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Seeing Further,
The Legacy of Robert Hooke
"He was of an active, restless, indefatigable Genius even
almost to the last, and always slept little to his death,
seldom going to sleep till two three, or four a Clock in the
Morning, and seldomer to Bed, often continuing his Studies all
Night, and taking a nap in the day. His temper was
Melancholy...."
These words were intended to describe Robert Hooke, but have
been said to equally describe Isaac Newton. Both men played
vital roles in the development of science in the seventeenth
century, though at first glance Newton appears to outshine and
outclass Robert Hooke. When Hooke is mentioned to this day, we
usually speak of Newton as well, but not the other way around.
They influenced one another far more than either would ever
admit and, though each deserves his own separate identity,
Hooke has rarely been granted his. This is largely because,
though Newton and Hooke had much in common, they were bitter
enemies, and Newton was able to exert far more influence over
the Royal Society and, thereby, over the entire scientific
community of his day. Robert Hooke's genius is hidden in
shadows created partly by Hooke himself, but largely by Isaac
Newton, a man who could not speak without contempt for Hooke,
even long after Hooke's death, and who may well have taken
steps to obliterate much of Hooke's contributions to science.
Hooke's reputation is riddled by exaggerated accusations and
misconceptions.
Robert Hooke was a significant influence in the advancement
of science as well as Newton. An established physicist and
astronomer, Hooke was with the Royal Society from its
inception, and served it tirelessly and loyally for over forty
years; it was he who had worded the society's credo "To improve
the knowledge of natural things, and all useful Arts,
Manufactures, Mechanic practices, Engines and Inventions by
Experiments (not meddling with divinity, Metaphysics, Morals,
Politics, Grammar, Rhetoric or Logic)." But the rancor between
Newton and Hooke did much to tarnish Hooke's reputation.
Hooke was born on the Isle of Wight, July 18, 1635. As a
child he survived smallpox, but was scarred physically and
emotionally for life. When Hooke was thirteen years old, his
father, John Hooke, a clergyman hanged himself. Young Robert
had much emotional pain in his youth. Receiving a 100 pound
inheritance from his father, Robert Hooke became an orphan of
sorts, being sent off to London. In London was the painter Sir
Peter Lely, and there, Hooke was to develop his artistic
skills.
As a boy, Robert Hooke had shown considerable interest and
skill in mechanical things, and this, along with Hooke's
intelligence, did not escape the notice of Richard Busby, the
most feared man of Westminster School. Busby had a reputation
for "flogging sense into them," but there was no threat here
for Robert Hooke. Busby saw great genius in Hooke, and got
involved to the extent of taking the boy into his own home.
Hooke moved through Westminster, to Oxford University,
working his way through as a servant as had Newton in
Cambridge. At Oxford, Hooke met Physicist Robert Boyle,
becoming his paid assistant. During his time with Boyle, their
greatest accomplish-ment was the construction of the air pump.
Hooke stayed with Boyle until 1662 when Boyle helped Hooke
secure the job as Curator of Experiments for the Royal
Society.
No job could have suited Robert Hooke more, and most other
scientists less, than the job of Curator of Experiments. His
task, three to four major experiments each week to be reported
on and/or demonstrated to the Royal Society. The experiments
varied in topic greatly, some of chemical nature, some of
astronomy, some of biology, all were considered Natural
Philosophy. All had to be understood. It was not a menial task,
but Hooke performed it excellently for forty one years until
his death.
Testimony to Hooke's stamina, and ability to handle a
tremendous workload lay in the endeavors of the next few years
of his life after being appointed curator. In 1663, Hooke was
elected a Fellow of the Society. In 1665, he was appointed
Professor of Geometry at Gresham College. The same year he
published his Micrographia, a book with elaborate drawings of
various things under the microscope.
And while it is Flamsteed, Cassinni and Halley who usually
get the credit for getting Newton involved with comets, a great
deal of interest was sparked in Newton by a book entitled
"Cometa," published around 1666, the author, Robert Hooke.
Newton had made mention of the book in his notes, and later
mentioned it in his correspondences. Hooke had taken close
observations of the comets of 1664 and 1665, as well as
collecting data from other astronomers. The only thing Hooke
could not decide on was what type of motion the comet would
take, straight line, circular orbit, or ellipse. By 1666, Hooke
had put it aside for the time, apparently because of the
necessity of pursuing other matters. In 1666, after the Great
Fire of London, Hooke was appointed surveyor of London,
designing many buildings including Montague House, the Royal
College of Physicians, Bedlam and Bethlehem Hospital. Hooke was
indeed a very busy man.
In 1677, after Henry Oldenburg's death, Hooke succeeded him
to the post of Secretary of the Royal Society while still
maintaining his responsibilities as Curator. Hooke continued in
this capacity until 1683 when the post of secretary was filled
by Richard Waller who would eventually write Hooke's
biography.
Hooke continued as curator and with his interest in
architecture, an interest he shared with Christopher Wren,
though Wren practiced it far more diligently as an occupation.
The two conversed often about the subject of architecture.
While Wren was constructing St. Paul's Cathedral, his greatest
work, Hooke assisted in modifying the great arches of the
structure. And when the Royal Observatory was under
construction, references appear about Hooke's connection with
that, though precisely to what degree is not known.
While Hooke never married, there was only one instance where
he seemed to be in love, that was with his niece, Jane Hooke,
who took over the duties of housekeeper at Gresham. But though
he became obsessed with her, she would not be faithful to him.
Hooke was ever a lonely person.
Though Hooke outwardly may have seemed arrogant and self
assured, underlying this seemed to be a great deal of
insecurity. Perhaps his physical condition had much to do with
it. While physical deformities and scars were far more common
in those days, Hooke seems to have been an extreme case.
Descriptions of him such as "scarred to the point of ugliness"
and his condition of "twistedness, which grew worse with age"
and references to a great deal of pain, seem to imply a
tortured person. Certainly there were those who avoided him
because of his condition, some even mocked him, Newton once
made a reference to a "dwarf" that was most certainly a barb
directed at Hooke.
Hooke devoted a great deal of time to the universe and its
mysteries. The search for parallax was on in the seventeenth
century, and Hooke made an attempt to find it using a zenith
telescope. The idea of using zenith telescopes was based on
atmospheric distortion being at a minimum directly overhead,
and therefore making for the most accurate measurements. Hooke
used the star Gamma Draconis, but the telescope was too crude
to reach any definite conclusions.
Hooke anticipated some of the most important discoveries and
inventions of his time. Among Hooke's contributions are the
correct formulation of the theory of elasticity, the kinetic
hypothesis of gases and the nature of combustion. He was the
first to use the balance spring for the regulation of watches
and devised improvements in pendulum clocks and invented a
machine for cutting the teeth of watch wheels. An expert
micro-scopist, his microstudies of the composition of cork led
him to suggest the use of the word cell (meaning a tiny bare
room, like a monk's cell), and the word survived as the name
for living cells. The publication of his Micrographia in 1665,
published in English, with its engraved magnifications of
minute bodies, was a major milestone of English science.
Hooke was the first to report the Great Red Spot of Jupiter
and the first to establish the rotation of the giant planet. He
formulated the theory of planetary motion as a problem in
mechanics, and pioneered the scientific trail that led Newton
to his goal in the formulation of the law of gravitation. As a
scientist, Hooke made useful contributions to the wave theory
of light. His interests ranged from these matters to
pre-Daltonian atomic studies, astronomy, earthquakes and the
physics of spring mechanisms. He set the thermo-metrical zero
at the freezing point of water and studied the relationship of
barometrical readings to changes in the weather; he invented a
land carriage, a diving bell, a method of telegraphy and he and
ascertained the number of vibrations corresponding to musical
notes.
The first confrontation between Hooke and Newton came in
1672. Newton had written a paper on his demonstration of white
light being a composite of other colours. It was presented to
the Royal Society just prior to Newton's reception as a Fellow
of the Society. Newton thought a great deal of his
demonstration, referring to it as "the oddest if not the most
considerable detection wch hath hitherto beene made in the
operations of Nature."1 But Newton was met with a strong rebuff
by Hooke. Hooke had his own wave theory of light, he had gone
into some detail about it in the Micrographia, and he still
believed in it strongly. He claimed Newton had not proven his
idea clearly, and needed more detail.
Newton had the equivalent of a temper tantrum. The situation
was made worse for Newton because Hooke was not the only one
attacking Newton's theory, he had been joined by Christian
Huygens, Ignace Pardies and the Jesuits of Liege. Newton had
since childhood, reacted strongly to criticism. He constantly
challenged authority, and to rebuff him, was to become an
enemy. Newton demonstrated this over and over during his
lifetime; his response was often either complete withdrawal, or
open battle. On this occasion, Newton chose withdrawal (though
usually for Newton withdrawal was some form of manipulation in
battle plans.) In March 1673, Newton wrote to Henry Oldenburg,
the current secretary of the Royal Society. Newton requested to
withdraw from the Society. It took much gushing of admiration,
respect, etc. on Oldenburg's part, as well as an offer to wave
dues to the Society to get Newton to change his mind. Oldenburg
also offered an apology for the behavior of an "unnamed
member." The stage was set. Newton had successfully established
his place in the Society, and had scored a victory, of sorts,
over Hooke.
In many ways, the problems between Hooke and Newton could be
attributed to the traits they had in common, rather than to
their differences of opinion on scientific matters. Both were
short tempered. Both were quick to make someone an enemy.
Newton once threw a colleague out of his office and refused to
speak with him for years because the man had made a joke about
a nun. And Newton refused to speak with Flamsteed for years
because Flamsteed refused to surrender raw data on comet
observations. (Actually it made both Newton and Halley mad,
they needed the data for their studies and did not want to wait
for "finished data," but while Newton ranted and raved, Halley
took matters into his own hands, literally; he stole the data!)
Hooke became enemies of Henry Oldenburg, secretary of the Royal
Society, in 1658 because Oldenburg had taken Christian Huygens
side of an argument over a claim to the invention of spring
balanced watches.
Both Newton and Hooke were suspicious of other people's
motives, (especially each other's), to the point of paranoia.
Newton seems to have always been that way. But Hooke seems have
developed this trait later in life. Richard Waller, who knew
Hooke quite well, and was with him until his death wrote this
of Hooke: "He was in the beginning of his being made known to
the Learned, very communicative of his Philosophical
Discoveries and Inventions, till some Accidents made him to a
Crime close and reserv'd. He laid the cause upon some Persons,
challenging his Discoveries for their own, taking occasion from
his Hints to perfect what he had not; which made him say he
would suggest nothing until he had time to perfect it himself,
which has been the Reason that many things are lost, which he
affirm'd he knew."2
In other ways Hooke and Newton were opposite, almost as if
they had all the wrong things in common. While Newton was a
recluse, seldom dining out, Hooke was gregarious and loved
nothing better than the coffee house. He often dined there and
stayed until one or two in the morning, drinking some, and
smoking and talking to friends. When it came to experiments and
work, they were opposite also. Newton would work on one project
relentlessly until he had defeated it. Hooke, and it must be
said this attribute would be required of him if he was to do a
proper job as curator of Experiments, flitted from one topic to
another. He was, similar to Halley, curious to a fault about
everything. It was quite probably the demands of his job as
Curator of Experiments that kept Hooke from concentrating
adequate time on any one subject. The very job at which he had
worked so diligently and so faithfully would be the cause of
later accusations of Hooke's work being "broken" and
"disjointed."
The next major confrontation between Hooke and Newton
surfaced openly in 1684. It concerned Newton's Principia, and
the involvement Hooke had in it. Newton claimed Hooke had none,
and quite a few historians have agreed; but a closer look at
the events prior to the Principia's publication, leave little
doubt that Hooke was indeed involved.
The idea of gravity and its force of attraction was a common
topic of interest in those days. Newton, Halley, Wren and Hooke
all played with the concept. In 1679, there were several
letters exchanged between Hooke and Newton. Both had made a
slight attempt to work out their differences. Hooke had
suggested it was other people (namely Oldenburg) who had made
problems, and they should correspond with each other in order
to avoid misunder-standings. Newton seemed agreeable. The topic
of the first letters between them was the old trajectory
problem. What path would an object follow falling to the Earth.
Newton had suggested an experiment to prove it. But Newton made
a mistake, suggesting that the trajectory would be a spiral.
Hooke grabbed this and ran with it. He announced to the Society
that Newton was wrong.
Newton was incensed, he felt Hooke had no right to take
their correspondence to the Society, and that the major issue
was one of a conduct problem on the part of Hooke. Hooke had no
right to announce Newton wrong to the Society. It is entirely
possible that Hooke was making the most of it, but one can
hardly blame him when one considers the godlike esteem in which
many people held Newton. Newton may have been the "giver of
laws" but he often upstaged the others of his time, and was not
inclined to give credit to anyone else.
Newton refused to correspond with Hooke any further, Hooke
had written a third letter to Newton, that Newton refused to
answer. And it is this third letter that is of particular
interest. This letter was written January 6, 1680, and in it,
Hooke spoke of his theory of gravity. Hooke wrote; "But my
supposition is that the Attraction always is in a duplicate
proportion to the Distance from the Center Reciprocal, and
Consequently that the Velocity will be in a subduplicate
proportion to the Attraction and Consequently as Kepler
supposes Reciprocal to the Distance." This was the main letter
Hooke used as evidence when he claimed Newton had robbed him of
his theory, but Hooke had no answer from Newton acknowledging
Hooke's theory.
Hooke first appealed to Halley saying that Newton had taken
all credit for the theory of gravity, when in fact, he, Hooke,
had given the idea to Newton. This put Halley in a difficult
situation. Halley was himself paying for the Principia to be
published, and the last thing he needed was for Newton to get
temperamental. However, Halley had to know first hand, because
of previous communication with Hooke, that Hooke was not
unreasonable in his claims. Halley and Hooke had long before
discussed the idea that the force of gravitation must diminish
by the square of the distance across which it is propagated and
agreed that the inverse square law could explain Kepler's
discovery that the planets move in elliptical orbits, each
sweeping out an equal area within its orbit in equal time.
Halley wrote Newton and told him, "He sais you had the notion
from him, though he owns the Demonstration of the Curves
generated thereby to be wholly your own: how much of this is so
you know best, as likewise what you have to do in this matter,
only Mr. Hooke seems to expect you should make some mention of
him in the preface, which, it is possible, you may see reason
to prefix."3
Newton vehemently denied any such accusation to Halley. A
second letter to Newton from Halley pointed out that Hooke had
not made a formal complaint of the matter, and that he felt
that others had made Hooke's conduct seem worse than it was.
Halley further pointed out again that Hooke was not trying to
lay claim to the entire theory. It must have been a terribly
uncomfortable situation for the easy going Halley.
Newton had another temper tantrum and told Halley he would
not write the third book of the Principia. Halley thought this
an incredible loss to mankind, and he had already invested much
of his own resources in the publication of the first two books;
he stopped at nothing to appease Newton. This incident only
served to further harm Hooke's reputation. Newton still
maintained Hooke was wrong; Newton would share his credit with
no one, most certainly not with Hooke, and refused to do
anything for him. The Principia was formally presented to the
Royal Society in 1687 with no mention of Hooke in the preface;
clearly, Newton had scored another victory over Hooke.
The year 1687 was indeed a dark year for Robert Hooke. The
Principia was published, without recognition to Hooke. As if
that was not enough, Hooke's niece also died that year. She was
the niece who had captured the heart of the aging scientist.
After the Principia publication and the death of Hooke's niece,
his health declined at a greater rate. It is possible, judging
by some descriptions, that Hooke was inflicted with Scoliosis,
a crippling degenerative disease that causes an unnatural
curvature of the spine and would account for his "incurvature"
and stooping posture. But he stayed active until the last year
of his life when he possibly had a stroke and was confined to
bed. But Waller reported that his mind stayed clear until his
death, though he became increasingly melancholy and
disagreeable.
Hooke died on March 3, 1703, having been blind and bedridden
the last year of his life. There had been little justice for
Hooke during his life, and there would be little to follow
after his death. His grave location is not even known.
Moreover, Richard Waller published some of Hooke's works in
1705, dedicated to none other than Isaac Newton. This
posthumous insult did little for Hooke and it is quite doubtful
Newton appreciated it anyway. What remained of Hooke's works
then passed to the Reverend William Derham, who was an old
friend of Newton's and took until 1725 to publish any more of
Hooke's works.
What part Newton played in the events that took place in the
moving of the Royal Society from Gresham is unknown for sure.
However it was during the move, that Hooke's portrait, the only
one known, disappeared, as did most of Hooke's instruments,
papers and scientific contrivances which Hooke had fashioned
with his own hands. Derham commented that even twenty years
after Hooke's death, Newton could still not speak of him and
remain calm. There may be no evidence to prove Newton was
responsible, but the motive is damning.
It was also probably due to Newton's spite that one of
Hooke's gifts to the Society fell through. Hooke had spent
little of his money, keeping it locked away in an iron chest.
When he was a dying man he told Waller he wanted to give his
money after his death, to the Society, so that new quarters,
meeting rooms, laboratories, and a library might be
constructed. But Hooke had unfortunately not made a will, or at
least one was never found. It seems logical that, had Newton
wanted to assert the Society's right to the money, based on
Waller's testimony, he undoubtedly would have gotten it.
Newton, who after becoming president of The Royal Society in
1703 had severed all ties that bound the Society to Hooke,
wanted nothing of him.
Those who charge Robert Hooke with, habitually and without
justification, accusing others of stealing his work need only
consider that Wren's name had been attached to the architecture
of the Royal College of Physicians, Willen Church in
Buckingham-shire. Perhaps the only justice Hooke ever received,
albeit posthumously, is that Robert Hooke was eventually
recognized as the true architect.
Newton once wrote Halley and referring to his (Newton's)
works, said they were a garden, and that Hooke had pilfered
from it. Sometimes we need to take a look at the facts rather
than to judge someone by a reputation his enemies helped create
in order to grasp the true picture. Robert Hooke may have had
his faults, and he may have been too quick to make assertions,
but he most certainly does not deserve his fate or lack of
recognition. Newton's actions in severing all ties between
Hooke and the Society did nothing to further the knowledge of
science and its development and denied the rest of us of the
opportunity to know all the contributions to the advancement of
science Hooke really made. Newton once said, "If I have seen
further, it is by standing on ye sholders of giants." There can
be little doubt that one of those giants was Robert Hooke. It
seems that it would apparently be more appropriate to consider
Hooke as the sower of many of the seeds in Newton's garden.
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Of all the planets in the solar system, none have intrigued the public more than Mars. Mars is easy to observe and changing surface markings can be seen with even a small telescope. It was the changing variegated surface markings that led to the speculation of life on the red planet.
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