2015
DOI: 10.1098/rsnr.2015.0057
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Crafting the microworld: how Robert Hooke constructed knowledge about small things

Abstract: This paper investigates the way in which Robert Hooke constructed his microscopical observations. His Micrographia is justifiably famous for its detailed engravings, which communicated Hooke's observations of tiny nature to his readers, but less attention has been paid to how he went about making the observations themselves. In this paper I explore the relationship between the materiality of his instrument and the epistemic images he produced. Behind the pictures lies an array of hidden materials, and the craf… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(11 citation statements)
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References 12 publications
(14 reference statements)
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“…Several contradictory opinions have been raised over the years following Robert Hooke's miraculous description of the cell. The fact that animal cells did not contain the cell wall seen in plant cells, even though they contained nuclei and protoplasm, caused confusion about the definition of cell (31).…”
Section: History Of Cell Membranesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several contradictory opinions have been raised over the years following Robert Hooke's miraculous description of the cell. The fact that animal cells did not contain the cell wall seen in plant cells, even though they contained nuclei and protoplasm, caused confusion about the definition of cell (31).…”
Section: History Of Cell Membranesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These 38 schemas show magnified views of everything from such artificial objects as a printed dot and a needle to ants and flies, seeds, and leaves to minerals and even stellar objects. Hooke sought to represent his specimens as if in a peaceful and undisturbed world and so promoted microscopy as a nonviolent and easily accessible way to study nature, even if it took painstaking manipulation to make it appear as such (Lawson 2016).…”
Section: The Introduction Of Microscopesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hooke introduced coarse and fine adjustments and ball and socket joints. Lister, a wine merchant and amateur microscopist, was the first to use compound lenses from more than one element, significantly reducing spherical and chromatic aberrations [9,10]. Lister's law of aplanatic foci remained the underlying principle of microscopic science.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lister's law of aplanatic foci remained the underlying principle of microscopic science. He wrote a paper in 1843, entitled 'On the Limit to Defining Power in Vision with the Unassisted Eye, the Telescope and the Microscope', which was presented by his son John Lister to the Royal Microscopical Society, and influenced many of the later discoveries [9,10]. In 1846, a German mechanist Carl Zeiss opened the first microscope workshop in Jena, Germany [11].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%