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Edmond Halley: Charting the Heavens and the Seas
 
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Edmond Halley: Charting the Heavens and the Seas [Hardcover]

Alan Cook (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 9, 1998
Best remembered today for the comet that bears his name, Edmond Halley was one of the great scientists of all time. He discovered the proper motion of stars, made important studies of the moon's motion, and his investigations of the Earth's magnetic field and of tides were unrivalled for centuries. Now, in this superb full-length biography, Alan Cook paints an unsurpassed portrait of this preeminent figure.
Halley played a crucial role in the Newtonian revolution in the natural sciences. Indeed, Cook reveals that it was Halley who set the question that led Newton to write the Principia, and who edited, paid for, and reviewed it. The author also describes how Halley's prediction of the transit of Venus led to Captain Cook's voyage to Tahiti and to an accurate calculation of the distance between the Earth and Sun. Perhaps as important, the book examines Halley's personal life, revealing a man who was far from a lab-bound thinker. As a young man, he sailed to St. Helena to chart the unmapped stars of the Southern Hemisphere. Moreover, Halley knew the leading artists of his age--Wren, Pepys, Handel, Purcell, and Dryden--and he travelled widely throughout Europe, meeting numerous fellow scientists and serving on a variety of diplomatic missions. He even spent a number of adventurous years as commander of a Royal Naval warship.
Much material about Halley's career has only come to light in recent years. Alan Cook has used this new material to write an illuminating account of the life and times of one of the key scientists of the Enlightenment.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

`This new biography of Halley puts the record straight, Alan Cook is particularly well qualified to write it. ... The book is a mine of information and the extensive references and notes ensure that the serious student will find it invaluable, but it is also so clearly written that it will also appeal to the more casual reader. Nothing important has been left out. ... Halley lived in fascinating times, and Cook gives a vivid account of them ... As a study of Halley's life, times and accomplishments this book could hardly be bettered and it is certain to remain the standard work for many years to come. It is moreover well produced and printed and the illustrations match the quality of the text.' The Times Higher Education Supplement

`This assiduously researched biography now rounds out the cometary discoverer's life and work.' Financial Times weekend section

`Since very little can be gleaned about Halley's personal life, such an intellectual biography focused on his scientific work is even more appropriate.' Financial Times weekend section

`he has devoted his life to the same sorts of precision project that structured Halley's career, and this sprawling biography is evidently the culmination of a long-standing of wholly justified scientific admiration.' London Review of Books

About the Author


Alan Cook was Master of Selwyn College, Cambridge, and head of the Physics Department in Cambridge University.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 576 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (April 9, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0198500319
  • ISBN-13: 978-0198500315
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.7 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,005,759 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A well-deserved work on a fascinating scientist..., December 6, 2001
By 
This review is from: Edmond Halley: Charting the Heavens and the Seas (Hardcover)
An outstandingly thorough and meticulously researched biography of one of history's most outstanding scientists. Matters related to events in Halley's life are notoriously difficult to reconstruct. He was not a pack-rat like Newton or Kepler, and failed to keep thorough diaries like Hooke. Biographers have to rely on the notes of others, public records, and published papers. Cook rises to the occasion and has produced a biographic work that will rival those of of other important scientists of the era.

Though remembered chiefly for the comet that bears his name, Halley was a scientist of extraordinary breadth and depth. Cook reconstructs all the major categories of Halley's productivity. Chapters are devoted to his youth, the year spent at St. Helena mapping the southern stars, his key role in prying the Principia out of Newton, his role in the quest for longitude at sea, his years as the Astronomer Royal, as well as his career on the high seas, both as a ship's captain (civilian) and scientist/explorer. A scientist like Halley demands a biography of considerable scope, and Cook delivers.

As much as any biography I've read, Cook's "Halley" spends considerable space delving into the contemporary zeitgeist. The 30 page opening chapter "Halley's World," is a splendid essay on the culture and spiritual/political/popular world of the late 17th and early 18th century in Great Britain and Europe.

This book is not an easy read, but it is absolutely essential for any student of the golden age of science. Halley lived in Newton's shadow, but was never eclipsed. Cook has done the literary world a great service in this book.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars This well researched book gives a rich view of Halley, January 22, 1998
This review is from: Edmond Halley: Charting the Heavens and the Seas (Hardcover)

Edmond Halley is famous for his comet - or more specifically for showing that the comet returned by calculating its orbit. We also know of his relationship with Isaac Newton, and Halley's crucial role in the publishing of Newton's Principia from Westfall's major biography of Netwon.

Alan Cook has produced a well researched and sympathetic biography of Halley. Here we find details of Halley's upbringing, his voyage to St Helena to survey the southern skies and observe a transit of Venus, and his appraisal of Hevelius's observations by naked eye compared with telescopically aided observations. There is a basic account of his marriage (Mary Halley has left little trace behind her) and a good account of Halley's finances. The circimstances of the murder of his father are explored, and once again we are reminded of the autocratic and mercantile flavour of those times.

There is a full account of Halley's sea voyages, undertaken as they were in tiny unstable wooden ships. His mapping of the magnetic deviation of the compass, and of the tides and depth of the sea in the Channel mark Halley as perhaps one of the first government scientists.

Halley's time as the Royal Astronomer is documented, together with his fractious time at the Chester Mint during the recoinage overseen by Newton. Cook provides a mildly critical account of Halley's involvement with the publication of Flamsteed's star catalogue.

Halley is shown as a man of action, a shaper, and a man prepared to trust his judgement in difficult circumstances. This is a sharp contrast to the Newton revealed by Westfall's book, the obsessive and semi-reclusive thinker concerned mainly with his own thoughts.

Halley's world is described, and his interactions with Wren, Hooke, Pepys and the royal households of the time are well documented. The myth of Halley's poverty after his father's murder is laid to rest with some detailed examination of estates, wills and chancery court proceedings.

There are technical details of the Venus transit measurements, and a very welcome analysis of Newton's lunar theory, together with a statistical comparison of the Moon positions of Halley and Flamsteed.

Alan Cook is a scientist and a busy academic administrator. The book is composed in 15 chapters each divided into many sections. One has the image of a busy man typing the odd page or two when possible, and the text does not 'flow' as a narrative. You get the facts with sound judgements backed up by references.

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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Edmond Halley Edmond Halley Edmond Halley, November 20, 2006
By 
J. Frakes (Milwaukee, Wisconsin) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Edmond Halley: Charting the Heavens and the Seas (Hardcover)
I don't know of any more repetitious dissonance than this effort. I looked forward to an examination of Halley's life, understanding that he left little in the way of personal documentation. That's why I looked to a research scholar. But here we get a smattering of details restated endlessly and a complete dismissal if any attempt at characterization of Halley in the flesh. Halley was, in fact, an intellect, scientist, spy, a cursing seaman, and vigorous modern man in the awakening era of 17th Century England. He wove an interesting path among high political power, great scientists, publishers, shipmates, and London society with almost defiant, irreligious self-assurance. He was married, raised children, and developed Newton's new mathematics into practical results others could understand. We see none of this in Cook's account. The text is dry enough that by midway through I had developed a cough complete with clouds of dust. The author is judiciously reluctant to draw any conclusions or added insight from the details commingled throughout. And the repetition is unbearable. Some statements are made a dozen or more times. It's a cacophony that make one almost dizzy and then, at last, the noise simply ends. If you want more, simply extract any 40 paragraphs at random and string them on at the end. Like the comet, it would just keep going round and round.
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