Part I: The International of Science

  • slow move from faith to science
  • The Royal Society of London for improving national knowledge
  • National boundaries bypassed via published scientific journals

Part II: Mathematics

Part III: Astronomy

Part IV: The Earth

Part V: Physics

  • Christian Huygens
    • Law of centrifugal force
    • principles of momentum and force
    • conservation of energy
  • atmospheric pressure - study of vacuum's
  • weight of air
  • air as the medium of sound
  • Roberty Boyle
    • pneumatic engine
    • light in a vacuum demonstration
    • pressure of gas varies inversely with volume: Boyle's Law
  • Robert Hooke
    • improved understanding of heat
  • acoustics, studies of vibration and resonance
  • light
  • some modest advances in electricity

Part VI: Chemistry

  • Robert Boyle's "Skeptical Chemist" book relied on evidence and observation, it improved the idea of elements including a suggestin of oxygen

Part VII: Technology

Part VIII: Biology

  • Robert Hooke
    • demonstrated plants need for air
    • found the cellular structure of life
  • classificatins of plants and animals
    • identification of species
    • id of plant genders and reproductive organs
  • plant's derive nutrition from the soil
  • disproval of abiogenesis
  • discovery of single celled organisms, bacteria

hesitation of modern man between a search for truth that smiles at hope and a retreat to hopes that shy from truth

Part IX: Anatomy and Physiology

  • lymphatic system
  • purpose of pancreas discovered
  • anatomy of most organis mapped: eye, reproductive organans, stomach
  • nervous system described by Thomas Willis
  • Marcello Malpighi found capillaries and thus the full circulatory system
  • structure of lungs
  • Robert Hooke descovered how air exposed to blood when breathing
  • idea of air absorbed into the blood
  • idea of soul or vital power still persisted in this age

Part X: Medicine

  • Identification and classification of diseases
  • Identification of infection and bacteria
  • symptoms of disease vs symptoms of immune resonse described
  • surgery became more important and professional in this age
  • first injections and blood transfusions
  • improved and legislated sanitation
  • better water supplies

Part XI: Results

The moder mind ... has been living upon the accumulated capital of ideas provided for it by teh genius of the 17th century

The Royal Society, according ot it's historian, required of it's members "a close, naked, natural way of speaking ... bringing all things as near to mathematical plainness as they can

by the end of this epoch it was already being hailed as the harbinger of utopia and the savior or mankind