The Mysteryes of Nature and Art
Book by John Bate
The Mysteries of Nature and Art is a book by John Bate written in 1634. The book acts as a practical guide for amateur scientific experiments, and is divided into four sections: Water Workes; Fyer Workes; Drawing, Colouring, Painting and Engraving; and Divers Experiments.[1] It inspired Isaac Newton during his younger years, in particular the section on fire Drakes, kites with firecrackers tied to their tails.[1] It contains one of the earliest depictions of fireworks and their preparation to be detailed in the English language, in a similar manner to the preceding De la pirotechnia.
References
- ^ a b Edward Brooke-Hitching. Fox Tossing, Octopus Wrestling, and Other Forgotten Sports, p.102. Simon and Schuster, 2015. ISBN 978-1-4711-4899-6
External links
- Article about book
- The mysteries of nature and art, conteined in 4 severall tretises From the Collections at the Library of Congress
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Sir Isaac Newton
- Fluxions (1671)
- De Motu (1684)
- Principia (1687)
- Opticks (1704)
- Queries (1704)
- Arithmetica (1707)
- De Analysi (1711)
- Quaestiones (1661–1665)
- "standing on the shoulders of giants" (1675)
- Notes on the Jewish Temple (c. 1680)
- "General Scholium" (1713; "hypotheses non fingo" )
- Ancient Kingdoms Amended (1728)
- Corruptions of Scripture (1754)
- Calculus
- fluxion
- Impact depth
- Inertia
- Newton disc
- Newton polygon
- Newton's reflector
- Newtonian telescope
- Newton scale
- Newton's metal
- Spectrum
- Structural coloration
- Bucket argument
- Newton's inequalities
- Newton's law of cooling
- Newton's law of universal gravitation
- post-Newtonian expansion
- parameterized
- gravitational constant
- Newton–Cartan theory
- Schrödinger–Newton equation
- Newton's laws of motion
- Newtonian dynamics
- Newton's method in optimization
- Gauss–Newton algorithm
- Newton's rings
- Newton's theorem about ovals
- Newton–Pepys problem
- Newtonian potential
- Newtonian fluid
- Classical mechanics
- Corpuscular theory of light
- Leibniz–Newton calculus controversy
- Newton's notation
- Rotating spheres
- Newton's cannonball
- Newton–Cotes formulas
- Newton's method
- Newton fractal
- Newton's identities
- Newton polynomial
- Newton's theorem of revolving orbits
- Newton–Euler equations
- Newton number
- Newton's quotient
- Parallelogram of force
- Newton–Puiseux theorem
- Absolute space and time
- Luminiferous aether
- Newtonian series
- Catherine Barton (niece)
- John Conduitt (nephew-in-law)
- Isaac Barrow (professor)
- William Clarke (mentor)
- Benjamin Pulleyn (tutor)
- Roger Cotes (student)
- William Whiston (student)
- John Keill (disciple)
- William Stukeley (friend)
- William Jones (friend)
- Abraham de Moivre (friend)
- Newton by Blake (monotype)
- Newton by Paolozzi (sculpture)
- Isaac Newton Gargoyle
- Astronomers Monument
Isaac Newton
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