William Derham

 
Scientist:

William Derham

British physicist (1657–1735)

Born at Stoughton in Worcestershire, and educated at Trinity College, Oxford, Derham was ordained in 1682. He was appointed to the living of Upminister where he remained for the rest of his life.

Derham is best known for his attempt to measure the speed of sound. Martin Mersenne in 1640 had claimed a value of 1038 ft. per sec. while Newton, in the first edition of Principia (1687), had calculated it to be 968 ft. per sec. In 1705 Derham observed from the tower of his Upminiser church the flash of cannons being fired 12 miles away across the Thames at Blackheath. By timing the interval between the flash and roar of the cannon he was able to calculate the speed of sound to be 1142 ft. per sec., a result in good agreement with the 1130 ft. per sec. at 20°C given in modern textbooks. In the second edition of his Principia (1713), Newton revised his calculation in the light of Derham's published results.

Derham was also the author of two immensely popular works: Physico-theology (1713) and Astro-theology (1715). Based on his Boyle lectures, they set out to show that the basic facts of Newtonian mechanics and cosmology were convincing evidence for the “being and attributes of God.”

Also known as an editor, Derham published a number of posthumous works of John Ray as well as The Philosophical Experiments (1726) of Robert Hooke.

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Wikipedia: William Derham

William Derham (26 November 1657 - 5 April 1735)[1] was an English clergyman and natural philosopher. He was the first man known to measure the speed of sound.

Life

Derham was the son of Thomas Derham. He was born at Stoulton in Worcestershire, England. He was educated at Blockley, Gloucestershire and at Trinity College, Oxford from 1675 to 1679.[1] He was ordained on 29 May 1681. In 1682 he became vicar of Wargrave and from 1689 to 1735 he was rector at Upminster.

Work

In 1696 he published his Artificial Clockmaker, which went through several editions. The best known of his subsequent works are Physico-Theology, published in 1713; Astro-Theology, 1714; and Christo-Theology, 1730. The first two of these books were teleological arguments for the being and attributes of God, and were used by Paley nearly a century later.

On 3 February 1703 Derham was elected fellow of the Royal Society, and in 1716 was made a canon of Windsor. He was Boyle lecturer in 1711-1712. His last work, entitled A Defence of the Church's Right in Leasehold Estates, appeared in 1731.

Besides the works published in his own name, Derham, who was keenly interested in natural history, contributed a variety of papers to the Transactions of the Royal Society, revised the Miscellanea Curiosa, edited the correspondence of John Ray and Eleazar Albin's Natural History, and published some of the manuscripts of Robert Hooke, the natural philosopher.

References

  1. ^ a b Marja Smolenaars, ‘Derham, William (1657–1735)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 26 May 2007

 
 

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