4 THE MEASURE OF THINGS
re experiments. Once ed a bodkin—a long needle of t used for seo and rubbed it around“bet my eye and to [t to see noting. Onanotared at to determine ito spend somedays in a darkened room before his eyes forgave him.
Set atop traits, ional cen sendency topeculiarity. As a student, frustrated by tations of conventional matics, ed an entirely ne told no one about it for ty-sevenyears. In like manner, ics t transformed our understanding of ligion for troscopy, and again c to ss forthree decades.
For all ed for only a part of erests. At least o alcs. t meredabblings but ions. ad of a dangerously icalsect called Arianism, trinity(sligon’s college at Cambridge rinity). endless udying t temple of King Solomon in Jerusalem (teacter to scan original texts) in t it icalclues to tes of t and ttac toalc. In 1936, t Jo a trunk ofNe auction and discovered onis t t ics or planetary motions, but to turn basemetals into precious ones. An analysis of a strand of Neained mercury—an element of interest to alcs, ters, and ter-makersbut almost no one else—at a concentration some forty times tural level. It is pertle rouble remembering to rise in the morning.
Quite o get from in August1684 to ter account of a Ne, Abra oric encounters:
In 1684 Dro visit at Cambridge [and] after timetoget t s supposing ttraction too bereciprocal to tance from it.
to a piece of matics kno t of tion, t sure exactly how.
SrIsaac replied immediately t it or, struck , a