4 THE MEASURE OF THINGS
permanent feature ofone’s face. Cavendis, conducted experiments in ed jolts of electrical current, diligently noting til imes his consciousness, no longer.
In tring of signal discoveries—among muc person to isolate to combine o form er—but almost notirely divorced from strangeness. to tinuing exasperation of ists, en alluded in publiso ts of contingent experiments t told anyone about. In iveness merely resemble Ne actively exceeded s ricalconductivity ury aime, but unfortunately remained undiscovereduntil t century er part of il te nineteentury ook on taskof editing Cavendisime credit o others.
Among muc telling anyone, Cavendisicipated tion of energy, Oon’s Laial Pressures, Ricions, Cricalconductivity. t’s just some of it. According to torian J. G. Croidal friction on sloation of t of localatmospures, and some of terogeneous equilibria.” Finally, clues t led directly to ts kno t of t found until 1962. But our interest kno ty-seven, urned tention to tes of equipment t to ly out of simplescientific respect—by John Michell.
us looked like noteentury version of a Nautilus ed orsion t of tational deflection of t measurement of tational constant, and fromrictly speaking, th could be deduced.
Because gravity s in orbit and makes falling objects land endto t as a po it is not really. It is only poivesense, o anot, like t an elemental level gravity is extraordinarily unrobust. Eacime you pick up a bookfrom a table or a dime from tlessly overcome ta