Fincke Thomas Fincke. Thomas Fincke attended a school in Flensburg until hewas 16. After this he spent five years studying at Strasbourg. http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Fincke.html
Extractions: Thomas Fincke attended a school in Flensburg until he was 16. After this he spent five years studying at Strasbourg. He then attended seven universities over the next five years; Jena, Wittenberg, Heidelberg, Leipzig, Basel, Padua and Pisa. Only in Padua did he spend a number of years. He studied medicine in Basel and he practised as a doctor from 1587 until 1591. The first three of these years were spent in medical practise in his home town of Flensburg. In 1591 Fincke became professor of mathematics at Copenhagen. He became professor of rhetoric at Copenhagen in 1602, then the following year professor of medicine. His most famous book Geometriae rotundi (1583), was intended as a textbook and the reader is referred to Regiomontanus for more details. Based on works of Ramus from whom he took the word 'radius', the book introduces the terms 'tangents' and 'secants' and Fincke devised new formulas such as the law of tangents. Fincke's book was recommended by Clavius Napier and Pitiscus all of whom adopted much from it. His other books on astronomy and astrology are of much less interest despite the fact that he was in touch with
Thomas Fincke Thomas Fincke. Thomas Fincke (born 1561 in Flensburg, Schleswig; died1656 in Copenhagen) was a Danish mathematician and physicist http://www.fact-index.com/t/th/thomas_fincke.html
Extractions: Main Page See live article Alphabetical index Thomas Fincke (born in Flensburg Schleswig ; died in Copenhagen ) was a Danish mathematician and physicist , and a professor at the University of Copenhagen for more than sixty years. His lasting achievement is found in his book Geometria rotundi (1583), where he introduced the trigonometric functions tangent and secant
Extractions: Click the link for more information. Centuries: 15th century - 16th century - 17th century Decades: 1510s 1520s 1530s 1540s 1550s - Years: 1556 1557 1558 1559 1560 - Events The Edict of Orleans suspends the persecution of the Huguenots Mary, Queen of Scots is denied passage through England after returning from France. She arrives at Leigh, Scotland on August 19. The first Calvinists settle in England after fleeing Flanders Madrid is declared the capital of Spain by Philip II St. Paul's Cathedral in London is badly damaged by fire
Extractions: Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition The University of Copenhagen Copenhagen is the capital of Denmark. The Danish name for the city is København, a corruption of the Danish Købmandshavn , which means Merchants' Harbour. Copenhagen, March 2001 Copenhagen is located on the eastern shore of the island of Zealand (Sjælland) and partly on the island Amager, facing the strait known as the Øresund, with the Swedish towns of Malmö and Landskrona on the opposite side. Click the link for more information. university A university is an institution of higher education and of research, which grants academic degrees. A university provides both tertiary and quaternary education. Arguably the first university was the Academy founded in 387 BC by the Greek philosopher Plato in the grove of Academos near Athens, where students were taught philosophy, mathematics and gymnastics. The first European Medieval universities were established in Italy and France in the Middle Ages for the study of law, medicine, and theology. Before that, similar institutions already existed in the Islamic world, notably in Cairo. The most important Asian university was Nalanda, in Bihar, India, where the second century Buddhist philosopher Nagarjuna was based.
Thomas Fincke - Information An online Encyclopedia with information and facts Thomas Fincke Information,and a wide range of other subjects. Thomas Fincke - Information. http://www.book-spot.co.uk/index.php/Thomas_Fincke
Extractions: Thomas Fincke (born in Flensburg Schleswig ; died in Copenhagen ) was a Danish mathematician and physicist , and a professor at the University of Copenhagen for more than sixty years. His lasting achievement is found in his book Geometria rotundi (1583), where he introduced the trigonometric functions tangent and secant All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License (see for details). . Wikipedia is powered by MediaWiki , an open source wiki engine.
Extractions: An Illustrated History of the First 200 Years *** will be available for sale in mid-April, 1999 *** Julian's book *mostly* covers the USA, although there are three chapters about homeopathy in the UK Quin and the founders, The influence of Kent, he rise of the professional homeopath. It has 365 Illustrations It has 137 Biographies For those into graphology, it has the signatures of most people bio'd. It has an appendix with a brief history of homeopathy in each state. It has an appendix with a listing of all homeopathic hospitals that existed in the USA from the 1870s through the 1940s.It has a brief history of almost every country in the world where homeopathy is used. It has 14 pages about Hering.
Biography-center - Letter F Fairbank, Harold Arthur thomas. www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/2134.html www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/fincke. html. fincke, thomas. wwwhistory.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/ Mathematicians http://www.biography-center.com/f.html
Extractions: random biography ! Any language Arabic Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Turkish 450 biographies
Biographie Du Dr Thomas Skinner - Dr Robert Séror Biographie du. Docteur thomas Skinner (18251906 Avec fincke, Swan, Jenichen et Korsakoff en Europe, ces cinq hommes ont poussés très loin la technique de la http://www.homeoint.org/seror/biograph/skinner.htm
Extractions: Docteur Thomas Skinner Biographie chronologique du Docteur Thomas Skinner Médecin Homéopathe Anglais, né en Ecosse, le 11 août 1825 Mort le 11 octobre 1906 (81 ans) Etude de médecine à la Faculté de Médecine dEdimbourg. Commença par critiquer lhoméopathie et les homéopathes. Le Docteur Skinner est atteint dune maladie chronique mentale de type hypochondriaque qui loblige à abandonner la pratique médicale. Ne sachant plus à quelle porte frapper pour se guérir, en désespoir de cause, il consulte un homéopathe, le Docteur Edward Berridge Ce dernier le mena à la guérison complète avec Sulphur en haute dynamisation. A la suite de cette guérison, il devint médecin homéopathe, comme Hering , et de nombreux autres confrères qui doivent la santé pour eux mêmes ou un membre de leur famille, à lart et à la science de lhoméopathie. Il fonde avec Adolphe Lippe , Edward Berridge et Samuel Swan , une revue de médecine homéopathique anglo-américaine. Cette revue est destinée a établir un lien, un pont entre les deux communautés de médecins homéopathes praticiens anglophones.
Thomas Bartholin (www.whonamedit.com) thomas Bartholin was the second of the six sons of the famous family produced byCaspar Bartholin and his wife Anna, daughter of thomas fincke (15611656), who http://www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/894.html
Extractions: This survey of medical eponyms and the persons behind them is meant as a general interest site only. No information found here must under any circumstances be used for medical purposes, diagnostically, therapeutically or otherwise. If you, or anybody close to you, is affected, or believe to be affected, by any condition mentioned here: see a doctor. Thomas Bartholin is commonly credited with the first description of the thoracic duct in man and Jean Pecquet with recognizing it in animals a few years earlier. He described the intestinal lymphatics and their drainage via the thoracic duct into the venous system. He edited one of the earliest medical journals, Acta Medica Hofmensia, and described an encephalitis epidemic in Denmark in 1657. Thomas Bartholin was the second of the six sons of the famous family produced by Caspar Bartholin and his wife Anna, daughter of Thomas Fincke (1561-1656), who successively became professor of mathematics, rhetoric and medicine at Copenhagen. When his father, Caspar Bartholin the elder, died in 1629, his brother in law, Ole Worm (1588-1654), took over the custody of the young Thomas Bartholin. Ole Worm was famous as professor of medicine and founder of the study of Nordic antiquity.
Fink [Fincke], Thomas Fink fincke, thomas. Note the creators of the Galileo Project and this catalogue cannot answer email on genealogical he left some sort of inheritance to fincke. I find later that http://es.rice.edu/ES/humsoc/Galileo/Catalog/Files/fink.html
Extractions: Fink [Fincke], Thomas Note: the creators of the Galileo Project and this catalogue cannot answer email on genealogical questions. 1. Dates Born: Denmark, 1561 Died: Denmark, 1656 Dateinfo: Dates Certain Lifespan: 2. Father Occupation: Merchant And Alderman (Mag) He was prosperous enough that he left some sort of inheritance to Fincke. I find later that the father had married into the Thorsmede family, one of the richest bourgeois families in Denmark. After some thought I am listing him as affluent rather than wealthy. 3. Nationality Birth: Denmark Career: Denmark Death: Denmark 4. Education Schooling: Strassburg, Heidelberg, Leipzig, Padua, Pisa; Basel, M.D. Until 1577 grammar school in Flensburg. 1577-1582, studied under Dasypodius in Strasbourg. Later attended Jena, Wittenberg, Heidelberg (matric. 1582), Leipzig (matric 1582), Basel (studied medicine, 1583), Padua (1583-1587), and Pisa (1586). In Padua Procurator of the German Nation (1583), Consiliarius of the German Nation (1586), instrumental in founding of a type of regent (coemiterium) for the German Nation (1587). 1587, received M.D., Basel. I assume a B.A. or its equivalent.
Mathematicians In Richard S. Westfall's Archive Dürer, Albrecht; Fabri, Honoré; Faulhaber, Johann; Fermat, Pierre; Ferrari,Lodovico; Fine, Oronce; fincke, thomas; Flamsteed, John; Fontenelle http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/External/Westfall_list.html
Fincke Biography of thomas fincke (15611656) thomas fincke. Born 6 Jan 1561 in Flensburg, Denmark (now Germany) thomas fincke attended a school in Flensburg until he was 16 http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Fincke.html
Extractions: Thomas Fincke attended a school in Flensburg until he was 16. After this he spent five years studying at Strasbourg. He then attended seven universities over the next five years; Jena, Wittenberg, Heidelberg, Leipzig, Basel, Padua and Pisa. Only in Padua did he spend a number of years. He studied medicine in Basel and he practised as a doctor from 1587 until 1591. The first three of these years were spent in medical practise in his home town of Flensburg. In 1591 Fincke became professor of mathematics at Copenhagen. He became professor of rhetoric at Copenhagen in 1602, then the following year professor of medicine. His most famous book Geometriae rotundi (1583), was intended as a textbook and the reader is referred to Regiomontanus for more details. Based on works of Ramus from whom he took the word 'radius', the book introduces the terms 'tangents' and 'secants' and Fincke devised new formulas such as the law of tangents. Fincke's book was recommended by Clavius Napier and Pitiscus all of whom adopted much from it. His other books on astronomy and astrology are of much less interest despite the fact that he was in touch with
Encyclopedia: Thomas Fincke Updated Apr 28, 2004. Encyclopedia thomas fincke. thomas fincke(January 6, 1561 April 24, 1656) was a Danish mathematician and http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Thomas-Fincke
Extractions: several. Compare All Top 5 Top 10 Top 20 Top 100 Bottom 100 Bottom 20 Bottom 10 Bottom 5 All (desc) in category: Select Category Agriculture Crime Currency Democracy Economy Education Energy Environment Food Geography Government Health Identification Immigration Internet Labor Language Manufacturing Media Military Mortality People Religion Sports Taxation Transportation Welfare with statistic: view: Correlations Printable graph / table Pie chart Scatterplot with ... * Asterisk means graphable.
Ask Jeeves For Kids! Hire, Philippe de la. Lagny, thomas De. Faille, Charles La Fontenelle, Bernard de. Flamsteed, John. fincke, thomas. Fine, Oronce. Ferrari, Lodovico http://www.ajkids.com/kidsaskjeeves.asp?ask=Galileo&qSource=0&origin=0&a
The Galileo Project Fink fincke, thomas 1. Dates Born Denmark, 1561 Died Denmark, 1656 DateinfoDates Certain Lifespan 95 2. Father Occupation Merchant And Alderman (Mag http://galileo.rice.edu/Catalog/NewFiles/fink.html
Extractions: Fink [Fincke], Thomas 1. Dates Born: Denmark, 1561 Died: Denmark, 1656 Dateinfo: Dates Certain Lifespan: 2. Father Occupation: Merchant And Alderman (Mag) He was prosperous enough that he left some sort of inheritance to Fincke. I find later that the father had married into the Thorsmede family, one of the richest bourgeois families in Denmark. After some thought I am listing him as affluent rather than wealthy. 3. Nationality Birth: Denmark Career: Denmark Death: Denmark 4. Education Schooling: Strassburg, Heidelberg, Leipzig, Padua, Pisa; Basel, M.D. Until 1577 grammar school in Flensburg. 1577-1582, studied under Dasypodius in Strasbourg. Later attended Jena, Wittenberg, Heidelberg (matric. 1582), Leipzig (matric 1582), Basel (studied medicine, 1583), Padua (1583-1587), and Pisa (1586). In Padua Procurator of the German Nation (1583), Consiliarius of the German Nation (1586), instrumental in founding of a type of regent (coemiterium) for the German Nation (1587). 1587, received M.D., Basel. I assume a B.A. or its equivalent. 5. Religion
Brigitte Fincke Brigitte fincke. Dato. Sted. Kilde omk 1495 thomas Thorsmeden * Ett 1490 http://www.geocities.com/tausen.geo/per00782.htm
History Of Astronomy: Persons (F) fincke, Edward Michael (b. 1967) Biographical data. fincke, thomassee Fink, thomas (15611656); Finé, Oronce (1494-1555) Biographical http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/persons/pers_f.html
Extractions: Fabricius, David (1564-1617) Fabricius, Johannes (1587-1616) Fabry, Marie Paul Auguste Charles (1867-1945) Fairbank, William Martin (1917-1989) Fairfax Somerville, Mary: see Somerville, Mary Fairfax Greig (1780-1872) Falck, Anders (1740-1796) Faraday, Michael (1791-1867) Fatou, Pierre Joseph Louis (1878-1929) Faulkner, Don (20th c.) Fermat, Pierre de (1601-1665) Biography Short biography and references (MacTutor Hist. Math.)
WOL News Article Workshop instructors Gary fincke, thomas Bailey and Karen Holmberg are members of the Institute at Susquehanna University. fincke, director of the Writers' Institute and coordinator http://www.mywol.net/articles/p030618v4.htm
Extractions: Home Sponsors Events Dining ... WOL Current Articles WOL Navigation Departments Business Computing Churches Events ... Visitors Features Bloomsburg University Bucknell University Do You Remember James V. Brown Library ... On The PA Road About Us Advertise With Us Privacy Statement SUSQUEHANNA OFFERS 15TH SUMMER WRITERS WORKSHOP Junior and Senior High School Students Learn from Faculty and Guest Writers SELINSGROVE, (Pa.) - This July marks the 15th year Susquehanna University will host a Writers Workshop for junior and senior high school students. About 40 experienced writers entering 11th or 12th grade in the fall will spend the week of July 6-12 learning about fiction, creative nonfiction and poetry writing from Susquehanna faculty and guest writers. This year's workshop will feature guest writers Susan Perabo and Julia Kasdorf. Perabo has published a collection of short stories, titled Who I Was Supposed to Be, and a novel called The Broken Places. Her stories have been anthologized in Best American Stories and New Stories from the South, and have appeared in Story, Glimmer Train and Triquarterly. She currently teaches creative writing at Dickinson College.
The Fincke Process Of Potentiation The fincke Process of Potentiation. by William F. Kaercher, MD, Philadelphia, PA ( This appeared as an article in The Homoeopathician, November 1914. of The Organon translation by Dr. thomas Skinner, colaborer with Dr. B. fincke, in the art of potentiating medicinal http://julianwinston.com/archives/fincke/kaercher_fincke_potentiation.php
Extractions: by William F. Kaercher, MD, Philadelphia, PA It is interesting to note that the initial potency was not made by the multiple vial Hahnemannian method but, rather, in the single vial Korsakoff method. The current understanding of chemistry is that the glass vial would adsorb Saxony, the smallest kingdom of the German Empire, the home of Luther; of Bach, Handel and Wagner; of Hahnemann, Stapf and Hering, produced also Dr. Bernhardt Fincke, the Master Potentiator. Dr. Fincke was a man of uncommon intellectual attainments. Being equally profound in physical science, in philosophy, in mathematics, in history, in logic, he brought all this knowledge into service in the elaboration and perfection of the theory of potentiation, and his grasp and knowledge of that phase of our medical science has been equaled by no man except the founder of Homeopathy. For many years after graduation he labored patiently to adapt Hahnemann's doctrine and perfect the art of potentiation of medicinal substances. Finally he evolved his simple apparatus for producing those wonderfully efficacious, "quick, long and deep acting" [Kent quote] potencies, known the world over as the FINCKE HIGH POTENCIES. The intense love, veneration, devotion and loyalty to the founder of our school which filled the being of Fincke, the Master Potentiator, at all times found expression by speech and pen, as manifest in one grand quotation from his thesis, Homoeosis: