Block:"Base-ball" Cited in 1819 Science Textbook for Girls: Difference between revisions
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{{Block | {{Block | ||
|Title= | |Coordinates=51.5073509, -0.1277583 | ||
|Title="Base-ball" Cited in 1819 Science Textbook for Girls | |||
|Type of Date=Year | |||
|Date=1819/01/01 | |||
|Block Game=English Baseball | |Block Game=English Baseball | ||
|Block Location=London | |Block Location=London | ||
|Block Data=<p>Use of the term "base-ball" in a physics text tailored toward female students. In the book, a student named Emily offers an example to explain the principle of inertia: "In playing at base-ball I am obliged to use my strength to give a rapid motion to the ball; and when I have to catch it, I am sure I feel the resistance it makes to being stopped."</p> | |Block Data=<p>Use of the term "base-ball" in a physics text tailored toward female students. In the book, a student named Emily offers an example to explain the principle of inertia: "In playing at base-ball I am obliged to use my strength to give a rapid motion to the ball; and when I have to catch it, I am sure I feel the resistance it makes to being stopped."</p> | ||
|Sources=<p>Conversations on Natural Philosophy; by Mrs. Marcet (Jane Haldimand Marcet); London; 1819; Longman, Rees, Orme and Brown, p. 13</p> | |||
|Block Notes=<p>Jane Haldimand Marcet was a groundbreaking author who wrote a series of highly popular physics, chemistry, and economics text books aimed at female students that were up-to-date and on the mark with their subject matter, yet also easy to read.</p> | |Block Notes=<p>Jane Haldimand Marcet was a groundbreaking author who wrote a series of highly popular physics, chemistry, and economics text books aimed at female students that were up-to-date and on the mark with their subject matter, yet also easy to read.</p> | ||
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Revision as of 08:57, 24 October 2020
English Baseball |
Add a Block Game |
Data | Use of the term "base-ball" in a physics text tailored toward female students. In the book, a student named Emily offers an example to explain the principle of inertia: "In playing at base-ball I am obliged to use my strength to give a rapid motion to the ball; and when I have to catch it, I am sure I feel the resistance it makes to being stopped." |
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Sources | Conversations on Natural Philosophy; by Mrs. Marcet (Jane Haldimand Marcet); London; 1819; Longman, Rees, Orme and Brown, p. 13 |
Block Notes | Jane Haldimand Marcet was a groundbreaking author who wrote a series of highly popular physics, chemistry, and economics text books aimed at female students that were up-to-date and on the mark with their subject matter, yet also easy to read. |
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Query | Edit with form to add a query |