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....Optics Highlights |
II. Spectacles
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some dispute exists over whether
eyeglasses originated
in the Far East or in the West: it appears that the
eyeglasses used by the Chinese were for adornment or
supposed magical powers and contained colored glass, not
correcting lenses. Roger Bacon, the medieval champion of experimental
science, made the first recorded reference to the
magnifying properties of lenses in 1262. Eyeglasses
appeared first in Florence about 1280 and their use
spread rapidly. (Their invention is traditionally
assigned to Alessandro di Spina). A correct explanation
of their operation, however, did not appear for centuries
until 1604 with the publication of the work of the
astronomer Johannes Kepler. In 1784 Benjamin Franklin
invented bifocals. In his invention the two lens sections
were held by the frame; one hundred years later a version
with the lenses cemented together was invented. Bifocals
with the sections fused together were not invented until
1908. In 1827, George Airy introduced the use of a
cylindrical lens to correct astigmatism. As for contact lenses,
some believe that the sketches made by Leonardo da Vinci
about 1508 were intended to indicate contact lenses, and
contact lenses were suggested and sketched by Ren�
Descartes in 1636. The first contact lenses to have been
worn were invented by the physiologist Adolf Fick in 1887,
and the plastic contact lens was originated by Kevin
Tuohy in 1948. Soft lenses did not appear until the
1970’s. |
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Roger Bacon (1220 - 1292) was a young lecturer at Oxford who
became preoccupied with the idea of experimental studies.
He carried out some experiments with lenses and mirrors
and described the principles of reflection and
refraction, but his great contribution was his insistence
on systematic observation and experiments and he is
regarded as a forerunner of modern science. He joined the
Franciscan order at age 33. About 1266 he applied for
papal permission to write a book about the positive
effects of experimental methods; he was enjoined to send
the book secretly. Without the knowledge of his superiors
he completed the work, but the pope’s death in 1268
ended his hope of putting experimental science into the curricula
of the universities. Bacon was imprisoned for two years
(1277 - 1279), it is believed, by the Franciscan order
for "novelties" in his teaching but continued
to write aggressively until his death |
Johannes Kepler (1571 - 1630) born in a small German
town, was the son of a mercenary soldier. His mother was
the daughter of an innkeeper. He received a university scholarship,
became an astronomer and rose to the position of imperial
mathematician in the court of the Holy Roman emperor.
Kepler was among the few to accept the Copernican heliocentric
astronomy and he discovered the laws of planetary motion
which set the path for Newton’s theory of
gravitation. In the course of his astronomical
investigations he provided a correct explanation of
vision and the functions of the pupil, cornea and retina
and after more than three centuries gave the first
correct explanation of how eyeglasses work. Kepler lived
during the ravages and horrors of the Thirty Years War
(1618-1648). At one point he had to rush home to save his
mother from death at the stake after she had been accused
of witchcraft; his gravesight was lost in the turmoil of
the war. |
Benjamin Franklin (1706 - 1790), whose history we all know, was an
inventor, scientist, educator, writer, printer,
publisher, editor, politician, statesman, diplomat, and
postmaster. He helped establish a fire company, a
library, an insurance company, an academy, and a hospital.
He created a charitable trust which is still in
operation. His inventions included the lightning rod, a
stove, a musical instrument (the armonica), the flexible
catheter, watertight bulkheads for ships and, of course,
bifocals. |
(Sir) George Biddell Airy (1801 - 1892) the British Astronomer Royal from
1835 to 1881, was the first to use a cylindrical lens to
correct (his own) astigmatism. Airy made other contribution
to optics and the diffraction pattern of a circular
aperture, which he derived, is named for him. Airy played
a peculiar role during the famous 1847 discovery of
Neptune through the calculations of orbit perturbations.
He (and other British astronomers) failed to act promptly
to use the calculations of Adams. As a result, the planet
was discovered by the German astronomer, Galle, using the
calculations of the Frenchman, Le Verrier. When Adams had gone
to see Airy, he was turned away because Airy was at
dinner (at three in the afternoon)! |
Adolf Eugen Fick (1829 - 1901) was a renowned German
physiologist whose name is attached to the law which
governs diffusion phenomena and to a technique for
measuring cardiac output. He was one of the first to
actually experiment with contact lenses on animals and
then, finally, fit contact lenses to human eyes. |
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