بن زهر‎) (also known as Ibn Zuhr, Avenzoar, Abumeron or Ibn-Zohr) (1091-1161) was an Arab Muslim physician, pharmacist, surgeon, parasitologist, Islamic scholar, and teacher.</p>
<h3><span>Early life</span></h3>
<p>He was born in Seville, and studied at the University of Cordoba. He belonged to the Banu Zuhr family, which produced five generations of physicians, including two female physicians who served the Almohad ruler Abu Yusuf Ya&#8217;qub al-Mansur.<sup><span> </span></sup>Ibn Zuhr was also the teacher of Averroes. He began his medical practice and training under his father, Abu&#8217;l-Ala Zuhr (<em>d.</em> 1131).</p>
<h3><span> </span><span>Flight from Seville</span></h3>
<p>Around 1130, he fell out of favour of with the Almoravid ruler, Ali bin Yusuf bin Tashufin, and fled from Seville. He was however, apprehended and jailed in Marrakesh. Later in 1147 when the Almohad dynasty conquered Seville, he returned and devoted himself to medical practice and teaching. He died at Seville in 1161.<br />
<span id="more-123"></span></p>
<h2><span> </span><span>Achievements</span></h2>
<p>He is considered the father of experimental surgery, for introducing the experimental method into surgery, introducing the methods of human dissection and autopsy, inventing the surgical procedure of tracheotomy, performing the first parenteral nutrition of humans with a silver needle, discovering the cause of scabies and inflammation, discovering the existence of parasites, and refuting the theory of four humours.</p>
<h3><span> </span><span><em>Al-Taisir</em></span></h3>
<p>Ibn Zuhr&#8217;s most famous work is his <em>Al-Taisir</em>, in which he introduced the experimental method into surgery, for which he is considered the father of experimental surgery. He was the first to employ animal testing in order to experiment with surgical procedures before applying them to human patients.  He also performed the first dissections and postmortem autopsies on humans as well as animals.</p>
<p>He invented the surgical procedure of tracheotomy, as he was the first to give a correct description of the tracheotomy operation for suffocating patients. He perfected this surgical procedure through his experiments on a goat. He also performed postmortem autopsies on a sheep during his clinical trials on the treatment of ulcerating diseases of the lungs. He also wrote on the prophylaxis against urinary tract infections and described the importance of dietary management in maintaining the prophylaxis.</p>
<p>He established surgery as an independent field of medicine, by introducing a training course designed specifically for future surgeons, in order that they be qualified before being allowed to perform operations independently, and for defining the roles of a general practitioner and a surgeon in the treatment of a surgical condition.</p>
<h3><span> </span><span><em>The Method of Preparing Medicines and Diet</em></span></h3>
<p>He performed the first parenteral nutrition of humans with a silver needle, and wrote a book on it entitled <em>The Method of Preparing Medicines and Diet</em>.</p>
<h3><span> </span><span>Anatomy, Physiology, Etiology and Parasitology</span></h3>
<p>During his medical experiments on anatomy and physiology, Ibn Zuhr was the first physician known to have carried out human dissection and postmortem autopsy. He proved that the skin disease scabies was caused by a parasite, which contradicted the erroneous theory of four humours supported by Hippocrates, Galen and Avicenna. The removal of the parasite from the patient&#8217;s body did not involve purging, bleeding or any other traditional treatments associated with the four humours. His works show that he was often highly critical of previous medical authorities, including Avicenna&#8217;s <em>The Canon of Medicine</em>.</p>
<p>He was one of the first physicians to reject the erroneous theory of four humours, which dates back to Hippocrates and Galen. Avenzoar also confirmed the presence of blood in the body.</p>
<p>Ibn Zuhr was also the first to provide a real scientific etiology for the inflammatory diseases of the ear, and the first to clearly discuss the causes of stridor. He also proved that the skin disease scabies was caused by a parasite.</p>
<h3><span> </span><span>Anesthesiology</span></h3>
<p>In anesthesiology, modern anesthesia was developed in Islamic Spain by the Muslim anesthesiologists Ibn Zuhr and Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi. They were the first to utilize oral as well as inhalant anesthetics, and they performed hundreds of surgeries under inhalant anesthesia with the use of narcotic-soaked sponges which were placed over the face.</p>
<h3><span> </span><span>Neurology and Neuropharmacology</span></h3>
<p>Ibn Zuhr gave the first accurate descriptions on neurological disorders, including meningitis, intracranial thrombophlebitis, and mediastinal tumours, and made contributions to modern neuropharmacology.</p>
<h3><span> </span><span>Pharmacopoeia and drug therapy</span></h3>
<p>Ibn Zuhr wrote an early pharmacopoeia, which later became the first Arabic book to be printed with a movable type in 1491.</p>
<p>Ibn Zuhr (and other Muslim physicians such as al-Kindi, Ibn Sahl, Abulcasis, al-Biruni, Avicenna, Averroes, Ibn al-Baitar, Ibn Al-Jazzar and Ibn al-Nafis) developed drug therapy and medicinal drugs for the treatment of specific symptoms and diseases. His use of practical experience and careful observation was extensive.</p>
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		<title>Isaac Newton &#8211; The Most Famous Physics Scientist</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Dec 2008 15:28:40 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Isaac Newton was born on 4 January 1643  at Woolsthorpe Manor in Woolsthorpe-by-Colsterworth, a hamlet in the county of Lincolnshire. At the time of Newton's birth, England had not adopted the latest papal calendar and therefore his date of birth was recorded as Christmas Day, 25 December 1642. Newton was born three months after the death of his father. Born prematurely, he was a small child; his mother Hannah Ayscough reportedly said that he could have fit inside a quart mug. When Newton was three, his mother remarried and went to live with her new husband, the Reverend Barnabus Smith, leaving her son in the care of his maternal grandmother, Margery Ayscough. The young Isaac disliked his stepfather and held some enmity towards his mother for marrying him, as revealed by this entry in a list of sins committed up to the age of 19]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/39/GodfreyKneller-IsaacNewton-1689.jpg/225px-GodfreyKneller-IsaacNewton-1689.jpg" alt="Sir Isaac Newton" hspace="5" align="left" title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" /></p>
<blockquote><p><em>English physicist and mathematician who was born into a poor farming family. Luckily for humanity, Newton was not a good farmer, and was sent to Cambridge to study to become a preacher. At Cambridge, Newton studied mathematics, being especially strongly influenced by Euclid, although he was also influenced by Baconian and Cartesian philosophies. Newton was forced to leave Cambridge when it was closed because of the plague, and it was during this period that he made some of his most significant discoveries. With the reticence he was to show later in life, Newton did not, however, publish his results.<br />
</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>Sir Isaac Newton</strong>, FRS (4 January 1643 - 31 March 1727 was an <strong>English physicist, mathematician, astronomer, natural philosopher, alchemist, theologian </strong>and one of the most influential men in <span class="mw-redirect">human history</span>. His <strong><em>Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica</em></strong>, published in 1687, is considered to be the most influential book in the history of science. In this work, Newton described <span class="mw-redirect">universal gravitation</span> and the three laws of motion, laying the groundwork for classical mechanics, which dominated the scientific view of the physical universe for the next three centuries and is the basis for modern engineering. Newton showed that the motions of objects on Earth and of celestial bodies are governed by the same set of natural laws by demonstrating the consistency between Kepler&#8217;s laws of planetary motion and his theory of gravitation, thus removing the last doubts about heliocentrism and advancing the <span class="mw-redirect">scientific revolution</span>.<br />
In mechanics, Newton enunciated the principles of conservation of momentum and angular momentum. In optics, he built the first &#8220;practical&#8221; reflecting telescope<sup id="cite_ref-5" class="reference"><span>[</span>6<span>]</span></sup> and developed a theory of <span class="mw-redirect">colour</span> based on the observation that a <span class="mw-redirect">prism</span> decomposes white light into a visible spectrum. He also formulated an empirical <span class="mw-redirect">law of cooling</span> and studied the speed of sound.</p>
<p>In mathematics, Newton shares the credit with Gottfried Leibniz for the development of the differential and integral calculus. He also demonstrated the generalised binomial theorem, developed the so-called &#8220;Newton&#8217;s method&#8221; for approximating the zeroes of a function, and contributed to the study of power series.</p>
<p><span id="more-87"></span>Newton was also highly religious (though unorthodox), producing more work on Biblical hermeneutics than the natural science he is remembered for today.</p>
<p>Newton&#8217;s stature among scientists remains at the very top rank, as demonstrated by a 2005 survey of scientists in Britain&#8217;s Royal Society asking who had the greater effect on the history of science, Newton was deemed much more influential than Albert Einstein.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Biography</span></h2>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Early years</span></h3>
<p>Isaac Newton was born on 4 January 1643  at Woolsthorpe Manor in Woolsthorpe-by-Colsterworth, a hamlet in the county of Lincolnshire. At the time of Newton&#8217;s birth, England had not adopted the latest papal calendar and therefore his date of birth was recorded as Christmas Day, 25 December 1642. Newton was born three months after the death of his father. Born prematurely, he was a small child; his mother <span class="mw-redirect">Hannah Ayscough</span> reportedly said that he could have fit inside a quart mug. When Newton was three, his mother remarried and went to live with her new husband, the Reverend Barnabus Smith, leaving her son in the care of his maternal grandmother, Margery Ayscough. The young Isaac disliked his stepfather and held some enmity towards his mother for marrying him, as revealed by this entry in a list of sins committed up to the age of 19: <em>Threatening my father and mother Smith to burn them and the house over them.</em></p>
<p>According to E.T. Bell and H. Eves:</p>
<blockquote><p>Newton began his schooling in the village schools and was later sent to The King&#8217;s School, Grantham, where he became the top student in the school. At King&#8217;s, he lodged with the local apothecary, William Clarke and eventually became engaged to the apothecary&#8217;s stepdaughter, Anne Storer, before he went off to the University of Cambridge at the age of 19. As Newton became engrossed in his studies, the romance cooled and Miss Storer married someone else. It is said he kept a warm memory of this love, but Newton had no other recorded &#8220;sweet-hearts&#8221; and never married.</p></blockquote>
<p>There are rumours that he remained a confirmed celibate. However, Bell and Eves&#8217; sources for this claim, William Stukeley and Mrs. Vincent (the former Miss Storer - actually named Katherine, not Anne), merely say that Newton entertained &#8220;a passion&#8221; for Storer while he lodged at the Clarke house.</p>
<p>From the age of about twelve until he was seventeen, Newton was educated at The King&#8217;s School, Grantham (where his signature can still be seen upon a library window sill). He was removed from school, and by October 1659, he was to be found at Woolsthorpe-by-Colsterworth, where his mother, widowed by now for a second time, attempted to make a farmer of him. He hated farming. Henry Stokes, master at the King&#8217;s School, persuaded his mother to send him back to school so that he might complete his education. This he did at the age of eighteen, achieving an admirable final report.</p>
<p>In June 1661, he was admitted to Trinity College, Cambridge. According to John Stillwell, he entered Trinity as a sizar.<sup id="cite_ref-10" class="reference"><span>[</span>11<span>]</span></sup> At that time, the college&#8217;s teachings were based on those of Aristotle, but Newton preferred to read the more advanced ideas of modern philosophers such as Descartes and <span class="mw-redirect">astronomers</span> such as Copernicus, Galileo, and Kepler. In 1665, he discovered the generalised binomial theorem and began to develop a mathematical theory that would later become infinitesimal calculus. Soon after Newton had obtained his degree in August of 1665, the University closed down as a precaution against the Great Plague. Although he had been undistinguished as a Cambridge student,<sup id="cite_ref-11" class="reference"><span> </span></sup>Newton&#8217;s private studies at his home in Woolsthorpe over the subsequent two years saw the development of his theories on calculus, optics and the <span class="mw-redirect">law of gravitation</span>.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Middle years</span></h3>
<h4><span class="mw-headline">Mathematics</span></h4>
<p>Most modern historians believe that Newton and <span class="mw-redirect">Leibniz</span> developed infinitesimal calculus independently, using their own unique notations. According to Newton&#8217;s inner circle, Newton had worked out his method years before Leibniz, yet he published almost nothing about it until 1693, and did not give a full account until 1704. Meanwhile, Leibniz began publishing a full account of his methods in 1684. Moreover, Leibniz&#8217;s notation and &#8220;differential Method&#8221; were universally adopted on the Continent, and after 1820 or so, in the British Empire. Whereas Leibniz&#8217;s notebooks show the advancement of the ideas from early stages until maturity, there is only the end product in Newton&#8217;s known notes. Newton claimed that he had been reluctant to publish his calculus because he feared being mocked for it. Newton had a very close relationship with Swiss mathematician Nicolas Fatio de Duillier, who from the beginning was impressed by Newton&#8217;s <span class="mw-redirect">gravitational theory</span>. In 1691 Duillier planned to prepare a new version of Newton&#8217;s <em><span class="mw-redirect">Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica</span></em>, but never finished it. However, in 1694 the relationship between the two men changed. At the time, Duillier had also exchanged several letters with Leibniz<sup class="noprint Template-Fact"><span style="white-space: nowrap;" title="This claim needs references to reliable sources since November 2008">[<em>citation needed</em>]</span></sup>.</p>
<p>Starting in 1699, other members of the Royal Society (of which Newton was a member) accused Leibniz of plagiarism, and the dispute broke out in full force in 1711. Newton&#8217;s Royal Society proclaimed in a study that it was Newton who was the true discoverer and labeled Leibniz a fraud. This study was cast into doubt when it was later found that Newton himself wrote the study&#8217;s concluding remarks on Leibniz. Thus began the bitter <span class="mw-redirect">Newton v. Leibniz calculus controversy</span>, which marred the lives of both Newton and Leibniz until the latter&#8217;s death in 1716.</p>
<p>Newton is generally credited with the generalised binomial theorem, valid for any exponent. He discovered Newton&#8217;s identities, Newton&#8217;s method, classified cubic plane curves (<span class="mw-redirect">polynomials</span> of degree three in two <span class="mw-redirect">variables</span>), made substantial contributions to the theory of <span class="mw-redirect">finite differences</span>, and was the first to use fractional indices and to employ <span class="mw-redirect">coordinate geometry</span> to derive solutions to <span class="mw-redirect">Diophantine equations</span>. He approximated partial sums of the harmonic series by <span class="mw-redirect">logarithms</span> (a precursor to <span class="mw-redirect">Euler&#8217;s summation formula</span>), and was the first to use power series with confidence and to revert power series. He also discovered a new formula for calculating pi.</p>
<p>He was elected Lucasian Professor of Mathematics in 1669. In that day, any fellow of Cambridge or Oxford had to be an ordained Anglican priest. However, the terms of the Lucasian professorship required that the holder <em>not</em> be active in the church (presumably so as to have more time for science). Newton argued that this should exempt him from the ordination requirement, and Charles II, whose permission was needed, accepted this argument. Thus a conflict between Newton&#8217;s religious views and Anglican orthodoxy was averted.</p>
<h4><span class="mw-headline">Optics</span></h4>
<p>From 1670 to 1672, Newton lectured on optics. During this period he investigated the refraction of light, demonstrating that a <span class="mw-redirect">prism</span> could decompose white light into a <span class="mw-redirect">spectrum</span> of colours, and that a lens and a second prism could recompose the multicoloured spectrum into white light.</p>
<p>He also showed that the coloured light does not change its properties by separating out a coloured beam and shining it on various objects. Newton noted that regardless of whether it was reflected or scattered or transmitted, it stayed the same colour. Thus, he observed that colour is the result of objects interacting with already-coloured light rather than objects generating the colour themselves. This is known as Newton&#8217;s theory of colour.</p>
<div class="thumb tright">
<div class="thumbinner" style="width: 182px;"><span class="image"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cc/NewtonsTelescopeReplica.jpg/180px-NewtonsTelescopeReplica.jpg" border="0" alt="180px NewtonsTelescopeReplica Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" width="180" height="157" title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" /></span></p>
<div class="thumbcaption">
<p>A replica of Newton&#8217;s 6-inch (150 mm) reflecting telescope of 1672 for the Royal Society</p></div>
</div>
</div>
<p>From this work he concluded that any refracting telescope would suffer from the dispersion of light into colours (chromatic aberration), and invented a type reflecting telescope (today known as a Newtonian telescope) to bypass that problem. By grinding his own mirrors, using Newton&#8217;s rings to judge the quality of the optics for his telescopes, he was able to produce a superior instrument to the refracting telescope, due primarily to the wider diameter of the mirror. In 1671 the Royal Society asked for a demonstration of his reflecting telescope. Their interest encouraged him to publish his notes <em>On Colour</em>, which he later expanded into his <em>Opticks</em>. When Robert Hooke criticised some of Newton&#8217;s ideas, Newton was so offended that he withdrew from public debate. The two men remained enemies until Hooke&#8217;s death.</p>
<p>Newton argued that light is composed of particles or <em>corpuscles,</em> which were refracted by accelerating toward the denser medium, but he had to associate them with waves to explain the diffraction of light (<em>Opticks</em> Bk. II, Props. XII-L). Later physicists instead favoured a purely wavelike explanation of light to account for diffraction. Today&#8217;s quantum mechanics, <span class="mw-redirect">photons</span> and the idea of wave-particle duality bear only a minor resemblance to Newton&#8217;s understanding of light.</p>
<p>In his <em>Hypothesis of Light</em> of 1675, Newton <span class="extiw">posited</span> the existence of the ether to transmit forces between particles. The contact with the <span class="mw-redirect">theosophist</span> Henry More, revived his interest in alchemy. He replaced the ether with occult forces based on Hermetic ideas of attraction and repulsion between particles. John Maynard Keynes, who acquired many of Newton&#8217;s writings on alchemy, stated that &#8220;Newton was not the first of the age of reason: he was the last of the magicians.&#8221; Newton&#8217;s interest in alchemy cannot be isolated from his contributions to science. (This was at a time when there was no clear distinction between alchemy and science.) Had he not relied on the occult idea of action at a distance, across a vacuum, he might not have developed his theory of gravity. (See also Isaac Newton&#8217;s occult studies.)</p>
<p>In 1704 Newton published <em>Opticks</em>, in which he expounded his corpuscular theory of light. He considered light to be made up of extremely subtle corpuscles, that ordinary matter was made of grosser corpuscles and speculated that through a kind of alchemical transmutation &#8220;Are not gross Bodies and Light convertible into one another, &#8230;and may not Bodies receive much of their Activity from the Particles of Light which enter their Composition?&#8221; Newton also constructed a primitive form of a frictional electrostatic generator, using a glass globe (Optics, 8th Query).</p>
<h4><span class="mw-headline">Mechanics and gravitation</span></h4>
<div class="thumb tright">
<div class="thumbinner" style="width: 182px;"><a target="_blank" class="image" title="Newton's own copy of his Principia, with hand-written corrections for the second edition" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:NewtonsPrincipia.jpg"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/41/NewtonsPrincipia.jpg/180px-NewtonsPrincipia.jpg" border="0" alt="180px NewtonsPrincipia Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" width="180" height="120" title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" /></a></p>
<div class="thumbcaption">
<p>Newton&#8217;s own copy of his Principia, with hand-written corrections for the second edition</p></div>
</div>
</div>
<p>In 1677, Newton returned to his work on mechanics, i.e., gravitation and its effect on the orbits of planets, with reference to <span class="mw-redirect">Kepler&#8217;s laws</span> of planetary motion, and consulting with Hooke and Flamsteed on the subject. He published his results in <em>De motu corporum in gyrum</em> (1684). This contained the beginnings of the laws of motion that would inform the <em>Principia</em>.</p>
<p>The <em><span class="mw-redirect">Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica</span></em> (now known as the <em>Principia</em>) was published on 5 July 1687 with encouragement and financial help from Edmond Halley. In this work Newton stated the three universal laws of motion that were not to be improved upon for more than two hundred years. He used the Latin word <em>gravitas</em> (weight) for the effect that would become known as <span class="mw-redirect">gravity</span>, and defined the law of <span class="mw-redirect">universal gravitation</span>. In the same work he presented the first analytical determination, based on Boyle&#8217;s law, of the speed of sound in air. Newton&#8217;s postulate of an invisible force able to act over vast distances led to him being criticised for introducing &#8220;occult agencies&#8221; into science<sup id="cite_ref-15" class="reference">.</sup></p>
<p>With the <em>Principia</em>, Newton became internationally recognised. He acquired a circle of admirers, including the Swiss-born mathematician Nicolas Fatio de Duillier, with whom he formed an intense relationship that lasted until 1693. The end of this friendship led Newton to a <span class="mw-redirect">nervous breakdown</span>.<sup class="noprint Inline-Template"><span style="white-space: nowrap;" title="The text in the vicinity of this tag needs clarification or removal of jargon since November 2008">[<em>clarification needed</em>]</span></sup><sup class="noprint Inline-Template"><span style="white-space: nowrap;">[<em>citation needed</em>]</span></sup></p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Later life</span></h3>
<p>In the 1690s, Newton wrote a number of <span class="mw-redirect">religious tracts</span> dealing with the literal interpretation of the Bible. Henry More&#8217;s belief in the universe and rejection of <span class="mw-redirect">Cartesian dualism</span> may have influenced Newton&#8217;s religious ideas. A manuscript he sent to John Locke in which he disputed the existence of the Trinity was never published. Later works - <em><span class="mw-redirect">The Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms Amended</span></em> (1728) and <em>Observations Upon the Prophecies of Daniel and the Apocalypse of St. John</em> (1733) - were published after his death. He also devoted a great deal of time to alchemy (see above).</p>
<p>Newton was also a member of the Parliament of England from 1689 to 1690 and in 1701, but his only recorded comments were to complain about a cold draught in the chamber and request that the window be closed.</p>
<p>Newton moved to London to take up the post of warden of the Royal Mint in 1696, a position that he had obtained through the patronage of Charles Montagu, 1st Earl of Halifax, then Chancellor of the Exchequer. He took charge of England&#8217;s great recoining, somewhat treading on the toes of Master Lucas (and securing the job of deputy comptroller of the temporary Chester branch for Edmond Halley). Newton became perhaps the best-known Master of the Mint upon Lucas&#8217; death in 1699, a position Newton held until his death. These appointments were intended as sinecures, but Newton took them seriously, retiring from his Cambridge duties in 1701, and exercising his power to reform the currency and punish clippers and counterfeiters. As Master of the Mint in 1717 Newton unofficially moved the <span class="mw-redirect">Pound Sterling</span> from the silver standard to the gold standard by creating a relationship between gold coins and the silver penny in the &#8220;Law of Queen Anne&#8221;; these were all great reforms at the time, adding considerably to the wealth and stability of England. It was his work at the Mint, rather than his earlier contributions to science, that earned him a <span class="mw-redirect">knighthood</span> from Queen Anne in 1705.</p>
<p>Newton was made President of the Royal Society in 1703 and an associate of the French Academie des Sciences. In his position at the Royal Society, Newton made an enemy of John Flamsteed, the Astronomer Royal, by prematurely publishing Flamsteed&#8217;s star catalogue, which Newton had used in his studies.</p>
<p>Newton died in London on 31 March 1727 and was buried in Westminster Abbey. His half-niece, <span class="mw-redirect">Catherine Barton Conduitt</span>, served as his hostess in social affairs at his house on Jermyn Street in London; he was her &#8220;very loving Uncle,&#8221;<sup id="cite_ref-17" class="reference"><span> </span></sup>according to his letter to her when she was recovering from smallpox. Although Newton, who had no children, had divested much of his estate onto relatives in his last years, he actually died intestate.</p>
<p>After his death, Newton&#8217;s body was discovered to have had massive amounts of mercury in it, probably resulting from his alchemical pursuits. Mercury poisoning could explain Newton&#8217;s eccentricity in late life.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Religious views</span></h2>
<p>Historian Stephen D. Snobelen says of Newton, &#8220;Isaac Newton was a heretic. But like Nicodemus, the secret disciple of Jesus, he never made a public declaration of his private faith &#8211; which the orthodox would have deemed extremely radical. He hid his faith so well that scholars are still unravelling his personal beliefs.&#8221;Snobelen concludes that Newton was at least a <span class="mw-redirect">Socinian</span> sympathiser (he owned and had thoroughly read at least eight Socinian books), possibly an Arian and almost certainly an <span class="mw-redirect">antitrinitarian</span>.<sup id="cite_ref-heretic_19-1" class="reference"><span> </span></sup>In an age notable for its religious intolerance there are few public expressions of Newton&#8217;s radical views, most notably his refusal to take holy orders and his refusal, on his death bed, to take the sacrament when it was offered to him.</p>
<p>In a view disputed by Snobelen,<sup id="cite_ref-heretic_19-3" class="reference"><span> </span></sup>T.C. Pfizenmaier argues that Newton held the Eastern Orthodox view of the Trinity rather than the Western one held by <span class="mw-redirect">Roman Catholics</span>, <span class="mw-redirect">Anglicans</span>, and most <span class="mw-redirect">Protestants</span>.<sup id="cite_ref-20" class="reference"><span>[</span>21<span>]</span></sup> In his own day, he was also accused of being a Rosicrucian (as were many in the Royal Society and in the court of Charles II).</p>
<p>Although the laws of motion and universal gravitation became Newton&#8217;s best-known discoveries, he warned against using them to view the universe as a mere machine, as if akin to a great clock. He said, &#8220;Gravity explains the motions of the planets, but it cannot explain who set the planets in motion. God governs all things and knows all that is or can be done.&#8221;</p>
<p>His scientific fame notwithstanding, Newton&#8217;s studies of the Bible and of the early Church Fathers were also noteworthy. Newton wrote works on textual criticism, most notably <em>An Historical Account of Two Notable Corruptions of Scripture</em>. He also placed the crucifixion of <span class="mw-redirect">Jesus Christ</span> at 3 April, AD 33, which agrees with one traditionally accepted date. He also attempted, unsuccessfully, to find hidden messages within the Bible.</p>
<p>In his own lifetime, Newton wrote more on religion than he did on natural science. He believed in a rationally immanent world, but he rejected the hylozoism implicit in <span class="mw-redirect">Leibniz</span> and Baruch Spinoza. Thus, the ordered and dynamically informed universe could be understood, and must be understood, by an active reason, but this universe, to be perfect and ordained, had to be regular.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Newton&#8217;s effect on religious thought</span></h3>
<p>Newton and Robert Boyle&#8217;s mechanical philosophy was promoted by <span class="mw-redirect">rationalist</span> pamphleteers as a viable alternative to the pantheists and enthusiasts, and was accepted hesitantly by orthodox preachers as well as dissident preachers like the latitudinarians.<sup id="cite_ref-24" class="reference"><span>[</span>25<span>]</span></sup> Thus, the clarity and simplicity of science was seen as a way to combat the emotional and metaphysical superlatives of both superstitious enthusiasm and the threat of atheism,<sup id="cite_ref-25" class="reference"><span> </span></sup>and, at the same time, the second wave of English deists used Newton&#8217;s discoveries to demonstrate the possibility of a &#8220;Natural Religion.&#8221;</p>
<p>The attacks made against pre-Enlightenment &#8220;magical thinking,&#8221; and the mystical elements of Christianity, were given their foundation with Boyle&#8217;s mechanical conception of the universe. Newton gave Boyle&#8217;s ideas their completion through mathematical proofs and, perhaps more importantly, was very successful in popularising them. Newton refashioned the world governed by an interventionist God into a world crafted by a God that designs along rational and universal principles. These principles were available for all people to discover, allowed people to pursue their own aims fruitfully in this life, not the next, and to perfect themselves with their own rational powers.</p>
<p>Newton saw God as the master creator whose existence could not be denied in the face of the grandeur of all creation.<sup id="cite_ref-29" class="reference"><span> </span></sup>But the unforeseen theological consequence of his conception of God, as Leibniz pointed out, was that God was now entirely removed from the world&#8217;s affairs, since the need for intervention would only evidence some imperfection in God&#8217;s creation, something impossible for a perfect and <span class="mw-redirect">omnipotent</span> creator. Leibniz&#8217;s theodicy cleared God from the responsibility for <em>&#8220;l&#8217;origine du mal&#8221;</em> by making God removed from participation in his creation. The understanding of the world was now brought down to the level of simple human reason, and humans, as Odo Marquard argued, became responsible for the correction and elimination of evil.</p>
<p>On the other hand, latitudinarian and Newtonian ideas taken too far resulted in the <span class="mw-redirect">millenarians</span>, a religious faction dedicated to the concept of a mechanical universe, but finding in it the same enthusiasm and mysticism that the Enlightenment had fought so hard to extinguish.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Views of the end of the world</span></h3>
<dl></dl>
<p>In a manuscript he wrote in 1704 in which he describes his attempts to extract scientific information from the Bible, he estimated that the world would end no earlier than 2060. In predicting this he said, &#8220;This I mention not to assert when the time of the end shall be, but to put a stop to the rash conjectures of fanciful men who are frequently predicting the time of the end, and by doing so bring the sacred prophesies into discredit as often as their predictions fail.&#8221;</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Newton and the counterfeiters</span></h2>
<p>As warden of the Royal Mint, Newton estimated that 20% of the coins taken in during The Great Recoinage were counterfeit. Counterfeiting was high treason, punishable by being hanged, drawn and quartered. Despite this, convictions of the most flagrant criminals could be extremely difficult to achieve; however, Newton proved to be equal to the task.</p>
<p>Disguised as an habitue of bars and taverns, he gathered much of that evidence himself. For all the barriers placed to prosecution, and separating the branches of government, English law still had ancient and formidable customs of authority. Newton was made a <span class="mw-redirect">justice of the peace</span> and between June 1698 and Christmas 1699 conducted some 200 cross-examinations of witnesses, informers and suspects. Newton won his convictions and in February 1699, he had ten prisoners waiting to be executed.</p>
<p>Possibly Newton&#8217;s greatest triumph as the king&#8217;s attorney was against William Chaloner. One of Chaloner&#8217;s schemes was to set up phony conspiracies of Catholics and then turn in the hapless conspirators whom he entrapped. Chaloner made himself rich enough to posture as a gentleman. Petitioning Parliament, Chaloner accused the Mint of providing tools to counterfeiters (a charge also made by others). He proposed that he be allowed to inspect the Mint&#8217;s processes in order to improve them. He petitioned Parliament to adopt his plans for a coinage that could not be counterfeited, while at the same time striking false coins. Newton was outraged, and went about the work to uncover anything about Chaloner. During his studies, he found that Chaloner was engaged in counterfeiting. He immediately put Chaloner on trial, but Chaloner had friends in high places and, to Newton&#8217;s horror, Chaloner walked free. Newton put him on trial a second time with conclusive evidence. Chaloner was convicted of high treason and hanged, drawn and quartered on 23 March 1699 at Tyburn gallows.<sup id="cite_ref-36" class="reference"><a target="_blank" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Newton#cite_note-36"></a></sup></p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Enlightenment philosophers</span></h2>
<p>Enlightenment philosophers chose a short history of scientific predecessors-Galileo, Boyle, and Newton principally-as the guides and guarantors of their applications of the singular concept of Nature and Natural Law to every physical and social field of the day. In this respect, the lessons of history and the social structures built upon it could be discarded.</p>
<p>It was Newton&#8217;s conception of the universe based upon Natural and rationally understandable laws that became the seed for Enlightenment ideology. Locke and Voltaire applied concepts of Natural Law to political systems advocating intrinsic rights; the <span class="mw-redirect">physiocrats</span> and Adam Smith applied Natural conceptions of psychology and self-interest to economic systems and the sociologists criticised the current social order for trying to fit history into Natural models of progress. <span class="mw-redirect">Monboddo</span> and Samuel Clarke resisted elements of Newton&#8217;s work, but eventually rationalised it to conform with their strong religious views of nature.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Newton&#8217;s laws of motion</span></h2>
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<td><strong>Classical mechanics</strong></td>
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<div style="padding-top: 7px; padding-bottom: 4px;"><img class="tex" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/d/d/7/dd7abfc26ac768881a1c393f4cb49b88.png" alt="\vec{F}=\frac{\mathrm{d}}{\mathrm{d}t}(m \vec{v})" title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" /><br />
<small><small>Newton&#8217;s Second Law</small></small></div>
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<p>The famous three laws of motion:</p>
<p><em>Newton&#8217;s First Law</em> (also known as the Law of Inertia) states that an object at rest tends to stay at rest and that an object in uniform motion tends to stay in uniform motion unless acted upon by a net external force.</p>
<p><em>Newton&#8217;s Second Law</em> states that an applied force, <img class="tex" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/5/6/6/566a7b372e5cd9cf7b0dd04cac8e50ad.png" alt="\scriptstyle{\vec{F}}" title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" />, on an object equals the rate of change of its momentum, <img class="tex" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/7/e/6/7e6749c214addbd1bbdbca0390797740.png" alt="\scriptstyle{\vec{p}}" title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" />, with time. Mathematically, this is expressed as</p>
<dl>
<dd><img class="tex" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/0/8/1/0817d8e9e7d3fa74675f35d456b750af.png" alt=" \vec F=\frac{d\vec p}{dt} \,=\, \frac{d}{dt} (m \vec v) \,=\, \vec v \, \frac{dm}{dt} + m \, \frac{d\vec v}{dt} \,." title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" /></dd>
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<p>Because this relation only holds when the mass is constant, that is, when <img class="tex" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/1/8/7/1870ee2ad34efb69f2996a30cf32297a.png" alt="\scriptstyle{dm/dt=0}" title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" />, the first term vanishes, and the equation can be written in the iconic form</p>
<dl>
<dd><img class="tex" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/1/8/4/18420b4175aa9bf7cda3b83fc34e2637.png" alt=" \vec F=m \, \vec a \,," title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" /></dd>
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<p>where</p>
<dl>
<dd><img class="tex" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/d/e/7/de75a42001cdbe9e4907df502f3f30aa.png" alt="\vec{a}=\frac{d\vec{v}}{dt}\,." title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" /></dd>
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<p>This equation states that a force <img class="tex" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/5/6/6/566a7b372e5cd9cf7b0dd04cac8e50ad.png" alt="\scriptstyle{\vec{F}}" title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" /> applied to an object of mass <span class="texhtml"><em>m</em></span> causes it to accelerate at a rate <img class="tex" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/math/c/b/3/cb3d47cce38dd9be56cde641b3b3c89e.png" alt="\scriptstyle{\vec{a}}" title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" />.</p>
<p>This equality requires a consistent set of units for measuring mass, length, and time. One such set is the <span class="mw-redirect">SI</span> system, where mass is in <span class="mw-redirect">kilograms</span>, length in <span class="mw-redirect">metres</span>, and time in <span class="mw-redirect">seconds</span>. This leads to force being in <span class="mw-redirect">newtons</span>, named in his honour, and acceleration in metres per second per second. The English analogous system is slugs, feet, and <span class="mw-redirect">seconds</span>.</p>
<p><em>Newton&#8217;s Third Law</em> states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. This means that any force exerted onto an object has a counterpart force that is exerted in the opposite direction back onto the first object. The most common example is of two <span class="mw-redirect">ice skaters</span> pushing against each other and sliding apart in opposite directions. Another example is the recoil of a firearm, in which the force propelling the bullet is exerted equally back onto the gun and is felt by the shooter. Since the objects in question do not necessarily have the same mass, the resulting acceleration of the two objects can be different (as in the case of firearm recoil).</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Newton&#8217;s apple</span></h2>
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<div class="thumbimage"><span class="image"><img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2d/Newton%27s_tree%2C_Botanic_Gardens%2C_Cambridge.JPG/150px-Newton%27s_tree%2C_Botanic_Gardens%2C_Cambridge.JPG" border="0" alt="Reputed descendants of Newton's apple tree, at the Botanic Gardens in Cambridge and the Instituto Balseiro library garden" width="150" height="199" title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" /></span></div>
<p><span style="display: block; height: 2px; font-size: 1px;"> </span></p>
<div class="thumbimage"><span class="image"><img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/f/f2/Newtons_apple.jpg/150px-Newtons_apple.jpg" border="0" alt="Reputed descendants of Newton's apple tree, at the Botanic Gardens in Cambridge and the Instituto Balseiro library garden" width="150" height="113" title="Isaac Newton   The Most Famous Physics Scientist" /></span></div>
<div class="thumbcaption">Reputed descendants of Newton&#8217;s apple tree, at the Botanic Gardens in Cambridge and the Instituto Balseiro library garden</div>
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<td style="padding: 4px 10px;" valign="top">When Newton saw an apple fall, he found<br />
In that slight startle from his contemplation -<br />
&#8216;Tis said (for I&#8217;ll not answer above ground<br />
For any sage&#8217;s creed or calculation) -<br />
A mode of proving that the earth turn&#8217;d round<br />
In a most natural whirl, called &#8220;gravitation;&#8221;<br />
And this is the sole mortal who could grapple,<br />
Since Adam, with a fall or with an apple.</td>
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<p>Newton himself often told that story that he was inspired to formulate his theory of gravitation by watching the fall of an apple from a tree. It fell straight down&#8211;why was that, he asked?</p>
<p>Cartoons have gone further to suggest the apple actually hit Newton&#8217;s head, and that its impact somehow made him aware of the force of gravity. We know from his notebooks that Newton was grappling in the late 1660s with the idea that terrestrial gravity extends, in an inverse-square proportion, to the Moon; however it took him two decades to develop the full-fledged theory.<sup id="cite_ref-39" class="reference"><a target="_blank" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Newton#cite_note-39"><span> </span></a></sup>John Conduitt, Newton&#8217;s assistant at the Royal Mint and husband of Newton&#8217;s niece, described the event when he wrote about Newton&#8217;s life:</p>
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<td style="padding: 4px 10px;" valign="top">In the year 1666 he retired again from Cambridge to his mother in Lincolnshire. Whilst he was pensively meandering in a garden it came into his thought that the power of gravity (which brought an apple from a tree to the ground) was not limited to a certain distance from earth, but that this power must extend much further than was usually thought. Why not as high as the Moon said he to himself &amp; if so, that must influence her motion &amp; perhaps retain her in her orbit, whereupon he fell a calculating what would be the effect of that supposition.</td>
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<p>The question was not whether gravity existed, but whether it extended so far from Earth that it could also be the force holding the moon to its orbit. Newton showed that if the force decreased as the inverse square of the distance, one could indeed calculate the Moon&#8217;s orbital period, and get good agreement. He guessed the same force was responsible for other orbital motions, and hence named it &#8220;universal gravitation&#8221;.</p>
<p>A contemporary writer, William Stukeley, recorded in his <em>Memoirs of Sir Isaac Newton&#8217;s Life</em> a conversation with Newton in Kensington on 15 April 1726, in which Newton recalled &#8220;when formerly, the notion of gravitation came into his mind. It was occasioned by the fall of an apple, as he sat in contemplative mood. Why should that apple always descend perpendicularly to the ground, thought he to himself. Why should it not go sideways or upwards, but constantly to the earth&#8217;s centre.&#8221; In similar terms, Voltaire wrote in his <em>Essay on Epic Poetry</em> (1727), &#8220;Sir Isaac Newton walking in his gardens, had the first thought of his system of gravitation, upon seeing an apple falling from a tree.&#8221; These accounts are probably exaggerations of Newton&#8217;s own tale about sitting by a window in his home (Woolsthorpe Manor) and watching an apple fall from a tree.</p>
<p>Various trees are claimed to be &#8220;the&#8221; apple tree which Newton describes. The King&#8217;s School, Grantham, claims that the tree was purchased by the school, uprooted and transported to the headmaster&#8217;s garden some years later, the staff of the [now] National Trust-owned Woolsthorpe Manor dispute this, and claim that a tree present in their gardens is the one described by Newton. A descendant of the original tree can be seen growing outside the main gate of Trinity College, Cambridge, below the room Newton lived in when he studied there. The National Fruit Collection at Brogdale can supply grafts from their tree (ref 1948-729), which appears identical to Flower of Kent, a coarse-fleshed cooking variety<sup class="noprint Inline-Template"><span style="white-space: nowrap;" title="The text in the vicinity of this tag needs clarification or removal of jargon since November 2008">[<em>clarification needed</em>]</span></sup>.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Writings by Newton</span></h2>
<ul>
<li><em>Method of Fluxions</em> (1671)</li>
<li><em>Of Natures Obvious Laws &amp; Processes in Vegetation</em> (unpublished, c. 1671-75)</li>
<li><em><span class="mw-redirect">De Motu Corporum in Gyrum</span></em> (1684)</li>
<li><em><span class="mw-redirect">Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica</span></em> (1687)</li>
<li><em>Opticks</em> (1704)</li>
<li><em><span class="external text">Reports as Master of the Mint</span></em> (1701-25)</li>
<li><em>Arithmetica Universalis</em> (1707)</li>
<li><em>The System of the World</em>, <em>Optical Lectures</em>, <em>The Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms, (Amended)</em> and <em>De mundi systemate</em> (published posthumously in 1728)</li>
<li><span class="external text"><em>Observations on Daniel and The Apocalypse of St. John</em></span> (1733)</li>
<li><em>An Historical Account of Two Notable Corruptions of Scripture</em> (1754)</li>
</ul>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Fame</span></h2>
<p>French mathematician Joseph-Louis Lagrange often said that Newton was the greatest genius who ever lived, and once added that he was also &#8220;the most fortunate, for we cannot find more than once a system of the world to establish.&#8221; English poet Alexander Pope was moved by Newton&#8217;s accomplishments to write the famous epitaph:</p>
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<td style="padding: 4px 10px;" valign="top">Nature and nature&#8217;s laws lay hid in night;<br />
God said &#8220;Let Newton be&#8221; and all was light.</td>
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<p>Newton himself was rather more modest of his own achievements, famously writing in a letter to Robert Hooke in February 1676</p>
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<td style="padding: 4px 10px;" valign="top">If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants</td>
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<p>Historians generally think the above quote was an attack on Hooke (who was short and hunchbacked), rather than - or in addition to - a statement of modesty. The two were in a dispute over optical discoveries at the time. The latter interpretation also fits with many of his other disputes over his discoveries - such as the question of who discovered calculus as discussed above.</p>
<p>And then in a memoir later</p>
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<td style="padding: 4px 10px;" valign="top">I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.</td>
<td style="padding: 10px; color: #b2b7f2; font-size: 36px; font-family: 'Times New Roman',serif; font-weight: bold; text-align: right;" width="20" valign="bottom">&#8220;</td>
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<h2><span class="mw-headline">Newton in popular culture</span></h2>
<p>Newton is an important character in <em>The Baroque Cycle</em> by Neal Stephenson. A major theme of these novels is the emergence of modern science, with Newton&#8217;s work in the <em>Principia</em> being prominent. Newton&#8217;s interest in alchemy and the dispute over the discovery of calculus are prominent plot points, and there is a (fictional) debate on metaphysics between Newton and Gottfried Leibniz moderated by Caroline of Ansbach. The development of an economy based on money and credit is also a major theme, with Newton&#8217;s time with the Royal Mint and intrigues against <span class="mw-redirect">counterfeit</span> leading to a Trial of the Pyx.</p>
<p>In 2007, David Warner portrayed Newton in the <em>Doctor Who</em> audio drama <em>Circular Time</em>.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Monuments and commemoration</span></h2>
<p>Newton&#8217;s monument (1731) can be seen in Westminster Abbey, at the north of the entrance to the choir against the choir screen. It was executed by the sculptor <span class="mw-redirect">Michael Rysbrack</span> (1694-1770) in white and grey marble with design by the architect William Kent (1685-1748). The monument features a figure of Newton reclining on top of a sarcophagus, his right elbow resting on several of his great books and his left hand pointing to a scroll with a mathematical design. Above him is a pyramid and a celestial globe showing the signs of the Zodiac and the path of the comet of 1680. A relief panel depicts <span class="mw-redirect">putti</span> using instruments such as a telescope and prism. The Latin inscription on the base translates as:</p>
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<td style="padding: 4px 10px;" valign="top">Here is buried Isaac Newton, Knight, who by a strength of mind almost divine, and mathematical principles peculiarly his own, explored the course and figures of the planets, the paths of comets, the tides of the sea, the dissimilarities in rays of light, and, what no other scholar has previously imagined, the properties of the colours thus produced. Diligent, sagacious and faithful, in his expositions of nature, antiquity and the holy Scriptures, he vindicated by his philosophy the majesty of God mighty and good, and expressed the simplicity of the Gospel in his manners. Mortals rejoice that there has existed such and so great an ornament of the human race! He was born on 25th December, 1642, and died on 20th March 1726/7.</td>
<td style="padding: 10px; color: #b2b7f2; font-size: 60px; font-family: 'Times New Roman',serif; font-weight: bold; text-align: right;" width="20" valign="bottom">&#8220;</td>
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<p style="font-size: smaller; text-align: right;"><cite style="font-style: normal;">-Translation from G.L. Smyth, <em>The Monuments and Genii of St. Paul&#8217;s Cathedral, and of Westminster Abbey</em> (1826), ii, 703-4.<sup id="cite_ref-wmabbey_45-1" class="reference"><span>[</span>46<span>]</span></sup></cite></p>
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<p>A statue of Isaac Newton, standing over an apple, can be seen at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History.</p>
<p>From 1978 until 1988, an image of Newton designed by <span class="new">Harry Ecclestone</span> appeared on Series D £1 banknotes issued by the Bank of England (the last £1 notes to be issued by the Bank of England). Newton was shown on the reverse of the notes holding a book and accompanied by a telescope, a prism and a map of the Solar System.<sup id="cite_ref-bankofengland_46-0" class="reference"><a target="_blank" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Newton#cite_note-bankofengland-46"></a></sup></p>
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		<title>Albert Einstein &#8211; Physics Scientist</title>
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		<dc:creator>famous scientists</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[
German-American physicist who, in 1905, published three papers, each of which had a profound effect on the development of physics. In one paper, he proposed the theory of special relativity, Eric Weisstein&#8217;s World of Physics which provides a correct description for particles traveling at high speeds. The two postulates of the special theory of relativity [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/78/Einstein1921_by_F_Schmutzer_4.jpg/225px-Einstein1921_by_F_Schmutzer_4.jpg" alt="Albert Einstein" hspace="5" align="left" title="Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" /></p>
<blockquote><p><em>German-American physicist who, in 1905, published three papers, each of which had a profound effect on the development of physics. In one paper, he proposed the theory of special relativity, Eric Weisstein&#8217;s World of Physics which provides a correct description for particles traveling at high speeds. The two postulates of the special theory of relativity were that the speed of light Eric Weisstein&#8217;s World of Physics in a vacuum is constant and that the laws of physics are the same for all inertial reference frames. Einstein did know about the Michelson-Morley experiment Eric Weisstein&#8217;s World of Physics null result, but was not familiar with Lorentz&#8217;s work after 1895, so he reinvented the Lorentz transformation Eric Weisstein&#8217;s World of Math for himself (Pais 1982, p. 133).</em></p></blockquote>
<p><strong>Albert Einstein</strong> (14 March 1879 - 18 April 1955) was a German-born <strong>theoretical physicist</strong>. He is best known for his theory of relativity and specifically mass-energy equivalence, expressed by the equation <em>E</em> = <em>mc</em><sup>2</sup>. Einstein received the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics &#8220;for his services to Theoretical Physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect.&#8221;</p>
<p>Einstein&#8217;s many contributions to physics include his <span class="mw-redirect">special theory of relativity</span>, which reconciled mechanics with electromagnetism, and his <span class="mw-redirect">general theory of relativity</span>, which was intended to extend the principle of relativity to non-uniform motion and to provide a new theory of gravitation. His other contributions include advances in the <strong>fields of relativistic cosmology</strong>, <strong>capillary action</strong>, <strong>critical opalescence</strong>, <strong>classical problems of statistical mechanics</strong> and their application to <strong>quantum theory</strong>, an explanation of the Brownian movement of molecules, <strong>atomic transition probabilities</strong>, the <strong>quantum theory of a <span class="mw-redirect">monatomic gas</span></strong>, <strong>thermal properties of light</strong> with low <strong>radiation density</strong> (which laid the foundation for the photon theory), a <strong>theory of radiation</strong> including <strong>stimulated emission</strong>, the conception of a unified field theory, and the <strong>geometrization of physics</strong>.</p>
<p><span id="more-90"></span>Einstein published over 300 scientific works and over 150 non-scientific works.<sup id="cite_ref-1" class="reference"><span> </span></sup>In 1999 <em>Time</em> magazine named him the &#8220;Person of the Century&#8221;. In wider culture the name &#8220;Einstein&#8221; has become synonymous with genius, and he has since been regarded as one of the most influential people in <span class="mw-redirect">human history</span>.</p>
<p>Albert Einstein was born into a Jewish family in Ulm, in the Kingdom of Wurttemberg in the German Empire on 14 March 1879. His father was Hermann Einstein, a salesman and engineer. His mother was Pauline Einstein (nee Koch). In 1880, the family moved to Munich, where his father and his uncle founded a company, Elektrotechnische Fabrik J. Einstein &amp; Cie, that manufactured electrical equipment.</p>
<p>The Einsteins were not observant of Jewish religious practices, and Albert attended a Catholic elementary school. Although Einstein had early speech difficulties, he was a top student in elementary school.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="thumbimage aligncenter" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ad/Albert_Einstein_as_a_child.jpg" border="0" alt="young albert einstein" width="333" height="468" title="Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" /><br />
<em> Albert Einstein in 1893 (age 14), taken before the family moved to Italy</em></p>
<p>When Einstein was five, his father showed him a pocket compass. Einstein realized that there must be something in the space, previously thought to be empty, that was moving the needle and later stated that this experience made &#8220;a deep and lasting impression&#8221;. At his mother&#8217;s insistence, he took violin lessons starting at age six, and although he disliked them and eventually quit, he later took great pleasure in Mozart&#8217;s violin sonatas. As he grew, Einstein built models and mechanical devices for fun, and began to show a talent for mathematics.</p>
<p>In 1889, family friend Max Talmud, a medical student, introduced the ten-year-old Einstein to key science, mathematics, and philosophy texts, including Kant&#8217;s <em>Critique of Pure Reason</em> and Euclid&#8217;s <em>Elements</em> (Einstein called it the &#8220;holy little geometry book&#8221;). From Euclid, Einstein began to understand deductive reasoning, and by the age of twelve, he had learned Euclidean geometry. Soon thereafter he began to investigate infinitesimal calculus.</p>
<p>In his early teens, Einstein attended the progressive Luitpold Gymnasium. His father intended for him to pursue electrical engineering, but Einstein clashed with authorities and resented the school regimen. He later wrote that the spirit of learning and creative thought were lost in strict rote learning.</p>
<p>In 1894, when Einstein was fifteen, his father&#8217;s business failed, and the Einstein family moved to Italy, first to Milan and then, after a few months, to Pavia. During this time, Einstein wrote his first scientific work, &#8220;The Investigation of the State of Aether in Magnetic Fields&#8221;. Einstein had been left behind in Munich to finish high school, but in the spring of 1895, he withdrew to join his family in Pavia, convincing the school to let him go by using a doctor&#8217;s note.</p>
<p>Rather than completing high school, Einstein decided to apply directly to the <span class="mw-redirect">ETH Zurich</span>, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, Switzerland. Lacking a school certificate, he was required to take an entrance examination, which he did not pass, although he got exceptional marks in mathematics and physics. Einstein wrote that it was in that same year, at age 16, that he first performed his famous thought experiment visualizing traveling alongside a beam of light <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1979)</cite>.</p>
<p>The Einsteins sent Albert to Aarau, Switzerland to finish secondary school. While lodging with the family of Professor Jost Winteler, he fell in love with the family&#8217;s daughter, Marie. (Albert&#8217;s sister Maja later married Paul Winteler.) In Aarau, Einstein studied Maxwell&#8217;s <span class="mw-redirect">electromagnetic theory</span>. At age 17 he graduated, renounced his German citizenship to avoid military service (with his father&#8217;s approval), and finally enrolled in the mathematics program at ETH. Marie moved to Olsberg, Switzerland for a teaching post.</p>
<p>In 1896, Einstein&#8217;s future wife, Mileva Maric, also enrolled at ETH, as the only woman studying mathematics. During the next few years, Einstein and Maric&#8217;s friendship developed into romance. Einstein graduated in 1900 from ETH with a degree in physics. That same year, Einstein&#8217;s friend Michele Besso introduced him to the work of Ernst Mach. The next year, Einstein published a paper in the prestigious <em>Annalen der Physik</em> on the capillary forces of a straw <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1901)</cite>. On 21 February 1901, he gained Swiss citizenship, which he never revoked.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Patent office</span></h2>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="thumbimage aligncenter" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/b/b7/Einsteinhaus4.jpg/450px-Einsteinhaus4.jpg" border="0" alt="young albert einstein" width="356" height="472" title="Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" /><br />
<em>The &#8216;Einsteinhaus&#8217; on the Kramgasse in Berne where Einstein lived with Mileva on the first floor during his </em><em>Annus Mirabilis</em></p>
<p>Following graduation, Einstein could not find a teaching post. After almost two years of searching, a former classmate&#8217;s father helped him get a job in Berne, at the Federal Office for Intellectual Property,<sup id="cite_ref-13" class="reference"><span>[</span>14<span>]</span></sup> the patent office, as an assistant examiner. His responsibility was evaluating patent applications for electromagnetic devices. In 1903, Einstein&#8217;s position at the Swiss Patent Office was made permanent, although he was passed over for promotion until he &#8220;fully mastered machine technology&#8221;.</p>
<p>With friends he met in Berne, Einstein formed a weekly discussion club on science and philosophy, jokingly named &#8220;The Olympia Academy&#8221;. Their readings included Poincare, Mach, and Hume, who influenced Einstein&#8217;s scientific and philosophical outlook.</p>
<p>During this period Einstein had almost no personal contact with the physics community. Much of his work at the patent office related to questions about transmission of electric signals and electrical-mechanical synchronization of time: two technical problems that show up conspicuously in the thought experiments that eventually led Einstein to his radical conclusions about the nature of light and the fundamental connection between space and time.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Marriage and family life</span></h2>
<p>Einstein and Mileva Maric had a daughter, Lieserl Einstein, born in early 1902. Her fate is unknown.</p>
<p>Einstein married Mileva on 6 January 1903, although his mother had objected to the match because she had a prejudice against Serbs and thought Maric &#8220;too old&#8221; and &#8220;physically defective.&#8221; Their relationship was for a time a personal and intellectual partnership. In a letter to her, Einstein called Maric &#8220;a creature who is my equal and who is as strong and independent as I am.&#8221; There has been debate about whether Maric influenced Einstein&#8217;s work, however, most historians do not think she made major contributions. On 14 May 1904, Albert and Mileva&#8217;s first son, Hans Albert Einstein, was born in Berne, Switzerland. Their second son, Eduard, was born in Munich on 28 July 1910.</p>
<p>Albert and Maric divorced on 14 February 1919, having lived apart for five years. On 2 June of that year, Einstein married Elsa Lowenthal, who had nursed him through an illness. Elsa was Albert&#8217;s first cousin maternally and his <span class="mw-redirect">second cousin</span> paternally. Together the Einsteins raised Margot and Ilse, Elsa&#8217;s daughters from her first marriage. Their union produced no children.</p>
<h2><em>Annus Mirabilis</em> and special relativity</h2>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/a/a0/Einstein_patentoffice.jpg/459px-Einstein_patentoffice.jpg" border="0" alt="Einstein patent office" width="381" height="497" title="Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>Albert Einstein, 1905</em></p>
<p>In 1905, while he was working in the patent office, Einstein had four papers published in the <em>Annalen der Physik</em>, the leading German physics journal. These are the papers that history has come to call the <em><span class="mw-redirect">Annus Mirabilis Paper</span><span class="mw-redirect">s</span></em>:</p>
<ul>
<li>His paper on the particulate nature of light put forward the idea that certain experimental results, notably the photoelectric effect, could be simply understood from the postulate that light interacts with matter as discrete &#8220;packets&#8221; (<span class="mw-redirect">quanta</span>) of energy, an idea that had been introduced by Max Planck in 1900 as a purely mathematical manipulation, and which seemed to contradict contemporary wave theories of light <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1905a)</cite>. This was the only work of Einstein&#8217;s that he himself called &#8220;revolutionary.&#8221;</li>
<li>His paper on Brownian motion explained the random movement of very small objects as direct evidence of molecular action, thus supporting the atomic theory. <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1905c)</cite></li>
<li>His paper on the <span class="mw-redirect">electrodynamics</span> of moving bodies introduced the radical theory of special relativity, which showed that the observed independence of the speed of light on the observer&#8217;s state of motion required fundamental changes to the notion of simultaneity. Consequences of this include the time-space frame of a moving body slowing down and contracting (in the direction of motion) relative to the frame of the observer. This paper also argued that the idea of a luminiferous aether-one of the leading theoretical entities in physics at the time-was superfluous. <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1905d)</cite></li>
<li>In his paper on mass-energy equivalence (previously considered to be distinct concepts), Einstein deduced from his equations of special relativity what has been called the twentieth century&#8217;s most well known equation: <em>E</em> = <em>mc</em><sup>2</sup>. This suggests that tiny amounts of mass could be <span class="mw-redirect">converted</span> into huge amounts of energy and presaged the development of nuclear power. <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1905e)</cite></li>
</ul>
<p>All four papers are today recognized as tremendous achievements-and hence 1905 is known as Einstein&#8217;s &#8220;Wonderful Year&#8221;. At the time, however, they were not noticed by most physicists as being important, and many of those who did notice them rejected them outright. Some of this work-such as the theory of light quanta-remained controversial for years.</p>
<p>At the age of 26, having studied under Alfred Kleiner, Professor of Experimental Physics, Einstein was awarded a PhD by the University of Zurich. His dissertation was entitled <em>A New Determination of Molecular Dimensions</em>. <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1905b)</cite></p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Light and general relativity</span></h2>
<dl>
<dd><span class="boilerplate seealso"><em><a target="_blank" title="Relativity priority dispute" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relativity_priority_dispute"></a></em></span></dd>
</dl>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/37/1919_eclipse_positive.jpg/467px-1919_eclipse_positive.jpg" border="0" alt="einstein eclipse positive" width="378" height="484" title="Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" /><br />
<em> One of the 1919 eclipse photographs taken during Arthur Stanley Eddington&#8217;s expedition, which <span class="mw-redirect">confirmed</span></em> <em>Einstein&#8217;s predictions of the gravitational bending of light. </em></p>
<p>In 1906, the patent office promoted Einstein to Technical Examiner Second Class, but he had not given up on academia. In 1908, he became a privatdozent at the University of Bern. In 1910, he wrote a paper on critical opalescence that described the cumulative effect of light scattered by individual molecules in the atmosphere, <em>i.e.</em>, why the sky is blue.<sup id="cite_ref-Levenson_30-0" class="reference"><span>[</span>31<span>]</span></sup></p>
<p>During 1909, Einstein published &#8220;Uber die Entwicklung unserer Anschauungen uber das Wesen und die Konstitution der Strahlung&#8221; (&#8220;<span class="extiw">The Development of Our Views on the Composition and Essence of Radiation</span>&#8220;), on the quantization of light. In this and in an earlier 1909 paper, Einstein showed that Max Planck&#8217;s energy <span class="mw-redirect">quanta</span> must have well-defined momenta and act in some respects as independent, point-like particles. This paper introduced the <em>photon</em> concept (although the term itself was introduced by Gilbert N. Lewis in 1926) and inspired the notion of wave-particle duality in quantum mechanics.</p>
<p>In 1911, Einstein became an <span class="mw-redirect">associate professor</span> at the University of Zurich. However, shortly afterward, he accepted a full professorship at the Charles University of Prague. While in Prague, Einstein published a paper about the effects of gravity on light, specifically the gravitational redshift and the gravitational deflection of light. The paper appealed to astronomers to find ways of detecting the deflection during a solar eclipse. German astronomer Erwin Finlay-Freundlich publicized Einstein&#8217;s challenge to scientists around the world.</p>
<p>In 1912, Einstein returned to Switzerland to accept a professorship at his alma mater, the <span class="mw-redirect">ETH</span>. There he met mathematician Marcel Grossmann who introduced him to Riemannian geometry and more generally differential geometry, and at the recommendation of Italian mathematician Tullio Levi-Civita, Einstein began exploring the usefulness of general covariance (essentially the use of tensors) for his gravitational theory. Although for a while Einstein thought that there were problems with that approach, he later returned to it and by late 1915 had published his <span class="mw-redirect">general theory of relativity</span> in the form that is still used today <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1915)</cite>. This theory explains gravitation as distortion of the structure of spacetime by matter, affecting the inertial motion of other matter.</p>
<p>After many relocations, Mileva established a permanent home with the children in Zurich in 1914, just before the start of World War I. Einstein continued on alone to Berlin, where he became a member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences. As part of the arrangements for his new position, he also became a professor at the Humboldt University of Berlin, although with a special clause freeing him from most teaching obligations. From 1914 to 1932 he was also director of the <span class="mw-redirect">Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics</span>.</p>
<p>During World War I, the speeches and writings of Central Powers scientists were available only to Central Powers academics, for national security reasons. Some of Einstein&#8217;s work did reach the United Kingdom and the United States through the efforts of the Austrian Paul Ehrenfest and physicists in the Netherlands, especially 1902 Nobel Prize-winner Hendrik Lorentz and Willem de Sitter of the Leiden University. After the war ended, Einstein maintained his relationship with the Leiden University, accepting a contract as an <em>Extraordinary Professor</em>; he travelled to Holland regularly to lecture there between 1920 and 1930.</p>
<p>In 1917, Einstein published an article in <em>Physikalische Zeitschrift</em> that proposed the possibility of stimulated emission, the physical process that makes possible the maser and the laser <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1917b)</cite>. He also published a paper introducing a new notion, the cosmological constant, into the general theory of relativity in an attempt to model the behavior of the entire universe <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1917a)</cite>.</p>
<p>1917 was the year astronomers began taking Einstein up on his 1911 challenge from Prague. The Mount Wilson Observatory in California, U.S., published a solar <span class="mw-redirect">spectroscopic</span> analysis that showed no gravitational redshift. In 1918, the Lick Observatory, also in California, announced that they too had disproven Einstein&#8217;s prediction, although their findings were not published.</p>
<p>However, in May 1919, a team led by British astronomer Arthur Stanley Eddington claimed to have confirmed Einstein&#8217;s prediction of <span class="mw-redirect">gravitational deflection of starlight by the Sun</span> while photographing a solar eclipse in Sobral, northern Brazil, and Príncipe. On 7 November 1919, leading British newspaper <em>The Times</em> printed a banner headline that read: &#8220;Revolution in Science - New Theory of the Universe - Newtonian Ideas Overthrown&#8221;. In an interview Nobel laureate Max Born praised general relativity as the &#8220;greatest feat of human thinking about nature&#8221;; fellow laureate Paul Dirac was quoted saying it was &#8220;probably the greatest scientific discovery ever made&#8221;.</p>
<p>From this point on, the international media guaranteed Einstein&#8217;s global renown. There have been later claims that scrutiny of the specific photographs taken on the Eddington expedition showed the experimental uncertainty to be of about the same magnitude as the effect Eddington claimed to have demonstrated, and that a 1962 British expedition concluded that the method was inherently unreliable, the deflection of light during a solar eclipse has been confirmed by later, more accurate observations.</p>
<p>There was some resentment toward the newcomer Einstein&#8217;s fame in the scientific community, notably among German physicists, who later started the <em>Deutsche Physik</em> (German Physics) movement.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Nobel Prize</span></h2>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="thumbimage aligncenter" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f7/Albert_Einstein_portrait.jpg" border="0" alt="albert einstein" width="360" height="483" title="Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" /><br />
<em> Einstein, 1921. Age 42.</em></p>
<p>In 1922 Einstein was awarded the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics, &#8220;for his services to Theoretical Physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect&#8221;. This refers to his 1905 paper on the photoelectric effect: &#8220;On a Heuristic Viewpoint Concerning the Production and Transformation of Light&#8221;, which was well supported by the experimental evidence by that time. The presentation speech began by mentioning &#8220;his theory of relativity [which had] been the subject of lively debate in philosophical circles [and] also has astrophysical implications which are being rigorously examined at the present time.&#8221; <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1923)</cite></p>
<p>It was long reported that Einstein gave the Nobel prize money to his first wife, Mileva Maric, in compliance with their 1919 divorce settlement. However, personal correspondence made public in 2006 shows that this did not happen. He invested the bulk of it in the United States, and saw much of it wiped out in the Depression.</p>
<p>Einstein traveled to New York City in the United States for the first time on 2 April 1921. When asked where he got his scientific ideas, Einstein explained that he believed scientific work best proceeds from an examination of physical reality and a search for underlying axioms, with consistent explanations that apply in all instances and avoid contradicting each other. He also recommended theories with visualizable results <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1954)</cite>.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Unified field theory</span></h2>
<p>Einstein&#8217;s research after general relativity consisted primarily of a long series of attempts to generalize his theory of gravitation in order to unify and simplify the fundamental laws of physics, particularly gravitation and electromagnetism. In 1950, he described this &#8220;unified field theory&#8221; in a <em>Scientific American</em> article entitled &#8220;On the Generalized Theory of Gravitation&#8221; <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1950)</cite>. Although he continued to be lauded for his work in theoretical physics, Einstein became increasingly isolated in his research, and his efforts were ultimately unsuccessful. In his pursuit of a unification of the fundamental forces, he ignored some mainstream developments in physics, most notably the <span class="mw-redirect">strong</span> and <span class="mw-redirect">weak nuclear forces</span>, which were not well understood until many years after his death. Einstein&#8217;s dream of unifying the laws of physics under a single model survives in the current drive for the grand unification theory.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Collaboration and conflict</span></h2>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Bose-Einstein statistics</span></h3>
<p>In 1924, Einstein received a description of a statistical model from Indian physicist Satyendra Nath Bose, based on a counting method that assumed that light could be understood as a gas of indistinguishable particles. Bose&#8217;s statistics applied to some atoms as well as to the proposed light particles, and Einstein submitted his translation of Bose&#8217;s paper to the <em>Zeitschrift fur Physik</em>. Einstein also published his own articles describing the model and its implications, among them the Bose-Einstein condensate phenomenon that should appear at very low temperatures <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1924)</cite>. It was not until 1995 that the first such condensate was produced experimentally by Eric Allin Cornell and Carl Wieman using ultra-cooling equipment built at the NIST-JILA laboratory at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Bose-Einstein statistics are now used to describe the behaviors of any assembly of &#8220;bosons&#8221;. Einstein&#8217;s sketches for this project may be seen in the Einstein Archive in the library of the Leiden University.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Schrodinger gas model</span></h3>
<p>Einstein suggested to Erwin Schrodinger an application of Max Planck&#8217;s idea of treating energy levels for a gas as a whole rather than for individual molecules, and Schrodinger applied this in a paper using the Boltzmann distribution to derive the thermodynamic properties of a semiclassical ideal gas. Schrodinger urged Einstein to add his name as co-author, although Einstein declined the invitation.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Einstein refrigerator</span></h3>
<p>In 1926, Einstein and his former student Leo Szilard, a Hungarian physicist who later worked on the Manhattan Project and is credited with the discovery of the chain reaction, co-invented (and in 1930, patented) the Einstein refrigerator, revolutionary for having no moving parts and using only heat, not ice, as an input.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Bohr versus Einstein</span></h3>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="thumbimage aligncenter" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d5/Niels_Bohr_Albert_Einstein_by_Ehrenfest.jpg/414px-Niels_Bohr_Albert_Einstein_by_Ehrenfest.jpg" border="0" alt="414px Niels Bohr Albert Einstein by Ehrenfest Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" width="320" height="462" title="Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" /><br />
<em> Einstein and Niels Bohr. Photo taken by Paul Ehrenfest during their 1925 Leiden visit. </em></p>
<p>In the 1920s, quantum mechanics developed into a more complete theory. Einstein was unhappy with the &#8220;Copenhagen interpretation&#8221; of quantum theory developed by Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg, wherein quantum phenomena are inherently probabilistic, with definite states resulting only upon interaction with <span class="mw-redirect">classical systems</span>. A public <span class="mw-redirect">debate</span> between Einstein and Bohr followed, lasting for many years (including during the Solvay Conferences). Einstein formulated thought experiments against the Copenhagen interpretation, which were all rebutted by Bohr. In a 1926 letter to Max Born, Einstein wrote: &#8220;I, at any rate, am convinced that He [God] does not throw dice.&#8221; <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1969)</cite>.</p>
<p>Einstein was never satisfied by what he perceived to be quantum theory&#8217;s intrinsically incomplete description of nature, and in 1935 he further explored the issue in collaboration with Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen, noting that the theory seems to require <span class="mw-redirect">non-local</span> interactions; this is known as the EPR paradox <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1935)</cite>. The EPR experiment has since been performed, with results confirming quantum theory&#8217;s predictions.</p>
<p>Einstein&#8217;s disagreement with Bohr revolved around the idea of scientific determinism. For this reason the repercussions of the <span class="mw-redirect">Einstein-Bohr debate</span> have found their way into philosophical discourse as well.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Religious views</span></h2>
<p>The question of scientific determinism gave rise to questions about Einstein&#8217;s position on theological determinism, and whether or not he believed in a God. In 1929, Einstein told Rabbi Herbert S. Goldstein &#8220;I believe in Spinoza&#8217;s God, who reveals Himself in the lawful harmony of the world, not in a God Who concerns Himself with the fate and the doings of mankind.&#8221; In a 1950 letter to M. Berkowitz, Einstein stated that &#8220;My position concerning God is that of an agnostic. I am convinced that a vivid consciousness of the primary importance of moral principles for the betterment and ennoblement of life does not need the idea of a law-giver, especially a law-giver who works on the basis of reward and punishment.&#8221; Einstein also stated: &#8220;I have repeatedly said that in my opinion the idea of a personal God is a childlike one. You may call me an agnostic, but I do not share the crusading spirit of the professional atheist whose fervor is mostly due to a painful act of liberation from the fetters of religious indoctrination received in youth.&#8221; He is reported to have said in a conversation with Hubertus, Prince of Lowenstein-Wertheim-Freudenberg, &#8220;In view of such harmony in the cosmos which I, with my limited human mind, am able to recognize, there are yet people who say there is no God. But what really makes me angry is that they quote me for the support of such views.&#8221;Einstein clarified his religious views in a letter he wrote in response to those who claimed that he worshipped a Judeo-Christian god: &#8220;It was, of course, a lie what you read about my religious convictions, a lie which is being systematically repeated. I do not believe in a personal god and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it.&#8221; In his book <em>The World as I See It</em>, he wrote: &#8220;A knowledge of the existence of something we cannot penetrate, of the manifestations of the profoundest reason and the most radiant beauty, which are only accessible to our reason in their most elementary forms-it is this knowledge and this emotion that constitute the truly religious attitude; in this sense, and in this alone, I am a deeply religious man.&#8221;</p>
<p>In a 1930 <em>New York Times</em> article, Einstein distinguished three styles which are usually intermixed in actual religion. The first is motivated by fear and poor understanding of causality, and hence invents supernatural beings. The second is social and moral, motivated by desire for love and support. Einstein noted that both have an anthropomorphic concept of God. The third style, which Einstein deemed most mature, is motivated by a deep sense of awe and mystery. He said, &#8220;The individual feels the sublimity and marvelous order which reveal themselves in nature and he wants to experience the universe as a single significant whole.&#8221; Einstein saw science as an antagonist of the first two styles of religion, but as a partner of the third style.</p>
<p>Einstein was also a Humanist and a supporter of Ethical Culture. He served on the advisory board of the First Humanist Society of New York. For the seventy-fifth anniversary of the <em>New York Society for Ethical Culture</em>, he noted that the idea of Ethical Culture embodied his personal conception of what is most valuable and enduring in religious idealism. He observed, &#8220;Without &#8216;ethical culture&#8217; there is no salvation for humanity.&#8221;</p>
<p>Einstein published a paper in <em>Nature</em> in 1940 entitled &#8220;Science and Religion&#8221; in which he said that: &#8220;a person who is religiously enlightened appears to me to be one who has, to the best of his ability, liberated himself from the fetters of his selfish desires and is preoccupied with thoughts, feelings and aspirations to which he clings because of their super-personal value regardless of whether any attempt is made to unite this content with a Divine Being, for otherwise it would not be possible to count Buddha and Spinoza as religious personalities. Accordingly a religious person is devout in the sense that he has no doubt of the significance of those super-personal objects and goals which neither require nor are capable of rational foundation In this sense religion is the age-old endeavour of mankind to become clearly and completely conscious of these values and goals, and constantly to strengthen their effects.&#8221; He argued that conflicts between science and religion &#8220;have all sprung from fatal errors.&#8221; &#8220;Even though the realms of religion and science in themselves are clearly marked off from each other&#8221; there are &#8220;strong reciprocal relationships and dependencies science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind a legitimate conflict between science and religion cannot exist.&#8221; In Einstein&#8217;s view, &#8220;neither the rule of human nor Divine Will exists as an independent cause of natural events. To be sure, the doctrine of a personal God interfering with natural events could never be <em>refuted</em> by science, for it can always take refuge in those domains in which scientific knowledge has not yet been able to set foot.&#8221; <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1940, pp. 605-607)</cite></p>
<p>In a letter to Eric Gutkind in 1954 Einstein said: &#8220;The word God is for me nothing more than the expression and product of human weaknesses, the Bible a collection of honorable, but still primitive legends which are nevertheless pretty childish.&#8221; In the same letter, Einstein rejected the idea that the Jews are God&#8217;s chosen people: &#8220;For me the Jewish religion like all others is an incarnation of the most childish superstitions. And the Jewish people to whom I gladly belong and with whose mentality I have a deep affinity have no different quality for me than all other people. As far as my experience goes, they are no better than other human groups, although they are protected from the worst cancers by a lack of power. Otherwise I cannot see anything &#8216;chosen&#8217; about them.&#8221;</p>
<p>His friend Max Jammer explored Einstein&#8217;s views on religion thoroughly in the 1999 book <em>Einstein and Religion: Physics and Theology.</em></p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Politics</span></h2>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="thumbimage aligncenter" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/7/79/Figh2.jpg" border="0" alt="Einstein and Rabindranath Tagore" title="Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>Einstein and Indian poet and <span class="mw-redirect">Nobel laureate</span> Rabindranath Tagore during their widely publicized 14 July 1930 conversation </em></p>
<p>With increasing public demands, his involvement in political, humanitarian, and academic projects in various countries, and his new acquaintances with scholars and political figures from around the world, Einstein was less able to achieve the productive isolation that he needed in order to work. Due to his fame and genius, Einstein found himself called on to give conclusive judgments on matters that had nothing to do with theoretical physics or mathematics. He was not timid, and he was aware of the world around him, with no illusion that ignoring politics would make world events fade away. His very visible position allowed him to speak and write frankly, even provocatively, at a time when many people of conscience could only flee to the underground or keep doubts about developments within their own movements to themselves for fear of internecine fighting. Einstein flouted the ascendant Nazi movement, tried to be a voice of moderation in the tumultuous formation of the State of Israel and braved anti-communist politics and resistance to the civil rights movement in the United States. He participated in the 1927 congress of the League against Imperialism in Brussels.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Zionism</span></h3>
<p>Einstein was a socialist Zionist who opposed nationalism. In 1931, The Macmillan Company published <em>About Zionism: Speeches and Lectures by Professor Albert Einstein</em>. Querido, an Amsterdam publishing house, collected eleven of Einstein&#8217;s essays into a 1933 book entitled <em>Mein Weltbild</em>, translated to English as <em>The World as I See It</em>; Einstein&#8217;s foreword dedicates the collection &#8220;to the Jews of Germany&#8221;.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="thumbimage aligncenter" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c4/Einsteinwiezmann.PNG" border="0" alt=" Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" width="359" height="271" title="Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>Albert Einstein, seen here with his wife Elsa Einstein and Zionist leaders, including future President of Israel Chaim Weizmann, his wife Dr. Vera Weizmann, Menahem Ussishkin, and Ben-Zion Mossinson on arrival in New York City in 1921.</em></p>
<p>Einstein publicly stated reservations about the proposal to partition the British-supervised British Mandate of Palestine into independent Arab and Jewish countries. In a 1938 speech, &#8220;Our Debt to Zionism&#8221;, he said: &#8220;I am afraid of the inner damage Judaism will sustain-especially from the development of a narrow nationalism within our own ranks, against which we have already had to fight strongly, even without a Jewish state. If external necessity should after all compel us to assume this burden, let us bear it with tact and patience.&#8221; In a 1947 letter to Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, Einstein stated that the Balfour Declaration&#8217;s proposal to establish a national home for Jews in Palestine &#8220;redresses the balance&#8221; of justice and history.</p>
<p>The United Nations did divide the mandate, demarcating the borders of several new countries including the <span class="mw-redirect">State of Israel</span>, and <span class="mw-redirect">war</span> broke out immediately. Einstein was one of the authors of a 1948 letter to the New York Times criticizing Menachem Begin&#8217;s Herut (Freedom) Party for the Deir Yassin massacre <cite class="inline">(Einstein et al. 1948)</cite>.</p>
<p>Einstein served on the Board of Governors of <span class="mw-redirect">The Hebrew University of Jerusalem</span>. In his Will of 1950, Einstein bequeathed literary rights to his writings to The Hebrew University, where many of his original documents are held in the Albert Einstein Archives.</p>
<p>When President Chaim Weizmann died in 1952, Einstein was asked to be Israel&#8217;s second president, but he declined, stating that he had &#8220;neither the natural ability nor the experience to deal with human beings.&#8221; He wrote: &#8220;I am deeply moved by the offer from our State of Israel, and at once saddened and ashamed that I cannot accept it. &#8221;</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Anti-Nazism</span></h3>
<p>In January 1933, Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany. One of the first actions of Hitler&#8217;s administration was the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service, which removed Jews and politically suspect government employees (including university professors) from their jobs, unless they had demonstrated their loyalty to Germany by serving in World War I. In response to this growing threat Einstein had prudently traveled to the U.S. in December 1932. For several years he had been wintering at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California, and also was a guest lecturer at Abraham Flexner&#8217;s newly founded Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.</p>
<p>The Einsteins bought a house in Princeton (where Elsa died in 1936), and Einstein remained an integral contributor to the Institute for Advanced Study until his death in 1955. During the 1930s and into World War II, Einstein wrote affidavits recommending United States visas for a huge number of European Jews who were trying to flee persecution. He raised money for Zionist organizations and was, in part, responsible for the formation, in 1933, of the International Rescue Committee.</p>
<div class="thumb tright">
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/8a/Citizen-Einstein.jpg/225px-Citizen-Einstein.jpg" border="0" alt="225px Citizen Einstein Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" width="359" height="272" title="Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>Albert Einstein receiving his certificate of American citizenship from Judge Phillip Forman in 1940.</em></p>
</div>
<p>Meanwhile, in Germany, a campaign to eliminate Einstein&#8217;s work from the German lexicon as unacceptable &#8220;<span class="mw-redirect">Jewish physics</span>&#8221; (<em>Judische Physik</em>) was led by Nobel laureates Philipp Lenard and Johannes Stark. <em>Deutsche Physik</em> activists published pamphlets and even textbooks denigrating Einstein, and instructors who taught his theories were blacklisted-including Nobel laureate Werner Heisenberg, who had debated quantum probability with Bohr and Einstein. Philipp Lenard claimed that the mass-energy equivalence formula needed to be credited to Friedrich Hasenohrl to make it an Aryan creation. An anti-Einstein organization was formed, and a man who was convicted of composing a plot to kill Einstein was fined a mere six dollars.</p>
<p>Einstein became a citizen of the United States in 1940 and remained there the rest of his life, although he retained his Swiss citizenship.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Atomic bomb</span></h3>
<div class="thumb tleft">
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/bf/Einstein-Roosevelt-letter.png/800px-Einstein-Roosevelt-letter.png" border="0" alt="800px Einstein Roosevelt letter Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" width="558" height="326" title="Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" /></p>
<div class="thumbcaption">
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>Einstein-Szilard letter</em></p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Concerned scientists, many of them refugees from European anti-Semitism in the U.S., recognized the danger of German scientists developing an <span class="mw-redirect">atomic bomb</span> based on the newly discovered phenomena of nuclear fission. In 1939, the Hungarian emigre Leo Szilard, having failed to arouse U.S. government interest on his own, worked with Einstein to write a letter to U.S. President <span class="mw-redirect">Franklin Delano Roosevelt</span>, which Einstein signed, urging U.S. development of such a weapon. In August 1939, Roosevelt received the Einstein-Szilard letter and authorized secret research into the harnessing of nuclear fission for military purposes.</p>
<p>By 1942 this effort had become the Manhattan Project, the largest secret scientific endeavor undertaken up to that time. By late 1945, the U.S. had developed operational nuclear weapons, and used them on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Einstein himself did not play a role in the development of the atomic bomb other than signing the letter. He did help the United States Navy with some unrelated theoretical questions it was working on during the war.</p>
<p>According to Linus Pauling, Einstein later expressed regret about his letter to Roosevelt. In 1947, Einstein wrote an article for <em>The Atlantic Monthly</em> arguing that the United States should not try to pursue an atomic monopoly, and instead should equip the United Nations with nuclear weapons for the sole purpose of maintaining deterrence.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Cold War era</span></h3>
<p>When he was a visible figure working against the rise of Nazism, Einstein had sought help and developed working relationships in both the West and what was to become the <span class="mw-redirect">Soviet bloc</span>. After World War II, enmity between the former allies became a very serious issue for people with international resumes. To make things worse, during the first days of McCarthyism Einstein was writing about a single world government; it was at this time that he wrote, &#8220;I do not know how the third World War will be fought, but I can tell you what they will use in the Fourth-rocks!&#8221; In a 1949 <em>Monthly Review</em> article entitled &#8220;Why Socialism?&#8221; Albert Einstein described a chaotic capitalist society, a source of evil to be overcome, as the &#8220;predatory phase of human development&#8221; <cite class="inline">(Einstein 1949)</cite>. With Albert Schweitzer and Bertrand Russell, Einstein lobbied to stop nuclear testing and future bombs. Days before his death, Einstein signed the Russell-Einstein Manifesto, which led to the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs.</p>
<p>Einstein was a member of several <span class="mw-redirect">civil rights</span> groups, including the Princeton chapter of the NAACP. When the aged W. E. B. Du Bois was accused of being a Communist spy, Einstein volunteered as a character witness, and the case was dismissed shortly afterward. Einstein&#8217;s friendship with activist Paul Robeson, with whom he served as co-chair of the American Crusade to End Lynching, lasted twenty years.</p>
<p>In 1946, Einstein collaborated with Rabbi Israel Goldstein, Middlesex University heir C. Ruggles Smith, and activist attorney George Alpert on the Albert Einstein Foundation for Higher Learning, which was formed to create a Jewish-sponsored secular university, open to all students, on the grounds of the former Middlesex University in Waltham, Massachusetts. Middlesex was chosen in part because it was accessible from both Boston and New York City, Jewish cultural centers of the U.S. Their vision was a university &#8220;deeply conscious both of the Hebraic tradition of Torah looking upon culture as a birthright, and of the American ideal of an educated democracy.&#8221; The collaboration was stormy, however. Finally, when Einstein wanted to appoint British economist Harold Laski as the university&#8217;s president, George Alpert wrote that Laski was &#8220;a man utterly alien to American principles of democracy, tarred with the Communist brush.&#8221; Einstein withdrew his support and barred the use of his name. The university opened in 1948 as Brandeis University. In 1953, Brandeis offered Einstein an honorary degree, but he declined.</p>
<p>Given Einstein&#8217;s links to Germany and Zionism, his socialist ideals, and his links to Communist figures, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation kept a file on Einstein that grew to 1,427 pages. Many of the documents in the file were sent to the FBI by concerned citizens: some objecting to his immigration, while others asked the FBI to protect him.</p>
<p>Although Einstein had long been sympathetic to the notion of vegetarianism, it was only near the start of 1954 that he adopted a strict vegetarian diet.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Death</span></h2>
<p>On 17 April 1955, Albert Einstein experienced internal bleeding caused by the rupture of an aortic aneurysm, which had previously been diagnosed and reinforced. He took a draft of a speech he was preparing for a television appearance commemorating the State of Israel&#8217;s seventh anniversary with him to the hospital, but he did not live long enough to complete it. He died in Princeton Hospital early the next morning at the age of 76, having continued to work until near the end. Einstein&#8217;s remains were cremated and his ashes were scattered.</p>
<p>Before the cremation, Princeton Hospital pathologist Thomas Stoltz Harvey removed Einstein&#8217;s brain for preservation, without the permission of his family, in hope that the neuroscience of the future would be able to discover what made Einstein so intelligent.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Legacy</span></h2>
<p>While travelling, Einstein had written daily to his wife Elsa and adopted stepdaughters, Margot and Ilse, and the letters were included in the papers bequeathed to <span class="mw-redirect">The Hebrew University</span>. Margot Einstein permitted the personal letters to be made available to the public, but requested that it not be done until twenty years after her death (she died in 1986). Barbara Wolff, of The Hebrew University&#8217;s Albert Einstein Archives, told the BBC that there are about 3,500 pages of private correspondence written between 1912 and 1955.</p>
<p>The United States&#8217; National Academy of Sciences commissioned the <em>Albert Einstein Memorial</em>, a monumental bronze and marble sculpture by Robert Berks, dedicated in 1979 at its Washington, D.C. campus adjacent to the National Mall.</p>
<p>Einstein bequeathed the royalties from use of his image to <span class="mw-redirect">The Hebrew University of Jerusalem</span>. Corbis, successor to The Roger Richman Agency, licenses the use of his name and associated imagery, as agent for the Hebrew University.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Honors</span></h2>
<p>In 1999, Albert Einstein was named &#8220;Person of the Century&#8221; by <em>Time</em> magazine, a Gallup poll recorded him as the fourth most admired person of the 20th century and according to <em>The 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Persons in History</em>, Einstein is &#8220;the greatest scientist of the twentieth century and one of the supreme intellects of all time.&#8221;</p>
<div class="thumb tright">
<p style="text-align: center;"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/e/ea/Einstein_Memorial.jpg" border="0" alt="Einstein Memorial Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" width="411" height="306" title="Albert Einstein   Physics Scientist" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>Albert Einstein Memorial located on the public grounds of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D.C.</em></p>
</div>
<p>A partial list of his memorials:</p>
<ul>
<li>The International Union of Pure and Applied Physics named 2005 the &#8220;<span class="mw-redirect">World Year of Physics</span>&#8221; in commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the publication of the Annus Mirabilis Papers.<sup id="cite_ref-112" class="reference"><span>[</span>113<span>]</span></sup></li>
<li>The Albert Einstein Institute</li>
<li>The <em>Albert Einstein Memorial</em> by Robert Berks</li>
<li>A unit used in photochemistry, the <em>einstein</em></li>
<li>The chemical element 99, einsteinium</li>
<li>The asteroid 2001 Einstein</li>
<li>The Albert Einstein Award</li>
<li>The Albert Einstein Peace Prize</li>
</ul>
<p>In 1990, his name was added to the Walhalla temple.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Impact on popular culture</span></h2>
<p>In the period before World War II, Albert Einstein was so well-known in America that he would be stopped on the street by people wanting him to explain &#8220;that theory&#8221;. He finally figured out a way to handle the incessant inquiries. He told his inquirers &#8220;Pardon me, sorry! Always I am mistaken for Professor Einstein.&#8221;</p>
<p>Albert Einstein has been the subject of or inspiration for many novels, films, and plays. Einstein is a favorite model for depictions of mad scientists and absent-minded professors; his expressive face and distinctive hairstyle have been widely copied and exaggerated. <em>Time</em> magazine&#8217;s Frederic Golden wrote that Einstein was &#8220;a cartoonist&#8217;s dream come true.&#8221;</p>
<p>Einstein&#8217;s association with great intelligence has made the name <em>Einstein</em> synonymous with genius, often used in ironic expressions such as &#8220;Nice job, Einstein!&#8221;.</p>
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		<title>Galileo Galilei &#8211; Father of Modern Science</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Dec 2008 11:21:39 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Galileo was born in Pisa (then part of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany), the first of six children of Vincenzo Galilei, a famous lutenist and music theorist, and Giulia Ammannati. Of the six children four survived infancy, and the youngest Michelangelo (or Michelagnolo) became a noted lutenist and composer. Galileo's full name was Galileo Bonaiuti de' Galilei.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cc/Galileo.arp.300pix.jpg/225px-Galileo.arp.300pix.jpg" alt="Galileo Galilei" hspace="5" align="left" title="Galileo Galilei   Father of Modern Science" /><em>Italian scientist and philosopher. Galileo was a true Renaissance man, excelling at many different endeavors, including lute playing and painting. He attended medical school in Padua. While in a cathedral, he noticed that a chandelier was swinging with the same period as timed by his pulse, regardless of its amplitude. He began to study the isochronism of the pendulum Eric Weisstein&#8217;s World of Physics in 1581, as well as the motion of bodies. Using an inclined plane, he showed that all bodies fall at the same rate. He also investigated cohesion, Eric Weisstein&#8217;s World of Physics and concluded that a waterfall breaks when the weight of the water Eric Weisstein&#8217;s World of Physics becomes too great, the same reason that water Eric Weisstein&#8217;s World of Physics pumps could only raise water by 34 feet.</em></p>
<p><strong>Galileo Galilei</strong> (15 February 1564 &#8211; 8 January 1642) was a Tuscan (Italian) <strong>physicist</strong>, <strong>mathematician</strong>, <strong>astronomer</strong>, and <strong>philosopher </strong>who played a major role in the Scientific Revolution. His achievements include improvements to the telescope and consequent astronomical observations, and support for <strong>Copernicanism</strong>. Galileo has been called the &#8220;father of modern observational astronomy&#8221;, the &#8220;<strong>father of modern physics</strong>&#8220;, the &#8220;<strong>father of science</strong>&#8220;, and &#8220;the <strong>Father of Modern Science</strong>.&#8221; The motion of uniformly accelerated objects, taught in nearly all high school and introductory college physics courses, was studied by Galileo as the subject of kinematics. His contributions to observational astronomy include the telescopic confirmation of the phases of Venus, the discovery of the four largest satellites of Jupiter, named the Galilean moons in his honour, and the observation and analysis of sunspots. Galileo also worked in applied science and technology, improving compass design.</p>
<p><span id="more-84"></span>Galileo&#8217;s championing of Copernicanism was controversial within his lifetime. The geocentric view had been dominant since the time of Aristotle, and the controversy engendered by Galileo&#8217;s presentation of heliocentrism as proven fact resulted in the Catholic Church&#8217;s prohibiting its advocacy as empirically proven fact, because it was not empirically proven at the time and was contrary to the literal meaning of Scripture. Galileo was eventually forced to recant his heliocentrism and spent the last years of his life under house arrest on orders of the Roman Inquisition.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Life</span></h2>
<p>Galileo was born in Pisa (then part of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany), the first of six children of Vincenzo Galilei, a famous <span class="mw-redirect">lutenist</span> and music theorist, and Giulia Ammannati. Of the six children four survived infancy, and the youngest Michelangelo (or Michelagnolo) became a noted <span class="mw-redirect">lutenist</span> and composer. Galileo&#8217;s full name was Galileo Bonaiuti de&#8217; Galilei. At the age of 8, his family moved to <span class="mw-redirect">Florence</span>, but he was left with Jacopo Borghini for two years. He then was educated in the Camaldolese Monastery at Vallombrosa, 21 mi (34 km) southeast of Florence. Although he seriously considered the priesthood as a young man, he enrolled for a medical degree at the University of Pisa at his father&#8217;s urging. He did not complete this degree, but instead studied mathematics. In 1589, he was appointed to the chair of mathematics in Pisa. In 1591 his father died and he was entrusted with the care of his younger brother Michelagnolo. In 1592, he moved to the University of Padua, teaching geometry, mechanics, and astronomy until 1610. During this period Galileo made significant discoveries in both pure science (for example, kinematics of motion, and astronomy) and applied science (for example, strength of materials, improvement of the telescope). His multiple interests included the study of astrology, which in pre-modern disciplinary practice was seen as correlated to the studies of mathematics and astronomy.</p>
<p>Although a devout <span class="mw-redirect">Roman Catholic</span>, Galileo fathered three children <span class="mw-redirect">out of wedlock</span> with Marina Gamba. They had two daughters, Virginia in 1600 and Livia in 1601, and one son, Vincenzio, in 1606. Because of their illegitimate birth, their father considered the girls unmarriageable. Their only worthy alternative was the religious life. Both girls were sent to the convent of San Matteo in Arcetri and remained there for the rest of their lives. Virginia took the name Maria Celeste upon entering the convent. She died on 2 April 1634, and is buried with Galileo at the <span class="mw-redirect">Basilica di Santa Croce di Firenze</span>. Livia took the name Sister Arcangela and was ill for most of her life. Vincenzio was later legitimized and married Sestilia Bocchineri.</p>
<p>In 1610 Galileo published an account of his telescopic observations of the moons of Jupiter, using this observation to argue in favor of the sun-centered, <span class="mw-redirect">Copernican</span> theory of the universe against the dominant earth-centered Ptolemaic and Aristotelian theories. The next year Galileo visited Rome in order to demonstrate his telescope to the influential philosophers and mathematicians of the <span class="mw-redirect">Jesuit</span> Collegio Romano, and to let them see with their own eyes the reality of the four moons of Jupiter. While in Rome he was also made a member of the Accademia dei Lincei.</p>
<p>In 1612, opposition arose to the Sun-centered theory of the universe which Galileo supported. In 1614, from the pulpit of Santa Maria Novella, Father Tommaso Caccini (1574-1648) denounced Galileo&#8217;s opinions on the motion of the Earth, judging them dangerous and close to heresy. Galileo went to Rome to defend himself against these accusations, but, in 1616, Cardinal Roberto Bellarmino personally handed Galileo an admonition enjoining him neither to advocate nor teach Copernican astronomy. During 1621 and 1622 Galileo wrote his first book, <em>The Assayer</em> (<em>Il Saggiatore</em>), which was approved and published in 1623. In 1630, he returned to Rome to apply for a license to print the <em>Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems</em>, published in Florence in 1632. In October of that year, however, he was ordered to appear before the Holy Office in Rome.</p>
<p>Following a papal trial in which he was found vehemently suspect of heresy, Galileo was placed under house arrest and his movements restricted by the Pope. From 1634 onward he stayed at his country house at Arcetri, outside of Florence. He went completely blind in 1638 and was suffering from a painful hernia and insomnia, so he was permitted to travel to Florence for medical advice. He continued to receive visitors until 1642, when, after suffering fever and heart palpitations, he died<sup id="cite_ref-15" class="reference">.</sup></p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Scientific methods</span></h2>
<p>Galileo made original contributions to the science of motion through an innovative combination of experiment and mathematics<sup id="cite_ref-17" class="reference">. </sup>More typical of science at the time were the qualitative studies of William Gilbert, on magnetism and electricity. Galileo&#8217;s father, Vincenzo Galilei, a lutenist and music theorist, had performed experiments establishing perhaps the oldest known non-linear relation in physics: for a stretched string, the pitch varies as the square root of the tension. These observations lay within the framework of the Pythagorean tradition of music, well-known to instrument makers, which included the fact that subdividing a string by a whole number produces a harmonious scale. Thus, a limited amount of mathematics had long related music and physical science, and young Galileo could see his own father&#8217;s observations expand on that tradition.</p>
<p>Galileo is perhaps the first to clearly state that the laws of nature are mathematical. In <em>The Assayer</em> he wrote &#8220;Philosophy is written in this grand book, the universe &#8230; It is written in the language of mathematics, and its characters are triangles, circles, and other geometric figures; &#8230;&#8221;<sup id="cite_ref-20" class="reference">. </sup>His mathematical analyses are a further development of a tradition employed by late scholastic natural philosophers, which Galileo learned when he studied philosophy. Although he tried to remain loyal to the Catholic Church, his adherence to experimental results, and their most honest interpretation, led to a rejection of blind allegiance to authority, both philosophical and religious, in matters of science. In broader terms, this aided to separate science from both philosophy and religion; a major development in human thought.</p>
<p>By the standards of his time, Galileo was often willing to change his views in accordance with observation. Philosopher of science Paul Feyerabend also noted the supposedly improper aspects of Galileo&#8217;s methodology, but he argued that Galileo&#8217;s methods could be justified retroactively by their results. The bulk of Feyerabend&#8217;s major work, <em>Against Method</em> (1975), was devoted to an analysis of Galileo, using his astronomical research as a case study to support Feyerabend&#8217;s own anarchistic theory of scientific method. As he put it: &#8216;Aristotelians demanded strong empirical support while the Galileans were content with far-reaching, unsupported and partially refuted theories. I do not criticize them for that; on the contrary, I favour Niels Bohr&#8217;s &#8220;this is not crazy enough.&#8221;&#8216; In order to perform his experiments, Galileo had to set up standards of length and time, so that measurements made on different days and in different laboratories could be compared in a reproducible fashion.</p>
<p>Galileo showed a remarkably modern appreciation for the proper relationship between mathematics, theoretical physics, and experimental physics. He understood the parabola, both in terms of conic sections and in terms of the <span class="mw-redirect">ordinate</span> (y) varying as the square of the <span class="mw-redirect">abscissa</span> (x). Galilei further asserted that the parabola was the theoretically ideal trajectory of a uniformly accelerated projectile in the absence of friction and other disturbances. He conceded that there are limits to the validity of this theory, noting on theoretical grounds that a projectile trajectory of a size comparable to that of the Earth could not possibly be a parabola,<sup id="cite_ref-23" class="reference"><span>[</span>24<span>]</span></sup> but he nevertheless maintained that for distances up to the range of the artillery of his day, the deviation of a projectile&#8217;s trajectory from a parabola would only be very slight<sup id="cite_ref-24" class="reference">. </sup>Thirdly, he recognized that his experimental data would never agree exactly with any theoretical or mathematical form, because of the imprecision of measurement, irreducible friction, and other factors.</p>
<p>According to Stephen Hawking, Galileo probably bears more of the responsibility for the birth of modern science than anybody else, and Albert Einstein called him the father of modern science.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Astronomy</span></h2>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Contributions</span></h3>
<p style="text-align: center;"><span class="image"><img class="thumbimage aligncenter" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/87/Galileo.script.arp.600pix.jpg.jpg/391px-Galileo.script.arp.600pix.jpg.jpg" border="0" alt="Galileo script" width="340" height="521" title="Galileo Galilei   Father of Modern Science" /></span></p>
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<p style="text-align: center;"><em>It was on this page that Galileo first noted an observation of the moons of <span class="mw-redirect">Jupiter</span>. This observation upset the notion that all celestial bodies must revolve around the Earth. Galileo published a full description in </em><em>Sidereus Nuncius in March 1610</em></p>
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<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d1/Phases-of-Venus.svg/800px-Phases-of-Venus.svg.png" alt="Phases of Venus" width="565" height="423" title="Galileo Galilei   Father of Modern Science" /><br />
<em> The phases of Venus, observed by Galileo in 1610</em></p>
<p>Based only on uncertain descriptions of the telescope, invented in the Netherlands in 1608, Galileo, in the following year, made a telescope with about 3x magnification, and later made others with up to about 30x magnification. With this improved device he could see magnified, upright images on the earth - it was what is now known as a terrestrial telescope, or spyglass. He could also use it to observe the sky; for a time he was one of those who could construct telescopes good enough for that purpose. On 25 August 1609, he demonstrated his first telescope to Venetian lawmakers. His work on the device made for a profitable sideline with merchants who found it useful for their shipping businesses and trading issues. He published his initial telescopic astronomical observations in March 1610 in a short treatise entitled <em>Sidereus Nuncius</em> (<em>Starry Messenger</em>).</p>
<p>On 7 January 1610 Galileo observed with his telescope what he described at the time as &#8220;three fixed stars, totally invisible by their smallness&#8221;, all within a short distance of <span class="mw-redirect">Jupiter</span>, and lying on a straight line through it. Observations on subsequent nights showed that the positions of these &#8220;stars&#8221; relative to Jupiter were changing in a way that would have been inexplicable if they had really been fixed stars. On 10 January Galileo noted that one of them had disappeared, an observation which he attributed to its being hidden behind Jupiter. Within a few days he concluded that they were orbiting Jupiter: He had discovered three of Jupiter&#8217;s four largest satellites (moons): Io, Europa, and Callisto. He discovered the fourth, Ganymede, on 13 January. Galileo named the four satellites he had discovered <em>Medicean stars</em>, in honour of his future patron, Cosimo II de&#8217; Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, and Cosimo&#8217;s three brothers. Later astronomers, however, renamed them <em>Galilean satellites</em> in honour of Galileo himself.</p>
<p>A planet with smaller planets orbiting it did not conform to the principles of Aristotelian Cosmology, which held that all heavenly bodies should circle the Earth, and many astronomers and philosophers initially refused to believe that Galileo could have discovered such a thing.</p>
<p>Galileo continued to observe the satellites over the next eighteen months, and by mid 1611 he had obtained remarkably accurate estimates for their periods-a feat which Kepler had believed impossible.</p>
<p>From September 1610, Galileo observed that <span class="mw-redirect">Venus</span> exhibited a full set of phases similar to that of the Moon. The <span class="mw-redirect">heliocentric model</span> of the solar system developed by Nicolaus Copernicus predicted that all phases would be visible since the orbit of Venus around the Sun would cause its illuminated hemisphere to face the Earth when it was on the opposite side of the Sun and to face away from the Earth when it was on the Earth-side of the Sun. In contrast, the geocentric model of Ptolemy predicted that only crescent and new phases would be seen, since Venus was thought to remain between the Sun and Earth during its orbit around the Earth. Galileo&#8217;s observations of the phases of Venus proved that it orbited the Sun and lent support to (but did not prove) the <span class="mw-redirect">heliocentric model</span>. However, since it refuted the Ptolemaic pure geocentric planetary model, it seems it was the crucial observation that caused the 17th century majority conversion of the scientific community to geoheliocentric geocentric models such as the Tychonic and Capellan models, and was thereby arguably Galileo&#8217;s historically most important astronomical observation.</p>
<p>Galileo also observed the planet <span class="mw-redirect">Saturn</span>, and at first mistook its rings for planets, thinking it was a three-bodied system. When he observed the planet later, Saturn&#8217;s rings were directly oriented at Earth, causing him to think that two of the bodies had disappeared. The rings reappeared when he observed the planet in 1616, further confusing him.</p>
<p>Galileo was one of the first Europeans to observe sunspots, although Kepler had unwittingly observed one in 1607, but mistook it for a transit of Mercury.. He also reinterpreted a sunspot observation from the time of Charlemagne, which formerly had been attributed (impossibly) to a transit of Mercury. The very existence of sunspots showed another difficulty with the unchanging perfection of the heavens posited by orthodox Aristotelian celestial physics, but their regular periodic transits also confirmed the dramatic novel prediction of Kepler&#8217;s Aristotelian celestial dynamics in his 1609 <em>Astronomia Nova</em> that the sun rotates, which was the first successful novel prediction of post-spherist celestial physics. And the annual variations in sunspots&#8217; motions, discovered by Francesco Sizzi and others in 1612-1613, provided a powerful argument against both the Ptolemaic system and the geoheliocentric system of Tycho Brahe. For the seasonal variation refuted all non-geo-rotational geostatic planetary models such as the Ptolemaic pure geocentric model and the Tychonic geoheliocentric model in which the Sun orbits the Earth daily, whereby the variation should appear daily but does not. But it was explicable by all geo-rotational systems such as Longomontanus&#8217;s semi-Tychonic geo-heliocentric model, Capellan and extended Capellan geo-heliocentric models with a daily rotating Earth, and the pure heliocentric model. A dispute over priority in the discovery of sunspots, and in their interpretation, led Galileo to a long and bitter feud with the Jesuit Christoph Scheiner; in fact, there is little doubt that both of them were beaten by David Fabricius and his son Johannes, looking for confirmation of Kepler&#8217;s prediction of the sun&#8217;s rotation. Scheiner quickly adopted Kepler&#8217;s 1615 proposal of the modern telescope design, which gave larger magnification at the cost of inverted images; Galileo apparently never changed to Kepler&#8217;s design.</p>
<p>Galileo was the first to report lunar mountains and craters, whose existence he deduced from the patterns of light and shadow on the Moon&#8217;s surface. He even estimated the mountains&#8217; heights from these observations. This led him to the conclusion that the Moon was &#8220;rough and uneven, and just like the surface of the Earth itself,&#8221; rather than a perfect sphere as Aristotle had claimed. Galileo observed the Milky Way, previously believed to be nebulous, and found it to be a multitude of stars packed so densely that they appeared to be clouds from Earth. He located many other stars too distant to be visible with the naked eye. Galileo also observed the planet Neptune in 1612, but did not realize that it was a planet and took no particular notice of it. It appears in his notebooks as one of many unremarkable dim stars.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Controversy over comets and <em>The Assayer</em></span></h3>
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<p>In 1619, Galileo became embroiled in a controversy with Father Orazio Grassi, professor of mathematics at the Jesuit <span class="mw-redirect">Collegio Romano</span>. It began as a dispute over the nature of comets, but by the time Galileo had published <em>The Assayer</em> (<em>Il Saggiatore</em>) in 1623, his last salvo in the dispute, it had become a much wider argument over the very nature of Science itself. Because <em>The Assayer</em> contains such a wealth of Galileo&#8217;s ideas on how Science should be practised, it has been referred to as his scientific manifesto.</p>
<p>Early in 1619, Father Grassi had anonymously published a pamphlet, <em>An Astronomical Disputation on the Three Comets of the Year 1618</em>,<sup id="cite_ref-disputatio_40-0" class="reference"><span>[</span>41<span>]</span></sup> which discussed the nature of a comet that had appeared late in November of the previous year. Grassi concluded that the comet was a fiery body which had moved along a segment of a great circle at a constant distance from the earth, and that it had been located well beyond the moon.</p>
<p>Grassi&#8217;s arguments and conclusions were criticized in a subsequent article, <em>Discourse on the Comets</em>,<sup id="cite_ref-discourse_on_comets_42-0" class="reference"><span>[</span>43<span>]</span></sup> published under the name of one of Galileo&#8217;s disciples, a Florentine lawyer named Mario Guiducci, although it had been largely written by Galileo himself. Galileo and Guiducci offered no definitive theory of their own on the nature of comets, although they did present some tentative conjectures which we now know to be mistaken.</p>
<p>In its opening passage, Galileo and Guiducci&#8217;s <em>Discourse</em> gratuitously insulted the Jesuit <span class="mw-redirect">Christopher Scheiner</span>, and various uncomplimentary remarks about the professors of the Collegio Romano were scattered throughout the work. The Jesuits were offended, and Grassi soon replied with a polemical tract of his own, <em>The Astronomical and Philosophical Balance</em>,<sup id="cite_ref-astronomical_balance_48-0" class="reference"><span>[</span>49<span>]</span></sup> under the pseudonym Lothario Sarsio Sigensano,<sup id="cite_ref-49" class="reference"><span> </span></sup>purporting to be one of his own pupils.</p>
<p><em>The Assayer</em> was Galileo&#8217;s devastating reply to the <em>Astronomical Balance</em>. It has been widely regarded as a masterpiece of polemical literature, in which &#8220;Sarsi&#8217;s&#8221; arguments are subjected to withering scorn. It was greeted with wide acclaim, and particularly pleased the new pope, <span class="mw-redirect">Urban VIII</span>, to whom it had been dedicated.</p>
<p>Galileo&#8217;s dispute with Grassi permanently alienated many of the Jesuits who had previously been sympathetic to his ideas, and Galileo and his friends were convinced that these Jesuits were responsible for bringing about his later condemnation. The evidence for this is at best equivocal, however.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Galileo, Kepler and theories of tides</span></h3>
<p>Cardinal Bellarmine had written in 1615 that the Copernican system could not be defended without &#8220;a true <span class="mw-redirect">physical</span> demonstration that the sun does not circle the earth but the earth circles the sun&#8221;. Galileo considered his theory of the tides to provide the required physical proof of the motion of the earth. This theory was so important to Galileo that he originally intended to entitle his <em>Dialogue on the Two Chief World Systems</em> the <em>Dialogue on the Ebb and Flow of the Sea</em>. For Galileo, the tides were caused by the sloshing back and forth of water in the seas as a point on the Earth&#8217;s surface speeded up and slowed down because of the Earth&#8217;s rotation on its axis and revolution around the Sun. Galileo circulated his first account of the tides in 1616, addressed to Cardinal Orsini.</p>
<p>If this theory were correct, there would be only one high tide per day. Galileo and his contemporaries were aware of this inadequacy because there are two daily high tides at Venice instead of one, about twelve hours apart. Galileo dismissed this anomaly as the result of several secondary causes, including the shape of the sea, its depth, and other factors. Against the assertion that Galileo was deceptive in making these arguments, Albert Einstein expressed the opinion that Galileo developed his &#8220;fascinating arguments&#8221; and accepted them uncritically out of a desire for physical proof of the motion of the Earth.</p>
<p>Galileo dismissed as a &#8220;useless fiction&#8221; the idea, held by his contemporary Johannes Kepler, that the moon caused the tides. Galileo also refused to accept Kepler&#8217;s elliptical orbits of the planets, considering the circle the &#8220;perfect&#8221; shape for planetary orbits.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Technology</span></h2>
<div style="text-align: center;"><span class="image"><img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7d/Galileo_telescope_replica.jpg/800px-Galileo_telescope_replica.jpg" border="0" alt="Galileo telescope replica" width="550" height="411" title="Galileo Galilei   Father of Modern Science" /><br />
<em> A replica of the earliest surviving telescope attributed to Galileo Galilei, on display at the Griffith Observatory</em></p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Galileo made a number of contributions to what is now known as technology, as distinct from pure physics, and suggested others. This is not the same distinction as made by Aristotle, who would have considered all Galileo&#8217;s physics as <em>techne</em> or useful knowledge, as opposed to <em>episteme</em>, or philosophical investigation into the causes of things. Between 1595-1598, Galileo devised and improved a <em>Geometric and Military Compass</em> suitable for use by gunners and surveyors. This expanded on earlier instruments designed by <span class="mw-redirect">Niccolò Tartaglia</span> and Guidobaldo del Monte. For gunners, it offered, in addition to a new and safer way of elevating cannons accurately, a way of quickly computing the charge of gunpowder for cannonballs of different sizes and materials. As a geometric instrument, it enabled the construction of any regular polygon, computation of the area of any polygon or circular sector, and a variety of other calculations. About 1593, Galileo constructed a thermometer, using the expansion and contraction of air in a bulb to move water in an attached tube.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">In 1609, Galileo was among the first to use a refracting telescope as an instrument to observe stars, planets or moons. The name &#8220;telescope&#8221; was coined for Galileo&#8217;s instrument by a Greek mathematician, Giovanni Demisiani, at a banquet held in 1611 by Prince Federico Cesi to make Galileo a member of his Accademia dei Lincei. The name was derived from the Greek <em>tele</em> = &#8216;far&#8217; and <em>skopein</em> = &#8216;to look or see&#8217;. In 1610, he used a telescope at close range to magnify the parts of insects. By 1624 he had perfected a compound microscope. He gave one of these instruments to Cardinal Zollern in May of that year for presentation to the Duke of Bavaria, and in September he sent another to Prince Cesi.. The Linceans played a role again in naming the &#8220;microscope&#8221; a year later when fellow academy member Giovanni Faber coined the word for Galileo&#8217;s invention from the Greek words <em>μικρόν</em> (<em>micron</em>) meaning &#8220;small&#8221;, and <em>σκοπεῖν</em> (<em>skopein</em>) meaning &#8220;to look at&#8221;. The word was meant to be analogous with &#8220;telescope&#8221;. Illustrations of insects made using one of Galileo&#8217;s microscopes, and published in 1625, appear to have been the first clear documentation of the use of a compound microscope.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">In 1612, having determined the orbital periods of Jupiter&#8217;s satellites, Galileo proposed that with sufficiently accurate knowledge of their orbits one could use their positions as a universal clock, and this would make possible the determination of longitude. He worked on this problem from time to time during the remainder of his life; but the practical problems were severe. The method was first successfully applied by Giovanni Domenico Cassini in 1681 and was later used extensively for large land surveys; this method, for example, was used by <span class="mw-redirect">Lewis and Clark</span>. For sea navigation, where delicate telescopic observations were more difficult, the longitude problem eventually required development of a practical portable marine chronometer, such as that of John Harrison.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">In his last year, when totally blind, he designed an escapement mechanism for a pendulum clock, a vectorial model of which may be seen here. The first fully operational pendulum clock was made by Christiaan Huygens in the 1650s. Galilei created sketches of various inventions, such as a candle and mirror combination to reflect light throughout a building, an automatic tomato picker, a pocket comb that doubled as an eating utensil, and what appears to be a ballpoint pen.</p>
<h2 style="text-align: left;"><span class="mw-headline">Physics</span></h2>
<p style="text-align: left;">Galileo&#8217;s theoretical and experimental work on the motions of bodies, along with the largely independent work of Kepler and Rene Descartes, was a precursor of the classical mechanics developed by Sir Isaac Newton.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">A biography by Galileo&#8217;s pupil Vincenzo Viviani stated that Galileo had dropped balls of the same material, but different masses, from the Leaning Tower of Pisa to demonstrate that their time of descent was independent of their mass. This was contrary to what Aristotle had taught: that heavy objects fall faster than lighter ones, in direct proportion to weight. While this story has been retold in popular accounts, there is no account by Galileo himself of such an experiment, and it is generally accepted by historians that it was at most a thought experiment which did not actually take place.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">In his 1638 <em>Discorsi</em> Galileo&#8217;s character Salviati, widely regarded as largely Galileo&#8217;s spokesman, held that all unequal weights would fall with the same finite speed in a vacuum. But this had previously been proposed by Lucretius and Simon Stevin. Salviati also held it could be experimentally demonstrated by the comparison of pendulum motions in air with otherwise similar but different weight bobs of lead and of cork.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">Galileo proposed that a falling body would fall with a uniform acceleration, as long as the resistance of the medium through which it was falling remained negligible, or in the limiting case of its falling through a vacuum. He also derived the correct kinematical law for the distance travelled during a uniform acceleration starting from rest-namely, that it is proportional to the square of the elapsed time ( <em>d</em> ∝ <em>t</em><sup> 2</sup> ). However, in neither case were these discoveries entirely original. The time-squared law for uniformly accelerated change was already known to Nicole Oresme in the 14th century, and Domingo de Soto, in the 16th, had suggested that bodies falling through a homogeneous medium would be uniformly accelerated Galileo expressed the time-squared law using geometrical constructions and mathematically-precise words, adhering to the standards of the day. (It remained for others to re-express the law in algebraic terms). He also concluded that objects <em>retain their velocity</em> unless a force-often friction-acts upon them, refuting the generally accepted Aristotelian hypothesis that objects &#8220;naturally&#8221; slow down and stop unless a force acts upon them (philosophical ideas relating to inertia had been proposed by <span class="mw-redirect">Ibn al-Haytham</span> centuries earlier, as had Jean Buridan, and according to Joseph Needham, <span class="mw-redirect">Mo Tzu</span> had proposed it centuries before either of them, but this was the first time that it had been mathematically expressed, verified experimentally, and introduced the idea of frictional force, the key breakthrough in validating inertia). Galileo&#8217;s Principle of Inertia stated: &#8220;A body moving on a level surface will continue in the same direction at constant speed unless disturbed.&#8221; This principle was incorporated into Newton&#8217;s laws of motion (first law).</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><span class="image"><img class="thumbimage aligncenter" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/73/Pisa.Duomo.dome.Riminaldi01.jpg/558px-Pisa.Duomo.dome.Riminaldi01.jpg" border="0" alt="558px Pisa.Duomo.dome.Riminaldi01 Galileo Galilei   Father of Modern Science" width="279" height="299" title="Galileo Galilei   Father of Modern Science" /></span></p>
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<p style="text-align: center;"><em>Dome of the cathedral of Pisa with the &#8220;lamp of Galileo&#8221;</em></p>
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<p>Galileo also claimed (incorrectly) that a pendulum&#8217;s swings always take the same amount of time, independently of the amplitude. That is, that a simple pendulum is isochronous. It is popularly believed that he came to this conclusion by watching the swings of the bronze chandelier in the cathedral of Pisa, using his pulse to time it. It appears however, that he conducted no experiments because the claim is true only of infinitesimally small swings as discovered by <span class="mw-redirect">Christian Huygens</span>. Galileo&#8217;s son, Vincenzo, sketched a clock based on his father&#8217;s theories in 1642. The clock was never built and, because of the large swings required by its verge escapement, would have been a poor timekeeper. (See Technology above.)</p>
<p>In 1638 Galileo described an experimental method to measure the speed of light by arranging that two observers, each having lanterns equipped with shutters, observe each other&#8217;s lanterns at some distance. The first observer opens the shutter of his lamp, and, the second, upon seeing the light, immediately opens the shutter of his own lantern. The time between the first observer&#8217;s opening his shutter and seeing the light from the second observer&#8217;s lamp indicates the time it takes light to travel back and forth between the two observers. Galileo reported that when he tried this at a distance of less than a mile, he was unable to determine whether or not the light appeared instantaneously.Sometime between Galileo&#8217;s death and 1667, the members of the Florentine <em>Accademia del Cimento</em> repeated the experiment over a distance of about a mile and obtained a similarly inconclusive result.</p>
<p>Galileo is lesser known for, yet still credited with, being one of the first to understand sound frequency. By scraping a chisel at different speeds, he linked the pitch of the sound produced to the spacing of the chisel&#8217;s skips, a measure of frequency.</p>
<p>In his 1632 Dialogue Galileo presented a physical theory to account for tides, based on the motion of the Earth. If correct, this would have been a strong argument for the reality of the Earth&#8217;s motion. In fact, the original title for the book described it as a dialogue on the tides; the reference to tides was removed by order of the Inquisition. His theory gave the first insight into the importance of the shapes of ocean basins in the size and timing of tides; he correctly accounted, for instance, for the negligible tides halfway along the Adriatic Sea compared to those at the ends. As a general account of the cause of tides, however, his theory was a failure. Kepler and others correctly associated the Moon with an influence over the tides, based on empirical data; a proper physical theory of the tides, however, was not available until Newton.</p>
<p>Galileo also put forward the basic principle of relativity, that the laws of physics are the same in any system that is moving at a constant speed in a straight line, regardless of its particular speed or direction. Hence, there is no absolute motion or absolute rest. This principle provided the basic framework for Newton&#8217;s laws of motion and is central to Einstein&#8217;s <span class="mw-redirect">special theory of relativity</span>.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Mathematics</span></h2>
<p>While Galileo&#8217;s application of mathematics to experimental physics was innovative, his mathematical methods were the standard ones of the day. The analysis and proofs relied heavily on the Eudoxian theory of proportion, as set forth in the fifth book of Euclid&#8217;s Elements. This theory had become available only a century before, thanks to accurate translations by <span class="mw-redirect">Tartaglia</span> and others; but by the end of Galileo&#8217;s life it was being superseded by the algebraic methods of Descartes.</p>
<p>Galileo produced one piece of original and even prophetic work in mathematics: Galileo&#8217;s paradox, which shows that there are as many perfect squares as there are whole numbers, even though most numbers are not perfect squares. Such seeming contradictions were brought under control 250 years later in the work of Georg Cantor.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Church controversy</span></h2>
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<p style="text-align: center;"><span class="image"><img class="thumbimage aligncenter" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/88/Galileo_facing_the_Roman_Inquisition.jpg" border="0" alt="Galileo facing the Roman Inquisition Galileo Galilei   Father of Modern Science" width="250" height="191" title="Galileo Galilei   Father of Modern Science" /></span></p>
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<p style="text-align: center;"><em>Cristiano Banti&#8217;s 1857 painting </em><em>Galileo facing the Roman Inquisition</em></p>
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<p>Western Christian biblical references Psalm 93:1, Psalm 96:10, and 1 Chronicles 16:30 include (depending on translation) text stating that &#8220;the world is firmly established, it cannot be moved.&#8221; In the same tradition, <span class="external text">Psalm 104:5</span> says, &#8220;<span class="mw-redirect">the LORD</span> set the earth on its foundations; it can never be moved.&#8221; Further, Ecclesiastes 1:5 states that &#8220;And the sun rises and sets and returns to its place, etc.&#8221;</p>
<p>Galileo defended heliocentrism, and claimed it was not contrary to those Scripture passages. He took Augustine&#8217;s position on Scripture: not to take every passage literally, particularly when the scripture in question is a book of poetry and songs, not a book of instructions or history. The writers of the Scripture wrote from the perspective of the terrestrial world, and from that vantage point the sun does rise and set. In fact, it is the earth&#8217;s rotation which gives the impression of the sun in motion across the sky. He did, however, openly question the veracity of the Book of Joshua (10:13) wherein the sun and moon were said to have remained unmoved for three days to allow a victory to the Israelites.</p>
<p>By 1616 the attacks on Galileo had reached a head, and he went to Rome to try to persuade the Church authorities not to ban his ideas. In the end, <span class="mw-redirect">Cardinal Bellarmine</span>, acting on directives from the Inquisition, delivered him an order not to &#8220;hold or defend&#8221; the idea that the Earth moves and the Sun stands still at the centre. The decree did not prevent Galileo from discussing heliocentrism hypothetically. For the next several years Galileo stayed well away from the controversy. He revived his project of writing a book on the subject, encouraged by the election of <span class="mw-redirect">Cardinal Barberini</span> as Pope Urban VIII in 1623. Barberini was a friend and admirer of Galileo, and had opposed the condemnation of Galileo in 1616. The book, <em>Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems</em>, was published in 1632, with formal authorization from the Inquisition and papal permission.</p>
<p>Pope Urban VIII personally asked Galileo to give arguments for and against heliocentrism in the book, and to be careful not to advocate heliocentrism. He made another request, that his own views on the matter be included in Galileo&#8217;s book. Only the latter of those requests was fulfilled by Galileo. Whether unknowingly or deliberately, Simplicio (&#8220;Stupid&#8221;<sup class="noprint Template-Fact"><span style="white-space: nowrap;" title="This claim needs references to reliable sources since November 2008">[<em>citation needed</em>]</span></sup>), the defender of the Aristotelian Geocentric view in <em>Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems</em>, was often caught in his own errors and sometimes came across as a fool. This fact made <em>Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems</em> appear as an advocacy book; an attack on Aristotelian geocentrism and defense of the Copernican theory. To add insult to injury, Galileo put the words of Pope Urban VIII into the mouth of Simplicio. Most historians agree Galileo did not act out of malice and felt blindsided by the reaction to his book. However, the Pope did not take the suspected public ridicule lightly, nor the blatant bias. Galileo had alienated one of his biggest and most powerful supporters, the Pope, and was called to Rome to defend his writings.</p>
<p>With the loss of many of his defenders in Rome because of <em>Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems</em>, Galileo was ordered to stand trial on suspicion of heresy in 1633. The sentence of the Inquisition was in three essential parts:</p>
<ul>
<li>Galileo was found &#8220;vehemently suspect of heresy&#8221;, namely of having held the opinions that the Sun lies motionless at the centre of the universe, that the Earth is not at its centre and moves, and that one may hold and defend an opinion as probable after it has been declared contrary to Holy Scripture. He was required to &#8220;abjure, curse and detest&#8221; those opinions.</li>
<li>He was ordered imprisoned; the sentence was later commuted to house arrest.</li>
<li>His offending <em>Dialogue</em> was banned; and in an action not announced at the trial, publication of any of his works was forbidden, including any he might write in the future.</li>
</ul>
<p>According to popular legend, after recanting his theory that the Earth moved around the Sun, Galileo allegedly muttered the rebellious phrase <em>And yet it moves</em>, but there is no evidence that he actually said this or anything similarly impertinent. The first account of the legend dates to a century after his death.<sup id="cite_ref-88" class="reference"><span>[</span>89<span>]</span></sup></p>
<p>After a period with the friendly Ascanio Piccolomini (the Archbishop of Siena), Galileo was allowed to return to his villa at Arcetri near Florence, where he spent the remainder of his life under house arrest, and where he later became blind. It was while Galileo was under house arrest that he dedicated his time to one of his finest works, Two New Sciences. Here he summarized work he had done some forty years earlier, on the two sciences now called kinematics and strength of materials. This book has received high praise from both <span class="mw-redirect">Sir Isaac Newton</span> and Albert Einstein. As a result of this work, Galileo is often called, the &#8220;father of modern physics&#8221;.</p>
<p>Galileo died on 8 January 1642. The Grand Duke of Tuscany, Ferdinando II, wished to bury him in the main body of the <span class="mw-redirect">Basilica of Santa Croce</span>, next to the tombs of his father and other ancestors, and to erect a marble mausoleum in his honour. These plans were scrapped, however, after Pope Urban VIII and his nephew, Cardinal Francesco Barberini, protested. He was instead buried in a small room next to the novices&#8217; chapel at the end of a corridor from the southern transept of the basilica to the sacristy. He was reburied in the main body of the basilica in 1737 after a monument had been erected there in his honour.</p>
<p>The Inquisition&#8217;s ban on reprinting Galileo&#8217;s works was lifted in 1718 when permission was granted to publish an edition of his works (excluding the condemned <em>Dialogue</em>) in Florence. In 1741 Pope Benedict XIV authorized the publication of an edition of Galileo&#8217;s complete scientific works which included a mildly censored version of the <em>Dialogue</em>. In 1758 the general prohibition against works advocating heliocentrism was removed from the Index of prohibited books, although the specific ban on uncensored versions of the <em>Dialogue</em> and Copernicus&#8217;s <em>De Revolutionibus</em> remained. All traces of official opposition to heliocentrism by the Church disappeared in 1835 when these works were finally dropped from the Index.</p>
<p>In 1939 Pope Pius XII, in his first speech to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, within a few months of his election to the papacy, described Galileo as being among the <em>&#8220;most audacious heroes of research &#8230; not afraid of the stumbling blocks and the risks on the way, nor fearful of the funereal monuments<sup>&#8220;</sup></em> His close advisor of 40 years, Professor Robert Leiber wrote: &#8220;Pius XII was very careful not to close any doors (to science) prematurely. He was energetic on this point and regretted that in the case of Galileo.&#8221;</p>
<p>On 15 February 1990, in a speech delivered at the Sapienza University of Rome,<sup id="cite_ref-100" class="reference"><span> </span></sup><span class="mw-redirect">Cardinal Ratzinger</span> cited some current views on the Galileo affair as forming what he called &#8220;a symptomatic case that permits us to see how deep the self-doubt of the modern age, of science and technology goes today.&#8221;<sup id="cite_ref-self-doubt_101-0" class="reference"><span> </span></sup>Some of the views he cited were those of the philosopher Paul Feyerabend, whom he quoted as saying &#8220;The Church at the time of Galileo kept much more closely to reason than did Galileo himself, and she took into consideration the ethical and social consequences of Galileo&#8217;s teaching too. Her verdict against Galileo was rational and just and the revision of this verdict can be justified only on the grounds of what is politically opportune.&#8221; The Cardinal did not clearly indicate whether he agreed or disagreed with Feyerabend&#8217;s assertions. He did, however, say &#8220;It would be foolish to construct an impulsive apologetic on the basis of such views&#8221;.</p>
<p>On 31 October 1992, Pope John Paul II expressed regret for how the Galileo affair was handled, and officially conceded that the Earth was not stationary, as the result of a study conducted by the Pontifical Council for Culture.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">His writings</span></h2>
<p>Galileo&#8217;s early works describing scientific instruments include the 1586 tract entitled <em><span class="new">The Little Balance</span></em> (<em>La Billancetta</em>) describing an accurate balance to weigh objects in air or water and the 1606 printed manual <em><span class="new">Le Operazioni del Compasso Geometrico et Militare</span></em> on the operation of a geometrical and military compass.<sup id="cite_ref-106" class="reference"><span>[</span>107<span>]</span></sup></p>
<p>His early works in dynamics, the science of motion and mechanics were his 1590 Pisan <em>De Motu</em> (On Motion) and his <em>circa</em> 1600 Paduan <em>Le Meccaniche</em> (Mechanics). The former was based on Aristotelian-Archimedean fluid dynamics and held that the speed of gravitational fall in a fluid medium was proportional to the excess of a body&#8217;s specific weight over that of the medium, whereby in a vacuum bodies would fall with speeds in proportion to their specific weights. It also subscribed to the Hipparchan-Philoponan <span class="mw-redirect">impetus dynamics</span> in which impetus is self-dissipating and free-fall in a vacuum would have an essential terminal speed according to specific weight after an initial period of acceleration.</p>
<p>Galileo&#8217;s 1610 <em>The Starry Messenger</em> (<em>Sidereus Nuncius</em>) was the first scientific treatise to be published based on observations made through a telescope and include the discovery of the Galilean moons. Galileo published a description of sunspots in 1613 entitled <em><span class="new">Letters on Sunspots</span></em> suggesting the Sun and heavens are corruptible. It also reported his 1610 telescopic confirmation of the full set of phases of Venus that refuted pure geocentrism and so promoted the 17th century conversion to geoheliocentrism.<sup class="noprint Inline-Template"><span style="white-space: nowrap;" title="The material in the vicinity of this tag failed verification of its source citation(s) since October 2008"> </span></sup>In 1615 Galileo prepared a manuscript known as the <em><span class="mw-redirect">Letter to Grand Duchess Christina</span></em> which was not published in printed form until 1636. This letter was a revised version of the <em><span class="new">Letter to Castelli</span></em>, which was denounced by the Inquisition as an incursion upon theology by advocating Copernicanism both as physically true and as consistent with Scripture.<sup id="cite_ref-108" class="reference"><span> </span></sup>In 1616, after the order by the inquisition for Galileo not to hold or defend the Copernican position, Galileo wrote the <em><span class="new">Discourse on the tides</span></em> (<em>Discorso sul flusso e il reflusso del mare</em>) based on the Copernican earth, in the form of a private letter to Cardinal Orsini. In 1619, Mario Guiducci, a pupil of Galileo&#8217;s, published a lecture written largely by Galileo under the title <em><span class="new">Discourse on the Comets</span></em> (<em>Discorso Delle Comete</em>), arguing against the Jesuit interpretation of comets.<sup id="cite_ref-110" class="reference"><span>[</span>111<span>]</span></sup></p>
<p>In 1623, Galileo published <em>The Assayer &#8211; Il Saggiatore</em>, which attacked theories based on Aristotle&#8217;s authority and promoted experimentation and the mathematical formulation of scientific ideas. The book was highly successful and even found support among the higher echelons of the Christian church.<sup id="cite_ref-111" class="reference"><span>[</span>112<span>]</span></sup> Following the success of The Assayer, Galileo published the <em>Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems</em> (Dialogo sopra i due massimi sistemi del mondo) in 1632. Despite taking care to adhere to the Inquisition&#8217;s 1616 instructions, the claims in the book favouring Copernican theory and a non Geocentric model of the solar system led to Galileo being tried and banned on publication. Despite the publication ban, Galileo published his <em>Discourses and Mathematical Demonstrations Relating to Two New Sciences</em> (<em>Discorsi e Dimostrazioni Matematiche, intorno a due nuove scienze</em>) in 1638 in Holland, outside the jurisdiction of the Inquisition.</p>
<ul>
<li><em>The Little Balance</em> (1586)</li>
<li><em>On Motion</em> (1590)</li>
<li><em>Mechanics</em> (c1600)</li>
<li><em>The Starry Messenger</em> (1610; in Latin, Sidereus Nuncius)</li>
<li><em>Letters on Sunspots</em> (1613)</li>
<li><em>Letter to the Grand Duchess Christina</em> (1615; published in 1636)</li>
<li><em>Discourse on the Tides</em> (1616; in Italian, Discorso del flusso e reflusso del mare)</li>
<li><em>Discourse on the Comets</em> (1619; in Italian, Discorso Delle Comete)</li>
<li><em>The Assayer</em> (1623; in Italian, Il Saggiatore)</li>
<li><em>Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems</em> (1632; in Italian Dialogo dei due massimi sistemi del mondo)</li>
<li><em>Discourses and Mathematical Demonstrations Relating to Two New Sciences</em> (1638; in Italian, Discorsi e Dimostrazioni Matematiche, intorno a due nuove scienze)</li>
</ul>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Legacy</span></h2>
<p>Galileo&#8217;s astronomical discoveries and investigations into the Copernican theory have led to a lasting legacy which includes the categorisation of the four large moons of Jupiter discovered by Galileo (Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto) as the Galilean moons. Other scientific endeavours and principles are named after Galileo including the Galileo spacecraft, the first spacecraft to enter orbit around Jupiter, the proposed Galileo <span class="mw-redirect">global satellite navigation system</span>, the transformation between <span class="mw-redirect">inertial systems</span> in classical mechanics denoted Galilean transformation and the <span class="mw-redirect">Gal (unit)</span>, sometimes known as the <em>Galileo</em> which is a non-<span class="mw-redirect">SI</span> unit of acceleration.</p>
<p>To coincide in part with Galileo&#8217;s first recorded astronomical observations using a telescope, the United Nations has scheduled 2009 to be the International Year of Astronomy. A global scheme laid out by the International Astronomical Union (IAU), it has also been endorsed by UNESCO &#8211; the <span class="mw-redirect">UN</span> body responsible for Educational, Scientific and Cultural matters. The International Year of Astronomy 2009 is intended to be a global celebration of astronomy and its contributions to society and culture, stimulating worldwide interest not only in astronomy but science in general, with a particular slant towards young people.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">The 20th-century German playwright Bertolt Brecht dramatised Galileo&#8217;s life in his <em>Life of Galileo</em> (1943).</p>
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		<title>Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi &#8211; The Father of Modern Surgery</title>
		<link>http://scientists.penyet.net/abu-al-qasim-al-zahrawi-the-father-of-modern-surgery.html</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Sep 2007 07:30:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>famous scientists</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Abu al-Qasim Khalaf ibn al-Abbas Al-Zahrawi (936 &#8211; 1013), (Arabic: أبو القاسم بن خلف بن العباس الزهراوي) also known in the West as Abulcasis, was an Andalusian-Arab physician, surgeon, and scientist. He is considered the father of modern surgery, and as Islam&#8217;s greatest medieval surgeon, whose comprehensive medical texts, combining Islamic medicine and Greco-Roman teachings, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Abu al-Qasim Khalaf ibn al-Abbas Al-Zahrawi</strong> (936 &#8211; 1013), (Arabic: أبو القاسم بن خلف بن العباس الزهراوي) also known in the West as <strong>Abulcasis</strong>, was an Andalusian-Arab physician, surgeon, and scientist. He is considered the father of modern surgery, and as Islam&#8217;s greatest medieval surgeon, whose comprehensive medical texts, combining Islamic medicine and Greco-Roman teachings, shaped both Islamic and European surgical procedures up until the Renaissance. His greatest contribution to history is the <em>Kitab al-Tasrif</em>, a thirty-volume encyclopedia of medical practices.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Biography</span></h2>
<p><img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/c/c2/Albucasis.gif" alt="abu al-qasim al-zahrawi" align="left" title="Abu al Qasim al Zahrawi   The Father of Modern Surgery" />Abu al-Qasim was born in the city of <span class="new">El Zahra</span>, six miles northwest of Cordoba, Spain. He was descended from the Ansar Arab tribe who settled earlier in Spain. Few details remain regarding his life, aside from his published work, due to the destruction of El-Zahra during later Spanish-Moorish conflicts. His name first appears in the writings of Abu Muhammad bin Hazm (993 &#8211; 1064), who listed him among the greatest physicians of Moorish Spain. But we have the first detailed biography of El-Zahrawi from al-Humaydi&#8217;s Jadhwat al-Muqtabis (On Andalusian Savants), completed six decades after El-Zahrawi&#8217;s death.</p>
<p>In El-Zahra, he lived most of his life. It is also where he studied, taught and practised medicine and surgery until shortly before his death in about 1013, two years after the sacking of El-Zahra.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Works</span></h2>
<p>Abu al-Qasim was a court physician to the Andalusian caliph Al-Hakam II. He devoted his entire life and genius to the advancement of medicine as a whole and surgery in particular. His best work was the <em>Kitab al-Tasrif. It is a medical encyclopaedia spanning 30 volumes which included sections on surgery, medicine, orthopaedics, ophthalmology, pharmacology, nutrition etc.</em></p>
<p>In the 14th century, <span id="more-10"></span>French surgeon Guy de Chauliac quoted <em>al-Tasrif</em> over 200 times. Pietro Argallata (d. 1453) described Abu al-Qasim as &#8220;without doubt the chief of all surgeons&#8221;. In an earlier work, he is credited to be the first to describe ectopic pregnancy in 963, in those days a fatal affliction. Abu Al-Qasim&#8217;s influence continued for at least five centuries, extending into the Renaissance, evidenced by <em>al-Tasrif&#8217;</em>s frequent reference by French surgeon Jaques Delechamps (1513-1588).</p>
<p style="text-align: center"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/3/35/Al-zahrawi_surgical_tools.gif" border="0" alt="Page from a 1531 Latin translation by Peter Argellata of El Zahrawi's treatise on surgical and medical instruments." width="180" height="279" title="Abu al Qasim al Zahrawi   The Father of Modern Surgery" /></p>
<p><span class="image"> </span></p>
<p align="center"><span class="image">Page from a 1531 Latin translation by Peter Argellata of El Zahrawi&#8217;s treatise on surgical and medical instruments.</span></p>
<p class="thumb tright">
<h3><span class="mw-headline"><em>Kitab al-Tasrif</em></span></h3>
<p>Abu al-Qasim&#8217;s thirty-chapter medical treatise, <em>Kitab al-Tasrif</em>, published in 1000, covered a broad range of medical topics, including dentistry and childbirth, which contained data that had accumulated during a career that spanned almost 50 years of training, teaching and practice. In it he also wrote of the importance of a positive doctor-patient relationship and wrote affectionately of his students, whom he referred to as &#8220;my children&#8221;. He also emphasised the importance of treating patients irrespective of their social status. He encouraged the close observation of individual cases in order to make the most accurate diagnosis and the best possible treatment.</p>
<p><em>Al-Tasrif</em> was later translated into Latin by Gerard of Cremona in the 12th century, and illustrated. For perhaps five centuries during the European Middle Ages, it was the primary source for European medical knowledge, and served as a reference for doctors and surgeons.</p>
<p>Not always properly credited, Abu Al-Qasim&#8217;s <em>al-Tasrif</em> described both what would later became known as &#8220;Kocher&#8217;s method&#8221; for treating a dislocated shoulder and &#8220;Walcher position&#8221; in obstetrics. <em>Al-Tasrif</em> described how to ligature blood vessels before Ambroise Pare, and was the first recorded book to document several dental devices and explain the hereditary nature of haemophilia.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Advances in surgery</span></h2>
<p>Al-Qasim was a surgeon and specialized in curing disease by cauterization. He also invented several devices used during surgery, for the purpose of:</p>
<ul>
<li>inspection of the interior of the urethra</li>
<li>applying and removing foreign bodies from the throat</li>
<li>inspection of the ear</li>
</ul>
<p>Al-Qasim also described the use of forceps in vaginal deliveries.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Surgical instruments</span></h2>
<p>In his <em>Al-Tasrif</em> (<em>The Method of Medicine</em>), he introduced his famous collection of over 200 surgical instruments. Many of these instruments were never used before by any previous surgeons. Hamidan, for example, listed at least twenty six innovative surgical instruments that Abulcasis introduced.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Catgut</span></h3>
<p>Abu al-Qasim&#8217;s use of catgut for internal stitching is still practised in modern surgery. The catgut appears to be the only natural substance capable of dissolving and is acceptable by the body.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Forceps</span></h3>
<p>In the <em>Al-Tasrif</em> (1000), Abu al-Qasim invented the forceps for extracting a dead fetus, as illustrated in the the <em>Al-Tasrif</em>.<sup id="_ref-2" class="reference">[3]</sup></p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Ligature</span></h3>
<p>In the <em>Al-Tasrif</em> (1000), Abu al-Qasim introduced the use of ligature for the arteries in lieu of cauterization.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Surgical needle</span></h3>
<p>The surgical needle was invented and described by Abu al-Qasim in his <em>Al-Tasrif</em> (1000).</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Other instruments</span></h3>
<p>Other surgical instruments invented by Abu al-Qasim and first described in his <em>Al-Tasrif</em> (1000) include the scalpel, curette, retractor, surgical spoon, sound, surgical hook, surgical rod, and specula.</p>
<p><a target="_blank" title="famous scientists" href="http://en.wikipedia.org">en.wikipedia.org</a></p>
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		<title>Ibn Tufail (Abubacer)</title>
		<link>http://scientists.penyet.net/ibn-tufail-abubacer.html</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Sep 2007 07:21:48 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Ibn Tufail (c. 1105, Gaudix, Spain &#8211; 1185) full name: Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Abd al-Malik ibn Muhammad ibn Tufail al-Qaisi al-Andalusi أبو بكر محمد بن عبد الملك بن محمد بن طفيل القيسي الأندلسي (Latinised form: Abubacer). Andalusian Arab Muslim philosopher, physician, and court official.
Life
Born in Guadix near Granada, he was educated by Ibn Bajjah [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Ibn Tufail</strong> (c. 1105, <span class="new">Gaudix</span>, Spain &#8211; 1185) full name: <strong>Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Abd al-Malik ibn Muhammad ibn Tufail al-Qaisi al-Andalusi أبو بكر محمد بن عبد الملك بن محمد بن طفيل القيسي الأندلسي</strong> (Latinised form: <strong>Abubacer</strong>). Andalusian Arab Muslim philosopher, physician, and court official.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Life</span></h2>
<p>Born in Guadix near Granada, he was educated by Ibn Bajjah (Avempace). He served as a secretary for the ruler of Granada, and later as vizier and physician for Abu Yaqub Yusuf, the Almohad ruler of Al-Andalus, to whom he recommended Averroës as his own successor when he retired in 1182. He died in Morocco.</p>
<p>Ibn Tufail was the author of <em><span class="Unicode">Ḥayy bin Yaqẓan</span></em>, حي بن يقظان (&#8220;Alive son of Awake&#8221;): a philosophical romance and allegorical tale of a man who lives alone on an island and who, without contact with other human beings, discovers ultimate truth through a systematic process of reasoned inquiry. Hayy ultimately comes into contact with civilization and religion when he meets Absal. He determines that the trappings of religion, namely imagery and dependence on material goods, are necessary for the multitude in order that they might have decent lives. However, imagery and material goods are distractions from the truth and ought to be abandoned by those whose reason recognizes that they are distractions.<span id="more-9"></span></p>
<p>Ibn Tufail drew the name of the tale and most of its characters from an earlier work by <a title="avicenna" href="http://scientists.penyet.net/ibn-sina-aviceodern-medicineibn-sina-avicenna-the-father-of-modern-medicine.html">Ibn Sina (Avicenna)</a>. Ibn Tufail&#8217;s book was neither a commentary on nor a mere retelling of Ibn Sina&#8217;s work, however, but a new and innovative work in its own right. It reflects one of the main concerns of Muslim philosophers (later also of Christian thinkers), that of reconciling philosophy with revelation. At the same time, the narrative anticipates in some ways both Robinson Crusoe and Rousseau&#8217;s <em>Émile</em>. It tells of a child who is nurtured by a gazelle and grows up in total isolation from humans. In seven phases of seven years each, solely by the exercise of his faculties, Hayy goes through all the graduations of knowledge.</p>
<p>The story of <em>Hayy Ibn Yaqzan</em> is similar to the later story of Mowgli in Rudyard Kipling&#8217;s <em>The Jungle Book</em> in that a baby is abandoned in a deserted tropical island where he is take care of and fed by a mother wolf.</p>
<p>A Latin translation of the work, entitled <em>Philosophus autodidactus</em>, first appeared in 1671, prepared by Edward Pococke the Younger. The first English translation (by Simon Ockley) was published in 1708.</p>
<p>The astronomer Nur Ed-Din Al Betrugi was a disciple of Ibn Tufail.</p>
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		<title>Ibn Sina (Avicenna) &#8211; The Father of Modern Medicine</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Sep 2007 10:30:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Abu ʿAli al-Ḥusayn ibn ʿAbd Allah ibn Sina (c. 980 in Afshana near Bukhara, Khorasan &#8211; 1037 in Hamedan), also known by his Latinized name Avicenna (Gr. Αβιτξιανός), was a Persian Muslim polymath: an astronomer, chemist, logician, mathematician, physicist, poet, scientist, theologian, statesman, soldier, and foremost physician and philosopher of his time.
He wrote some 450 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/bc/Avicenna_Persian_Physician.jpg/200px-Avicenna_Persian_Physician.jpg" alt="ibn sina the father of modern medicine" align="left" title="Ibn Sina (Avicenna)   The Father of Modern Medicine" /><strong><span class="Unicode" style="white-space: normal; text-decoration: none" title="ar ALA transliteration" lang="ar-Latn" xml:lang="ar-Latn">Abu ʿAli al-Ḥusayn ibn ʿAbd Allah ibn Sina</span></strong> (c. 980 in Afshana near Bukhara, Khorasan &#8211; 1037 in Hamedan), also known by his Latinized name <strong>Avicenna</strong> (Gr. <strong><span lang="grc" xml:lang="grc">Αβιτξιανός</span></strong>), was a Persian Muslim polymath: an astronomer, chemist, logician, mathematician, physicist, poet, scientist, theologian, statesman, soldier, and foremost physician and philosopher of his time.</p>
<p>He wrote some 450 books on a wide range of subjects, many of which concentrated on philosophy and medicine. His most famous works are <em>The Book of Healing</em> and <em>The Canon of Medicine</em>, which was a standard medical text at many Islamic and European universities up until the 18th century. Ibn Sina developed a medical system that combined his own personal experience with that of Islamic medicine, the medical system of Galen, Aristotelian metaphysics, and ancient Persian, Arabian and Indian medicine. Ibn Sina is regarded as the father of modern medicine, particularly for his introduction of systematic experimentation and quantification into the study of physiology, and for his discovery of the contagious nature of diseases. He is also considered the father of the fundamental concept of momentum in physics.</p>
<p>George Sarton, the father of the history of science, wrote in the <em>Introduction to the History of Science</em>:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;One of the most famous exponents of Muslim universalism and an eminent figure in Islamic learning was Ibn Sina, known in the West as Avicenna (981-1037). For a thousand years he has retained his original renown as one of the greatest thinkers and medical scholars in history. His most important medical works are the Qanun (Canon) and a treatise on Cardiac drugs. The &#8216;Qanun fi-l-Tibb&#8217; is an immense encyclopedia of medicine. It contains some of the most illuminating thoughts pertaining to distinction of mediastinitis from pleurisy; contagious nature of phthisis; distribution of diseases by water and soil; careful description of skin troubles; of sexual diseases and perversions; of nervous ailments.</p></blockquote>
<p><span id="more-8"></span></p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Biography</span></h2>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Early life</span></h3>
<p>Ibn Sina&#8217;s life is known to us from authoritative sources. A biography, which is widely considered by foremost Arabicists to have been composed by a disciple and later redacted, covers his first thirty years, and the rest are documented by his disciple al-Juzjani, who was also his secretary and his friend.</p>
<p>He was born in Persia around 980 (370 AH) in Afshana, his mother&#8217;s home, a small city now part of Uzbekistan. His father, a respected Ismaili scholar, was from Balkh of the Persian province of Khorasan, now part of Afghanistan, and was at the time of his son&#8217;s birth the governor of a village in one of the Samanid <span class="new">Nuh ibn Mansur</span>&#8217;s estates. He had his son very carefully educated at Bukhara. According to the Encyclopedia of Islam <em>his father and his brother were influenced by Isma&#8217;ili propaganda; he was certainly acquainted with its tenets, but refused to adopt them.</em> Ibn Sina&#8217;s independent thought was served by an extraordinary intelligence and memory, which allowed him to overtake his teachers at the age of fourteen.</p>
<p>Ibn Sina was put under the charge of a tutor, and his precocity soon made him the marvel of his neighbours; he displayed exceptional intellectual behaviour and was a child prodigy who had memorized the Quran by the age of 7 and a great deal of Persian poetry as well. From a greengrocer he learned arithmetic, and he began to learn more from a wandering scholar who gained a livelihood by curing the sick and teaching the young.</p>
<p>However he was greatly troubled by metaphysical problems and in particular the works of Aristotle. So, for the next year and a half, he also studied philosophy, in which he encountered greater obstacles. In such moments of baffled inquiry, he would leave his books, perform the requisite ablutions, then go to the mosque, and continue in prayer till light broke on his difficulties. Deep into the night he would continue his studies, and even in his dreams problems would pursue him and work out their solution. Forty times, it is said, he read through the <em>Metaphysics</em> of Aristotle, till the words were imprinted on his memory; but their meaning was hopelessly obscure, until one day they found illumination, from the little commentary by Farabi, which he bought at a bookstall for the small sum of three dirhams. So great was his joy at the discovery, thus made by help of a work from which he had expected only mystery, that he hastened to return thanks to God, and bestowed alms upon the poor.</p>
<p>He turned to medicine at 16, and not only learned medical theory, but also by gratuitous attendance on the sick had, according to his own account, discovered new methods of treatment. The teenager achieved full status as a physician at age 18 and found that &#8220;Medicine is no hard and thorny science, like mathematics and metaphysics, so I soon made great progress; I became an excellent doctor and began to treat patients, using approved remedies.&#8221; The youthful physician&#8217;s fame spread quickly, and he treated many patients without asking for payment.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Adulthood</span></h3>
<p>His first appointment was that of physician to the emir, who owed him his recovery from a dangerous illness (997). Ibn Sina&#8217;s chief reward for this service was access to the royal library of the Samanids, well-known patrons of scholarship and scholars. When the library was destroyed by fire not long after, the enemies of Ibn Sina accused him of burning it, in order for ever to conceal the sources of his knowledge. Meanwhile, he assisted his father in his financial labours, but still found time to write some of his earliest works.</p>
<p>When Ibn Sina was 22 years old, he lost his father. The Samanid dynasty came to its end in December 1004. Ibn Sina seems to have declined the offers of Mahmud of Ghazni, and proceeded westwards to Urgench in the modern Uzbekistan, where the vizier, regarded as a friend of scholars, gave him a small monthly stipend. The pay was small, however, so Ibn Sina wandered from place to place through the districts of Nishapur and Merv to the borders of Khorasan, seeking an opening for his talents. <span class="new">Shams al-Ma&#8217;ali Kavuus</span>, the generous ruler of <span class="new">Dailam</span> and central Persia, himself a poet and a scholar, with whom Ibn Sina had expected to find an asylum, was about that date (1052) starved to death by his troops who had revolted. Ibn Sina himself was at this season stricken down by a severe illness. Finally, at Gorgan, near the Caspian Sea, Ibn Sina met with a friend, who bought a dwelling near his own house in which Ibn Sina lectured on logic and astronomy. Several of Ibn Sina&#8217;s treatises were written for this patron; and the commencement of his <em>Canon of Medicine</em> also dates from his stay in Hyrcania.</p>
<p>Ibn Sina subsequently settled at Rai, in the vicinity of modern Tehran, (present day capital of Iran), the home town of Rhazes; where <span class="new">Majd Addaula</span>, a son of the last Buwayhid emir, was nominal ruler under the regency of his mother (Seyyedeh Khatun). About thirty of Ibn Sina&#8217;s shorter works are said to have been composed in Rai. Constant feuds which raged between the regent and her second son, <span class="new">Amir Shamsud-Dawala</span>, however, compelled the scholar to quit the place. After a brief sojourn at Qazvin he passed southwards to Hamadãn, where another Deylamite emir had established himself. At first, Ibn Sina entered into the service of a high-born lady; but the emir, hearing of his arrival, called him in as medical attendant, and sent him back with presents to his dwelling. Ibn Sina was even raised to the office of vizier. The emir consented that he should be banished from the country. Ibn Sina, however, remained hidden for forty days in a sheikh&#8217;s house, till a fresh attack of illness induced the emir to restore him to his post. Even during this perturbed time, Ibn Sina persevered with his studies and teaching. Every evening, extracts from his great works, the <em>Canon</em> and the <em>Sanatio</em>, were dictated and explained to his pupils. On the death of the emir, Ibn Sina ceased to be vizier and hid himself in the house of an apothecary, where, with intense assiduity, he continued the composition of his works.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, he had written to <span class="new">Abu Ya&#8217;far</span>, the prefect of the dynamic city of Isfahan, offering his services. The new emir of Hamadan, hearing of this correspondence and discovering where Ibn Sina was hidden, incarcerated him in a fortress. War meanwhile continued between the rulers of Isfahan and Hamadãn; in 1024 the former captured Hamadan and its towns, expelling the Tajik mercenaries. When the storm had passed, Ibn Sina returned with the emir to Hamadan, and carried on his literary labours. Later, however, accompanied by his brother, a favourite pupil, and two slaves, Ibn Sina escaped out of the city in the dress of a Sufi ascetic. After a perilous journey, they reached Isfahan, receiving an honourable welcome from the prince.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Later life</span></h3>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="image"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/67/Hamadan1.jpg/250px-Hamadan1.jpg" border="0" alt="Avicenna's tomb in Hamedan, Iran" width="250" height="188" title="Ibn Sina (Avicenna)   The Father of Modern Medicine" /><br />
Avicenna&#8217;s tomb in Hamedan, Iran</span></p>
<p>The remaining ten or twelve years of Ibn Sina&#8217;s life were spent in the service of <span class="new">Abu Ja&#8217;far &#8216;Ala Addaula</span>, whom he accompanied as physician and general literary and scientific adviser, even in his numerous campaigns.</p>
<p>During these years he began to study literary matters and philology, instigated, it is asserted, by criticisms on his style. He contrasts with the nobler and more intellectual character of Averroes. A severe colic, which seized him on the march of the army against Hamadãn, was checked by remedies so violent that Ibn Sina could scarcely stand. On a similar occasion the disease returned; with difficulty he reached Hamadãn, where, finding the disease gaining ground, he refused to keep up the regimen imposed, and resigned himself to his fate.</p>
<p>His friends advised him to slow down and take life moderately. He refused, however, stating that: <em>&#8220;I prefer a short life with width to a narrow one with length&#8221;</em>. On his deathbed remorse seized him; he bestowed his goods on the poor, restored unjust gains, freed his slaves, and every third day till his death listened to the reading of the Qur&#8217;an. He died in June 1037, in his fifty-eighth year, and was buried in Hamedan, Iran.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Works</span></h2>
<p>Scarcely any member of the Muslim circle of the sciences, including theology, philology, mathematics, astronomy, physics, and music, was left untouched by the treatises of Ibn Sina. This vast quantity of works &#8211; be they full-blown treatises or opuscula &#8211; vary so much in style and content (if one were to compare between the &#8216;<em>ahd</em> made with his disciple Bahmanyar to uphold philosophical integrity with the <em>Provenance and Direction</em>, for example) that Yahya (formerly Jean) Michot has accused him of &#8220;neurological bipolarity&#8221;.</p>
<p>Ibn Sina wrote at least one treatise on alchemy, but several others have been falsely attributed to him. His book on animals was translated by Michael Scot. His <em>Logic</em>, <em>Metaphysics</em>, <em>Physics</em>, and <em>De Caelo</em>, are treatises giving a synoptic view of Aristotelian doctrine, though the Metaphysics demonstrates a significant departure from the brand of Neoplatonism known as Aristotelianism in Ibn Sina&#8217;s world; Arabic philosophers have hinted at the idea that Ibn Sina was attempting to &#8220;re-Aristotelianise&#8221; Muslim philosophy in its entirety, unlike his predecessors, who accepted the conflation of Platonic, Aristotelian, Neo- and Middle-Platonic works transmitted into the Muslim world.</p>
<p>The <em>Logic</em> and <em>Metaphysics</em> have been printed more than once, the latter, e.g., at Venice in 1493, 1495, and 1546. Some of his shorter essays on medicine, logic, etc., take a poetical form (the poem on logic was published by Schmoelders in 1836). Two encyclopaedic treatises, dealing with philosophy, are often mentioned. The larger, Al-Shifa&#8217; (<em>Sanatio</em>), exists nearly complete in manuscript in the Bodleian Library and elsewhere; part of it on the <em>De Anima</em> appeared at Pavia (1490) as the <em>Liber Sextus Naturalium</em>, and the long account of Ibn Sina&#8217;s philosophy given by Muhammad al-Shahrastani seems to be mainly an analysis, and in many places a reproduction, of the Al-Shifa&#8217;. A shorter form of the work is known as the <span class="new">An-najat</span> (<em>Liberatio</em>). The Latin editions of part of these works have been modified by the corrections which the monastic editors confess that they applied. There is also a <strong>حكمت مشرقيه</strong> (<em>hikmat-al-mashriqqiyya</em>, in Latin <em>Philosophia Orientalis</em>), mentioned by Roger Bacon, the majority of which is lost in antiquity, which according to Averroes was pantheistic in tone.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Sciences</span></h2>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Medicine</span></h3>
<p class="thumbinner" style="width: 182px;">
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="image"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f7/Canons_of_medicine.JPG/180px-Canons_of_medicine.JPG" border="0" alt="A Latin copy of the Canon of Medicine, dated 1484, located at the P.I. Nixon Medical Historical Library of The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio." width="180" height="126" title="Ibn Sina (Avicenna)   The Father of Modern Medicine" /></span><br />
A Latin copy of the Canon of Medicine, dated 1484, located at the P.I. Nixon Medical Historical Library of The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.</p>
<p class="magnify" style="float: right">
<p>About 100 treatises were ascribed to Ibn Sina. Some of them are tracts of a few pages, others are works extending through several volumes. The best-known amongst them, and that to which Ibn Sina owed his European reputation, is his 14-volume <em>The Canon of Medicine</em>, which was a standard medical text in Europe and the Islamic world up until the 18th century. The book is known for its introduction of systematic experimentation and quantification into the study of physiology, and for the discovery of contagious diseases. It classifies and describes diseases, and outlines their assumed causes. Hygiene, simple and complex medicines, and functions of parts of the body are also covered. In this, Ibn Sina is credited as being the first to correctly document the anatomy of the human eye, along with descriptions of eye afflictions such as cataracts. It asserts that tuberculosis was contagious, which was later disputed by Europeans, but turned out to be true. It also describes the symptoms and complications of diabetes. Both forms of facial paralysis were described in-depth. In addition, the workings of the heart as a valve are described.</p>
<p class="thumbinner" style="width: 182px;">
<p style="text-align: center"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/b/b4/Canon_ibnsina_arabic.jpg/180px-Canon_ibnsina_arabic.jpg" border="0" alt="A copy of the Canon of Medicine, dated 1593" width="180" height="241" title="Ibn Sina (Avicenna)   The Father of Modern Medicine" /></p>
<p style="text-align: center">A copy of the Canon of Medicine, dated 1593</p>
<p class="magnify" style="float: right"><span class="internal"><br />
</span></p>
<p>An Arabic edition of the <em>Canon</em> appeared at Rome in 1593, and a Hebrew version at Naples in 1491. Of the Latin version there were about thirty editions, founded on the original translation by <span class="new">Gerard de Sablonetta</span>. In the 15th century a commentary on the text of the <em>Canon</em> was composed. Other medical works translated into Latin are the <em>Medicamenta Cordialia</em>, <em>Canticum de Medicina</em>, and the <em>Tractatus de Syrupo Acetoso</em>.</p>
<p>It was mainly accident which determined that from the 12th to the 18th century, Ibn Sina should be the guide of medical study in European universities, and eclipse the names of Rhazes, Ali ibn al-Abbas and Averroes. His work is not essentially different from that of his predecessor Rhazes, because he presented the doctrine of Galen, and through Galen the doctrine of Hippocrates, modified by the system of Aristotle, as well as the Indian doctrines of Sushruta and Charaka.<sup id="_ref-7" class="reference">[12]</sup> But the <em>Canon</em> of Ibn Sina is distinguished from the <em>Al-Hawi</em> (Continens) or <em>Summary</em> of Rhazes by its greater method, due perhaps to the logical studies of the former.</p>
<p>The work has been variously appreciated in subsequent ages, some regarding it as a treasury of wisdom, and others, like Averroes, holding it useful only as waste paper. In modern times it has been seen of mainly historic interest as most of its tenets have been disproved or expanded upon by scientific medicine. The vice of the book is excessive classification of bodily faculties, and over-subtlety in the discrimination of diseases. It includes five books; of which the first and second discuss physiology, pathology and hygiene, the third and fourth deal with the methods of treating disease, and the fifth describes the composition and preparation of remedies. This last part contains some personal observations.</p>
<p>He is, like all his countrymen, ample in the enumeration of symptoms, and is said to be inferior to Ali in practical medicine and surgery. He introduced into medical theory the <em>four causes of the Peripatetic system</em>. Of natural history and botany he pretended to no special knowledge. Up to the year 1650, or thereabouts, the <em>Canon</em> was still used as a textbook in the universities of Leuven and Montpellier.</p>
<p>In the museum at Bukhara, there are displays showing many of his writings, surgical instruments from the period and paintings of patients undergoing treatment. Ibn Sina was interested in the effect of the mind on the body, and wrote a great deal on psychology, likely influencing Ibn Tufayl and Ibn Bajjah. He also introduced medical herbs.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Alchemy</span></h3>
<p>In alchemy, Ibn Sina discredited the theory of transmutation of substances believed by some alchemists:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;Those of the chemical craft know well that no change can be effected in the different species of substances, though they can produce the appearance of such change.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Aromatherapy</span></h3>
<p>Ibn Sina used steam distillation to produce the first essential oils. As a result, he is regarded as a pioneer of aromatherapy.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Astronomy</span></h3>
<p>In 1070, Abu Ubayd al-Juzjani, a pupil of Ibn Sina, claimed that his teacher Ibn Sina had solved the equant problem in Ptolemy&#8217;s planetary model.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Chemistry</span></h3>
<p>In chemistry, steam distillation was invented by Ibn Sina in the early 11th century, which he used to produce essential oils.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Earth sciences</span></h3>
<p>Ibn Sina wrote on the earth sciences in <em>The Book of Healing</em>. In geology, he hypothesized two causes of mountains:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;Either they are the effects of upheavals of the crust of the earth, such as might occur during a violent earthquake, or they are the effect of water, which, cutting itself a new route, has denuded the valleys, the strata being of different kinds, some soft, some hard&#8230; It would require a long period of time for all such changes to be accomplished, during which the mountains themselves might be somewhat diminished in size.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Physics</span></h3>
<p>In physics, Ibn Sina was the first to employ an air thermometer in his scientific experiments.</p>
<p>In mechanics, Ibn Sina developed an elaborate theory of motion, in which he made a distinction between the inclination and force of a projectile, and concluded that motion was a result of an inclination (<em>mayl</em>) transferred to the projectile by the thrower, and that projectile motion in a vacuum would not cease. He viewed inclination as a permanent force whose effect is dissipated by external forces such as air resistance. His theory of motion was thus consistent with the concept of inertia in Newton&#8217;s first law of motion. Ibn Sina also referred to <em>mayl</em> to as being proportional to weight times velocity, a precursor to the concept of momentum in Newton&#8217;s second law of motion. Ibn Sina&#8217;s theory of <em>mayl</em> was further developed by Jean Buridan in his theory of impetus.</p>
<p>In optics, Ibn Sina provided a sophisticated explanation for the rainbow phenomenon. Carl Benjamin Boyer described Ibn Sina&#8217;s theory on the rainbow as follows:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;Independent observation had demonstrated to him that the bow is not formed in the dark cloud but rather in the very thin mist lying between the cloud and the sun or observer. The cloud, he thought, serves simply as the background of this thin substance, much as a quicksilver lining is placed upon the rear surface of the glass in a mirror. Ibn Sina would change the place not only of the bow, but also of the color formation, holding the iridescence to be merely a subjective sensation in the eye.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p><a target="_blank" href="http://%3C/a%3Een.wikipedia.org">en.wikipedia.org</a></p>
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		<title>Abu Rayhan Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Biruni &#8211; The Father of Indology</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Sep 2007 10:01:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Abu Rayḥan Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad al-Biruni (September 15, 973 in Kath, Khwarezm &#8211; December 13, 1048 in Ghazni) was a Persian Muslim polymath of the 11th century, whose experiments and discoveries were as significant and diverse as those of Leonardo da Vinci or Galileo, five hundred years before the Renaissance; al-Biruni was well-known in the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/2/27/Abu-Rayhan_Biruni_1973_Afghanistan_post_stamp.jpg/225px-Abu-Rayhan_Biruni_1973_Afghanistan_post_stamp.jpg" alt="al-biruni moslem scientist" align="left" title="Abu Rayhan Muhammad ibn Ahmad al Biruni   The Father of Indology" /><strong><span class="Unicode" style="white-space: normal; text-decoration: none" title="ar ALA transliteration" lang="ar-Latn" xml:lang="ar-Latn">Abu Rayḥan Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad al-Biruni</span></strong> (September 15, 973 in Kath, Khwarezm &#8211; December 13, 1048 in Ghazni) was a Persian Muslim polymath of the 11th century, whose experiments and discoveries were as significant and diverse as those of Leonardo da Vinci or Galileo, five hundred years before the Renaissance; al-Biruni was well-known in the Muslim world, but unlike some of his other Muslim contemporaries (such as Abulcasis, Alhacen, and Avicenna), al-Biruni&#8217;s name was little known in the Western world.</p>
<p>He was a scientist and physicist, an anthropologist, an astronomer and astrologer, an encyclopedist and historian, a geographer, a geodesist and geologist, a mathematician, a pharmacist and physician, a philosopher and Ash&#8217;ari theologian, a scholar and teacher, and a traveller, who contributed greatly to all of these fields. He was also the first Muslim scholar to study India and the Brahminical tradition, and has been described as the father of Indology, the father of geodesy, and &#8220;the first anthropologist&#8221;. Along with Geber and Ibn al-Haytham, al-Biruni was also one of the earliest leading exponents of the experimental method, and the first to conduct elaborate experiments related to astronomical phenomena.</p>
<p>George Sarton, the father of the history of science, described al-Biruni as:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;One of the very greatest scientists of Islam, and, all considered, one of the greatest of all times.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>A. I. Sabra desribed al-Biruni as:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;One of the great scientific minds in all history.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>The Al-Biruni crater, on the Moon, is named after al-Biruni.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Biography</span></h2>
<p>He was born in Khwarazm (formerly north-eastern part of the Persian Samanid dynasty) presently in Khiva, Uzbekistan. He studied mathematics and astronomy under Abu Nasr Mansur.</p>
<p>He was a colleague of the fellow Persian Muslim philosopher and physician Abu Ali ibn Sina (Avicenna), <span id="more-6"></span>the historian, philosopher and ethicist Ibn Miskawayh, in a university and science center established by prince Abu al-Abbas Ma&#8217;mun Khawarazmshah. He also travelled to South Asia with Mahmud of Ghazni (whose son and successor Masud was, however, his major patron), and accompanied him on his campaigns in India (in 1030), learning Indian languages, and studying the religion and philosophy of its people. There, he also wrote his <em>Ta&#8217;rikh al-Hind</em> (&#8220;Chronicles of India&#8221;). Biruni wrote his books in Arabic and his native language Persian, though he knew no less than four other languages: Greek, Sanskrit, Syriac, and possibly Berber.</p>
<p>He was buried in Ghazni in Afganistan.<sup class="noprint Template-Fact"></sup></p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Works</span></h2>
<p class="thumbinner" style="width: 302px;"><span class="image"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/62/Lunar_eclipse_al-Biruni.jpg/300px-Lunar_eclipse_al-Biruni.jpg" border="0" alt="An illustration from Beruni's Persian book. It shows different phases of the moon." width="300" height="211" title="Abu Rayhan Muhammad ibn Ahmad al Biruni   The Father of Indology" /></span></p>
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<p>An illustration from Beruni&#8217;s Persian book. It shows different phases of the moon.</p>
<p>Biruni&#8217;s works number 146 in total. These include 35 books on astronomy, 4 on astrolabes, 23 on astrology, 5 on chronology, 2 on time measurement, 9 on geography, 10 on geodesy and mapping theory, 15 on mathematics (8 on arithmetic, 5 on geometry, 2 on trigonometry), 2 on mechanics, 2 on medicine and pharmacology, 1 on meteorology, 2 on mineralogy and gems, 4 on history, 2 on India, 3 on religion and philosophy, 16 literary works, 2 books on magic, and 9 unclassified books. Among these works, only 22 have survived, and only 13 of these works have been published. His extant works include:</p>
<ul>
<li><em>Critical study of what India says, whether accepted by reason or refused</em> (Arabic تحقيق ما للهند من مقولة معقولة في العقل أم مرذولة) &#8211; a compendium of India&#8217;s religion and philosophy</li>
<li><em>The Remaining Signs of Past Centuries</em> (Arabic الآثار الباقية عن القرون الخالية) &#8211; a comparative study of calendars of different cultures and civilizations, interlaced with mathematical, astronomical, and historical information.</li>
<li><em>The Mas&#8217;udi Canon</em> (Persian قانون مسعودي) &#8211; an extensive encyclopedia on astronomy, geography, and engineering, named after Mas&#8217;ud, son of Mahmud of Ghazni, to whom he dedicated</li>
<li><em>Understanding Astrology</em> (Arabic التفهيم لصناعة التنجيم) &#8211; a question and answer style book about mathematics and astronomy, in Arabic and Persian</li>
<li><em>Pharmacy</em> &#8211; about drugs and medicines</li>
<li><em>Gems</em> (Arabic الجماهر في معرفة الجواهر) about geology, minerals, and gems, dedicated to Mawdud son of Mas&#8217;ud</li>
<li><em>Astrolabe</em></li>
<li>A historical summary book</li>
<li><em>History of Mahmud of Ghazni and his father</em></li>
<li><em>History of Khawarazm</em></li>
</ul>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Anthropology</span></h2>
<p>Biruni has been described as &#8220;the first anthropologist&#8221;. He wrote detailed comparative studies on the anthropology of peoples, religions and cultures in the Middle East, Mediterranean and South Asia. Biruni&#8217;s anthropology of religion was only possible for a scholar deeply immersed in the lore of other nations. Biruni has also been praised by several scholars for his Islamic anthropology.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Astronomy</span></h2>
<p class="thumbinner" style="width: 252px;"><span class="image"><img class="thumbimage" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/85/Laleh_park_jonub.jpg/250px-Laleh_park_jonub.jpg" border="0" alt="A statue of Biruni adorns the southwest entrance of Laleh Park in Tehran, Iran." width="250" height="138" title="Abu Rayhan Muhammad ibn Ahmad al Biruni   The Father of Indology" /></span></p>
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<p>A statue of Biruni adorns the southwest entrance of Laleh Park in Tehran, Iran.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Instruments</span></h3>
<p>In astronomy, al-Biruni invented and wrote the earliest treatises on the planisphere and the orthographical astrolabe, as well as the armillary sphere, and was able to mathematically determine the direction of the Qibla from any place in the world.<sup id="_ref-Khwarizm_0" class="reference">[15]</sup><sup id="_ref-Wiet_0" class="reference">[16]</sup></p>
<p>He also invented an early hodometer, and the first mechanical lunisolar calendar computer which employed a gear train and eight gear-wheels. These were early examples of fixed-wired knowledge processing machines.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Theories</span></h3>
<p>Al-Biruni was the first to conduct elaborate experiments related to astronomical phenomena. He discovered the Milky Way galaxy to be a collection of numerous nebulous stars. In Khorasan, he observed and described the solar eclipse on April 8, 1019, and the lunar eclipse on September 17, 1019, in detail, and gave the exact latitudes of the stars during the lunar eclipse.</p>
<p>In 1030, Biruni discussed the Indian heliocentric theories of Aryabhata, Brahmagupta and Varahamihira in his <em>Indica</em>. Biruni noted that the question of heliocentricity was a philosophical rather than a mathematical problem.</p>
<p>In 1031, al-Biruni completed his extensive astronomical encyclopaedia <em>Kitab al-Qanun al-Mas&#8217;udi</em> (Latinized as <em>Canon Mas&#8217;udicus</em>), in which he recorded his astronomical findings and formulated astronomical tables. The book introduces the mathematical technique of analysing the acceleration of the planets, and first states that the motions of the solar apogee and the precession are not identical. Al-Biruni also discovered that the distance between the Earth and the Sun is larger than Ptolemy&#8217;s estimate, on the basis that Ptolemy disregarded the annual solar eclipses.</p>
<p>Abu Said Sinjari, a contemporary of al-Biruni, suggested the possible heliocentric movement of the Earth around the Sun, which al-Biruni did not reject. Al-Biruni agreed with the Earth&#8217;s rotation about its own axis, and while he was initially neutral regarding the heliocentric and geocentric models, he considered heliocentrism to be a philosophical problem.<sup> </sup>He remarked that if the Earth rotates on its axis and moves around the Sun, it would remain consistent with his astronomical parameters:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;Rotation of the earth would in no way invalidate astronomical calculations, for all the astronomical data are as explicable in terms of the one theory as of the other. The problem is thus difficult of solution.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Will Durant wrote the following on al-Biruni&#8217;s contributions to astronomy:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;He wrote treatises on the astrolabe, the planisphere, the armillary sphere; and formulated astronomical tables for Sultan Masud. He took it for granted that the earth is round, noted &#8220;the attraction of all things towards the center of the earth,&#8221; and remarked that astronomic data can be explained as well by supposing that the earth turns daily on its axis and annually around the sun, as by the reverse hypothesis.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Chemistry</span></h2>
<p>Along with al-Kindi and Avicenna, al-Biruni was one of the first chemists to reject the theory of the transmuation of metals supported by some alchemists.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Earth sciences</span></h2>
<p>Biruni made a number of contributions to the Earth sciences. In particular, he is regarded as the father of geodesy,<sup id="_ref-Ahmed_2" class="reference">[7]</sup><sup id="_ref-13" class="reference">[26]</sup> and has made significant contributions to cartography, geography, and geology.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Cartography</span></h3>
<p>By the age of 22, he had written several short works, including a study of map projections, <em>Cartography</em>, which included a method for projecting a hemisphere on a plane.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Geodesy and Geography</span></h3>
<p>At the age of 17, Biruni calculated the latitude of Kath, Khwarazm, using the maximum altitude of the Sun. Biruni also solved a complex geodesic equation in order to accurately compute the Earth&#8217;s circumference, which were close to modern values of the Earth&#8217;s circumference. His estimate of 6,339.9 km for the Earth radius was only 16.8 km less than the modern value of 6,356.7 km.</p>
<p>John J. O&#8217;Connor and Edmund F. Robertson write in the <em>MacTutor History of Mathematics archive</em>:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;Important contributions to geodesy and geography were also made by al-Biruni. He introduced techniques to measure the earth and distances on it using triangulation. He found the radius of the earth to be 6339.6 km, a value not obtained in the West until the 16th century. His <em>Masudic canon</em> contains a table giving the coordinates of six hundred places, almost all of which he had direct knowledge.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Geology</span></h3>
<p>Among his writings on geology, Biruni wrote the following on the geology of India:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;But if you see the soil of India with your own eyes and meditate on its nature, if you consider the rounded stones found in earth however deeply you dig, stones that are huge near the mountains and where the rivers have a violent current: stones that are of smaller size at a greater distance from the mountains and where the streams flow more slowly: stones that appear pulverised in the shape of sand where the streams begin to stagnate near their mouths and near the sea &#8211; if you consider all this you can scarcely help thinking that India was once a sea, which by degrees has been filled up by the alluvium of the streams.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">History</span></h2>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Chronology</span></h3>
<p>By the age of 27, in the year 1000, he had written a book called <em>Chronology</em> which referred to other works he had completed (now lost) that included one book about the astrolabe, one about the decimal system, four about astrology, and two about history.</p>
<p>He discussed more on his idea of history in another work, <em>The Chronology of the Ancient Nations</em>.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Indology</span></h3>
<p>Until the 10th century, history most often meant political and military history, but this was not so with Persian historian Biruni (973-1048). In his <em>Kitab fi Tahqiq ma l&#8217;il-Hind</em> (<em>Researches on India</em>), he did not record political and military history in any detail, but wrote more on India&#8217;s cultural, scientific, social and religious history.<sup> </sup>Biruni is now regarded as the father of Indology.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Mathematics</span></h2>
<p>He made significant contributions to mathematics, especially in the fields of theoretical and practical arithmetic, summation of series, combinatorial analysis, the rule of three, irrational numbers, ratio theory, algebraic definitions, method of solving algebraic equations, geometry, and the development of Archimedes&#8217; theorems.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Medicine</span></h2>
<p>Al-Biruni&#8217;s <em>Kitab-al-Saidana</em> was an extensive medical encyclopedia which synthesized Islamic medicine with Indian medicine. His medical investigations included one of the earliest descriptions on Siamese twins.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Physics</span></h2>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Celestial mechanics</span></h3>
<p>In the celestial mechanics field of physics, al-Biruni described the Earth&#8217;s gravitation as:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;The attraction of all things towards the centre of the earth.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>He also discovered that gravity exists within the heavenly bodies and celestial spheres, and he criticized Aristotle&#8217;s views of them not having any levity or gravity and of circular motion being an innate property of the heavenly bodies.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Dynamics and kinematics</span></h3>
<p>In the dynamics and kinematics fields of mechanics, al-Biruni was the first to realize that acceleration is connected with non-uniform motion, which is part of Newton&#8217;s second law of motion.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Natural philosophy</span></h3>
<p>Al-Biruni and Abu Ali ibn Sina (Avicenna), who are regarded as two of the greatest polymaths in Persian history, were both colleagues and knew each other since the turn of the millenium. Al-Biruni later engaged in a written debate with Avicenna, with al-Biruni criticizing Aristotelian natural philosophy and the Peripatetic school, while Avicenna and his student Ahmad ibn &#8216;Ali al-Ma&#8217;sumi respond to al-Biruni&#8217;s criticisms in writing. Al-Biruni began by asking Avicenna eighteen questions, ten of which were criticisms of Aristotle&#8217;s <em>On the Heavens</em>, with his first question criticizing Aristotle&#8217;s reasons for denying the existence of levity or gravity in the celestial spheres and the Aristotelian notion of circular motion being an innate property of the heavenly bodies.</p>
<p>Al-Biruni&#8217;s second question criticizes Aristotle&#8217;s over-reliance on more ancient views concerning the heavens, while the third criticizes the Aristotelian view that space has only six directions. The fourth question deals with the continuity and discontinuity of physical bodies, while the fifth criticizes the Peripatetic school&#8217;s denial of the possibility of there existing another world completely different from the world known to them. In his sixth question, al-Biruni rejects Aristotle&#8217;s view on the celestial spheres having circular orbits rather than elliptic orbits. In his seventh question, he rejects Aristotle&#8217;s notion that the motion of the heavens begins from the right side and from the east, while his eighth question concerns Aristotle&#8217;s view on the fire element being spherical. The ninth question concerns the movement of heat, and the tenth question concerns the transformation of elements. The eleventh question concerns the burning of bodies by radiation reflecting off a flask filled with water, and the twelveth concerns the natural tendency of the classical elements in their upward and downward movements. The thirteenth question deals with vision, while the fourteenth concerns habitation on different parts of Earth. His fifteenth question asks how two opposite squares in a square divided into four can be tangential, while the sixteenth question concerns vacuum. His seventeenth question asks &#8220;if things expand upon heating and contract upon cooling, why does a flask filled with water break when water freezes in it?&#8221; His eighteenth and final question concerns the observable phenomenon of ice floating on water.</p>
<p>After Avicenna responded to the questions, al-Biruni was unsatisfied with some of the answers and wrote back commenting on them, after which Avicenna&#8217;s student Ahmad ibn &#8216;Ali al-Ma&#8217;sumi wrote back on behalf of Avicenna.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Optics</span></h3>
<p>In optics, al-Biruni was one of the first, along with <a title="the first scientist" href="http://scientists.penyet.net/2007/08/27/famous-scientists/ibn-al-haytham-the-first-scientist/">Ibn al-Haytham</a>, to discover that the speed of light was finite. Al-Biruni was also the first to discover that the speed of light is much faster than the speed of sound.</p>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Statics</span></h3>
<p>In statics, al-Biruni measured the specific gravities of eighteen gemstones, and discovered that there is a correlation between the specific gravity of an object and the volume of water it displaces. He also introduced the method of checking tests during experiments, measured the weights of various liquids, and recorded the differences in weight between fresh water and salt water, and between hot water and cold water.</p>
<p>During his experiments, he invented the conical measure, in order to find the ratio between the weight of a substance in air and the weight of water displaced, and to accurately measure the specific weights of the gemstones and their corresponding metals, which are very close to modern measurements.</p>
<h2><span class="mw-headline">Theology</span></h2>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Islamic theology</span></h3>
<p>Al-Biruni was a supporter of the Ash&#8217;ari school of Islamic theology. He assigned to the Qur&#8217;an a separate and autonomous realm of its own and held that:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;[the Qur'an] does not interfere in the business of science nor does it infringe on the realm of science.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<h3><span class="mw-headline">Comparative religion</span></h3>
<p>He wrote works on both Islamic theology and Indian theology, and wrote on the topic comparative religion, comparing both religions. His comparisons included the following comparison between the Qur&#8217;an and the Indian religious scriptures in the &#8220;On the Configuration of the Heavens and the Earth According to [Indian] astrologers&#8221; chapter of the <em>Indica</em>:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;[The views of Indian astrologers] have developed in a way which is different from those of our [Muslim] fellows; this is because unlike the scriptures revealed before it, the Qur&#8217;an does not articulate on this subject [of astronomy], or any other [field of] necessary [knowledge] any assertion that would require erratic interpretations in order to harmonize it with that which is known by necessity.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;[In contrast, the religious and transmitted books of the Indians do indeed speak] of the configuration of the universe in a way which contradicts the truth which is known to their own astrologers.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p><a target="_blank" title="indology scientists" href="http://en.wikipedia.org">en.wikipedia.org</a></p>
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		<title>Ibn al-Haytham, The First Scientist</title>
		<link>http://scientists.penyet.net/ibn-al-haytham-the-first-scientist.html</link>
		<comments>http://scientists.penyet.net/ibn-al-haytham-the-first-scientist.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Aug 2007 03:08:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>famous scientists</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Abu ʿAli al-Ḥasan ibn al-Ḥasan ibn al-Haytham (Arabic: أبو علي الحسن بن الحسن بن الهيثم, Latinized: Alhacen or (deprecated) Alhazen) (965 &#8211; 1039), was a Muslim polymath who made significant contributions to the principles of optics, as well as anatomy, astronomy, engineering, mathematics, medicine, ophthalmology, philosophy, physics, psychology, visual perception, and science in general with [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/7/7f/Ibn_haithem_portrait.jpg" alt="ibn al-haytham" align="left" title="Ibn al Haytham, The First Scientist" /><strong><span title="ar ALA transliteration" class="Unicode" style="white-space: normal; text-decoration: none" xml:lang="ar-Latn" lang="ar-Latn">Abu ʿAli al-Ḥasan ibn al-Ḥasan ibn al-Haytham</span></strong> (Arabic: أبو علي الحسن بن الحسن بن الهيثم, Latinized: <strong>Alhacen</strong> or (deprecated) <strong>Alhazen</strong>) (965 &#8211; 1039), was a Muslim polymath who made significant contributions to the principles of optics, as well as anatomy, astronomy, engineering, mathematics, medicine, ophthalmology, philosophy, physics, psychology, visual perception, and science in general with his pioneering development of the scientific method. He is sometimes called <strong>al-Basri</strong> (Arabic: البصري), after his birthplace in the city of Basra in Iraq (Mesopotamia), then ruled by the Buyid dynasty of Persia. His ethnic background is unclear; some scholars consider him Arab, and some consider him Persian. He was a supporter of the Ash&#8217;ari school of Islamic theology.</p>
<p>Ibn al-Haytham is regarded as the father of optics, for his influential <em>Book of Optics</em>, which correctly explained and proved the modern intromission theory of vision, and for his experiments on optics, including experiments on lenses, mirrors, refraction, reflection, and the dispersion of light into its constituent colours.<sup> </sup>He also explained binocular vision and the moon illusion, speculated on the finite speed, rectilinear propagation and electromagnetic aspects of light,<sup> </sup>and argued that rays of light are streams of energy particles travelling in straight lines. Due to his quantitative, empirical and experimental approach to physics and science, he is considered the pioneer of the modern scientific method and experimental physics, and some have described him as the &#8220;first scientist&#8221; for this reason. He is also considered by some to be the founder of psychophysics and experimental psychology, for his experimental approach to the psychology of visual perception, and a pioneer of the philosophical field of phenomenology. His <em>Book of Optics</em> has been ranked alongside Isaac Newton&#8217;s <em>Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica</em> as one of the most influential books ever written in the history of physics.<span id="more-5"></span></p>
<p>Among his other achievements, Ibn al-Haytham described the pinhole camera and invented the camera obscura (a precursor to the modern camera), discovered Fermat&#8217;s principle of least time and Newton&#8217;s first law of motion, described the attraction between masses and was aware of the magnitude of acceleration due to gravity, discovered that the heavenly bodies were accountable to the laws of physics, presented the earliest critique and reform of the Ptolemaic model, first stated Wilson&#8217;s theorem in number theory, pioneered analytic geometry, formulated and solved Alhazen&#8217;s problem geometrically, developed and proved the earliest general formula for infinitesimal and integral calculus using mathematical induction, and in his optical research, laid the foundations for the later development of telescopic astronomy, as well as the microscope and the use of optical aids in Renaissance art.</p>
<p><strong><span class="mw-headline">Biography</span></strong></p>
<p>Abu ‘Ali al-Hasan ibn al-Hasan ibn al-Haytham was born in the Arab city of Basra, Iraq (Mesopotamia), then part of the Shia Muslim Buyid dynasty of Persia, and he probably died in Cairo, Egypt. Known in the West as Alhacen or Alhazen, Ibn al-Haytham was born in 965 in Basra, and was educated there and in Baghdad. He was a supporter of the Ash&#8217;ari school of Islamic theology.</p>
<p>One account of his career has him summoned to Egypt by the mercurial caliph Hakim to regulate the flooding of the Nile. After his field work made him aware of the impracticality of this scheme, and fearing the caliph&#8217;s anger, he feigned madness. He was kept under house arrest until Hakim&#8217;s death in 1021. During this time, he wrote his influential <em>Book of Optics</em> and scores of other important treatises on physics and mathematics. He later traveled to Spain and, during this period, he had ample time for his scientific pursuits, which included optics, mathematics, physics, medicine, and the development of scientific methods on each of which he has left several outstanding books.</p>
<h2></h2>
<p><strong><span class="mw-headline">Legacy</span></strong></p>
<p>Ibn al-Haytham was one of the most eminent physicists, whose development of optics and the scientific method are outstanding. Ibn al-Haytham&#8217;s work on optics is credited with contributing a new emphasis on experiment. His influence on physical sciences in general, and optics in particular, has been held in high esteem and, in fact, it ushered in a new era in optical research, both in theory and practice. The scientific method is considered to be so fundamental to modern science that some &#8211; especially philosophers of science and practicing scientists &#8211; consider earlier inquiries into nature to be <em>pre-scientific</em>. Due to its importance in the history of science, some have considered his development of the scientific method to be the most important scientific development of the second millenium.</p>
<p>Rosanna Gorini wrote the following on Ibn al-Haytham&#8217;s development of the scientific method:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;According to the majority of the historians al-Haytham was the pioneer of the modern scientific method. With his book he changed the meaning of the term optics and established experiments as the norm of proof in the field. His investigations are based not on abstract theories, but on experimental evidences and his experiments were systematic and repeatable.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Roshdi Rashed wrote the following on Ibn al-Haytham:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;His work on optics, which includes a theory of vision and a theory of light, is considered by many to be his most important contribution, setting the scene for developments well into the 17th century. His contributions to geometry and number theory go well beyond the archimedean tradition. And by promoting the use of experiments in scientific research, al-Haytham played an important part in setting the scene for modern science.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Nobel Prize winning physicist Abdus Salam wrote:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;Ibn-al-Haitham (Alhazen, 965-1039 CE) was one of the greatest physicists of all time. He made experimental contributions of the highest order in optics. He enunciated that a ray of light, in passing through a medium, takes the path which is the easier and &#8216;quicker&#8217;. In this he was anticipating Fermat&#8217;s Principle of Least Time by many centuries. He enunciated the law of inertia, later to become Newton&#8217;s first law of motion. Part V of Roger Bacon&#8217;s &#8220;<em>Opus Majus</em>&#8221; is practically an annotation to Ibn al Haitham&#8217;s <em>Optics</em>.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>George Sarton, the &#8220;father of the history of science&#8221;, wrote in the <em>Introduction to the History of Science</em>:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;[Ibn al-Haytham] was not only the greatest Muslim physicist, but by all means the greatest of mediaeval times.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;Ibn Haytham&#8217;s writings reveal his fine development of the experimental faculty. His tables of corresponding angles of incidence and refraction of light passing from one medium to another show how closely he had approached discovering the law of constancy of ratio of sines, later attributed to Snell. He accounted correctly for twilight as due to atmospheric refraction, estimating the sun&#8217;s depression to be 19 degrees below the horizon, at the commencement of the phenomenon in the mornings or at its termination in the evenings.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Robert S. Elliot wrote the following on the <em>Book of Optics</em>:</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;Alhazen was one of the ablest students of optics of all times and published a seven-volume treatise on this subject which had great celebrity throughout the medieval period and strongly influenced Western thought, notably that of Roger Bacon and Kepler. This treatise discussed concave and convex mirrors in both cylindrical and spherical geometries, anticipated Fermat&#8217;s law of least time, and considered refraction and the magnifying power of lenses. It contained a remarkably lucid description of the optical system of the eye, which study led Alhazen to the belief that light consists of rays which originate in the object seen, and not in the eye, a view contrary to that of Euclid and Ptolemy.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>The <em>Biographical Dictionary of Scientists</em> wrote the following on Ibn al-Haytham::</p>
<blockquote class="templatequote"><p>&#8220;He was probably the greatest scientist of the Middle Ages and his work remained unsurpassed for nearly 600 years until the time of Johannes Kepler.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>The Latin translation of his main work, <em>Kitab al-Manazir</em>, exerted a great influence upon Western science e.g. on the work of Roger Bacon, who cites him by name, and Kepler. It brought about a great progress in experimental methods. His research in catoptrics centered on spherical and parabolic mirrors and spherical aberration. He made the important observation that the ratio between the angle of incidence and refraction does not remain constant and investigated the magnifying power of a lens. His work on catoptrics also contains the important problem known as Alhazen&#8217;s problem.</p>
<p>The list of his books runs to 200 or so, yet very few of the books have survived. Even his monumental treatise on optics survived only through its Latin translation. During the Middle Ages his books on cosmology were translated into Latin, Hebrew and other languages.</p>
<p>The Alhazen crater on the Moon was named in his honour. Ibn al-Haytham is also featured on the obverse of the Iraqi 10,000 dinars banknote issued in 2003. The asteroid &#8220;59239 Alhazen&#8221; was also named in his honour, while Iran&#8217;s largest laser research facility, located in the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran headquarters in Tehran, is named after him as well.</p>
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<a target="_blank" href="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/7/7f/Ibn_haithem_portrait.jpg" title="famous scientists">en.wikipedia.org</a></p>
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