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  1. 15 Famous Indian Scientists and their Inventions. From C. V. Raman to Salim Ali, the talents of Indian scientists and inventors have been fully established in many different areas, including physics, medicine, mathematics, chemistry and biology. Some of them have also contributed in a substantial way to advanced scientific research in many ...

  2. Apr 14, 2024 · 13. Antoine Lavoisier. Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier, widely regarded as the father of modern chemistry, was one of the most famous scientists in Europe in the 18th century. He was one of the earliest proponents of the metric system, named oxygen and hydrogen, and hypothesized the existence of silicon (1787).

  3. 10. Juan Sebastián Elcano (c. 1476-1526) Following Magellan’s death, the Basque explorer Juan Sebastián Elcano took command of the expedition. His ship ‘the Victoria’ reached Spanish shores in September 1522, completing the navigation. Of the 270 men who left with the Mangellan-Elcano expedition, only 18 Europeans returned alive.

  4. Here is an alphabetical list of hundreds of the most famous scientists in history; the men and women whose crucial discoveries and inventions changed the world. If you're looking for scientists in particular fields, you could try our pages here: → Astronomers → Biologists & Health Scientists → Chemists → Geologists & Paleontologists → Mathematicians

  5. Timeline of a Scientific Revolution. • c1600 – Galileo Galilei discovers the principle of inertia, building the stage for a rational view of motion. • 1600 – William Gilbert finds that Earth has magnetic poles and acts like a huge magnet. • 1600 – Galileo Galilei discovers that projectiles move with a parabolic trajectory.

  6. This article examines changes within the Dutch civilising mission ideology after the decline of the Ethical Policy. Support of pure science, scientific knowledge that supposedly transcended ideology and politics, allowed the colonial administration to continue to project their rule as decent and moral, even as conflict and repression dominated colonial politics in the 1920s.

  7. Interestingly, Darwin and Wallace found their inspiration in economics. An English parson named Thomas Malthus published a book in 1797 called Essay on the Principle of Population in which he warned his fellow Englishmen that most policies designed to help the poor were doomed because of the relentless pressure of population growth. A nation ...

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