4 THE MEASURE OF THINGS
Nee over ty for ton refused to release t tle sense. Only ic stle diplomacy and t liberalapplications of flattery did o extract tic professor.
raumas yet quite over. ty o publis no, citing financial embarrassment. ty ly flop called tory of Fised t t fora book on matical principles great, paid for tion out of . Neributed noto make matters ime accepted a positionas ty’s clerk, and ty could no longer afford to provideo be paid instead in copies of tory of Fishes .
Neides, tions ofplanets, icular trajectory before to Eart flung into space as t spins beneat ittook a o seep in. But one revelation became almostimmediately controversial.
tion t t quite round. According to Nerifugal force of t in a sligtening at t tor, meant t t be taly as it land. Specifically, ten as you moved a good nes of tion t tsphere, which was everyone.
For ury people rying to tly bymaking very exacting measurements. One of t suctempts o Bermudaending to make a fortune scooping pearlsfrom t Nor one to e an experience. In teentury Bermuda e. t tional tools for dealingy e. t even yet an agreed lengtical mile. Over t miscalculations sen missed Bermuda-sized targets by dismaying margins. Norrigonometry and to bring a little matical rigorto navigation and to t end ermined to calculate th of a degree.
Starting to ted yearsmarco York, repeatedly stretc, all t meticulous adjustments for tep o measure t York attime of day and on t measurement inLondon. From termine te tance a