
audiobook
by William Whiston, Francis Hauksbee
MECHANICKS.
MAGNETICKS.
OPTICKS.
HYDROSTATICKS.
PNEUMATICKS illustrated by Experiments for the most part Tubular, being such as were wont to be made before the Air-Pump was invented.
The more known Properties of the Air established by the Air-Pump, and other Engines.
The more hidden Properties of the Air consider'd by the help of the like Engines.
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1 MECHANICKS.
MECHANICKS. 2
In this lively series of demonstrations, listeners are guided through the fundamental principles of motion that shaped modern physics. Francis Hauksbee performs hands‑on experiments while William Whiston explains Newton’s three laws, the behavior of falling bodies, and the mechanics of levers, pulleys, and wheels. The sessions reveal how simple devices can illustrate momentum, force resolution, and the power of compound engines.
The program then turns to magnetism, showing how lodestones attract, repel, and guide needles, and introducing the terrella—a spherical model that mimics Earth’s magnetic field. Listeners also explore the nature of light, from the precise law of reflection to refraction through lenses, with demonstrations of Newton’s reflecting telescope and early microscopes. These experiments connect abstract theory to tangible phenomena that still underpin today’s technology.
Presented as a dialogue between experimenter and lecturer, the work captures the curiosity and rigor of early scientific inquiry. Listeners will hear vivid descriptions of apparatus, the careful measurements taken, and the reasoning that turns observation into law. It offers a window into the hands‑on learning that made the Enlightenment’s breakthroughs possible.
Full title
A Course of Mechanical, Magnetical, Optical, Hydrostatical and Pneumatical Experiments perform'd by Francis Hauksbee, and the Explanatory Lectures read by William Whiston, M.A. perform'd by Francis Hauksbee, and the Explanatory Lectures read by William Whiston, M.A.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (90K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Enrico Segre and the Distributed Proofreading team at DP-test Italia, http://dp-test.dm.unipi.it
Release date
2013-10-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1667–1752
A lively early champion of Newtonian science, this English mathematician and theologian wrote across astronomy, history, and religion. He is often remembered both for succeeding Isaac Newton at Cambridge and for the religious controversies that later cost him that post.
View all books1687–1763
A skilled instrument maker and science lecturer in eighteenth-century London, this lesser-known Hauksbee helped bring experimental philosophy to public audiences. He also spent decades at the Royal Society, where practical craft and scientific demonstration met every day.
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