翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ George Carlyon Hughes Armstrong
・ George Carmack
・ George Carman
・ George Carman (baseball)
・ George Carmichael
・ George Carmichael (rugby league)
・ George Carmichael Low
・ George Carmont
・ George Carnegie, 6th Earl of Northesk
・ George Carnegie, 9th Earl of Northesk
・ George Cadbury
・ George Caddy
・ George Cadle Price
・ George Cadogan
・ George Cadogan (disambiguation)
George Cadogan Morgan
・ George Cadogan, 3rd Earl Cadogan
・ George Cadogan, 5th Earl Cadogan
・ George Cadwalader
・ George Cadwell
・ George Cafego
・ George Caffentzis
・ George Cahill
・ George Cain
・ George Caines
・ George Caithamer
・ George Cakobau
・ George Cakobau, Jr.
・ George Calavassy
・ George Calderon


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

George Cadogan Morgan : ウィキペディア英語版
George Cadogan Morgan
George Cadogan Morgan (1754 – 17 November 1798) was a Welsh dissenting minister and scientist.
==Life==
He was born in 1754 at Bridgend, Glamorganshire, was the second son of William Morgan, a surgeon practising in that town, by Sarah, sister of Dr. Richard Price.
William Morgan was his elder brother.
George was educated at Cowbridge grammar school and, for a time, at Jesus College, Oxford, whence he matriculated 10 October 1771.
An intention of entering the church was abandoned, owing to the death of his father and the poverty of his family.
His religious views also changed, and he soon became, under the guidance of his uncle, Dr. Price, a student at the dissenting academy at Hoxton, where he remained for several years.
In 1776, he settled as Unitarian minister at Norwich, where it is said that his advanced opinions exposed him to much annoyance from the clergy of the town.
He was subsequently minister at Yarmouth for 1785-6, but removed to Hackney early in 1787, and became associated with Dr. Price in starting Hackney College, where he acted as tutor until 1791.
In 1789, accompanied by three friends, he set out on a tour through France, and his letters to his wife descriptive of the journey are still preserved.
He was in Paris at the storming of the Bastille, and is supposed to have been the first to communicate the news to England.
He sympathised with the revolution in its earlier stages, and held very optimistic views as to human progress, believing that the mind could be so developed as to receive, by intuition, knowledge which is now attainable only through research.
In 1791, he was disappointed of Dr. Price's post as preacher at the Gravel-pit meeting-house at Hackney, and retired to Southgate in Middlesex.
There he undertook the education of private pupils, and met with much success.

Morgan gained a high reputation as a scientific writer, his best-known work being his ''Lectures on Electricity'', which he had delivered to the students at Hackney.
In these he foreshadowed several of the discoveries of subsequent scientific men.
In chemistry, he was an advocate of the opinions of Stahl in opposition to those of Lavoisier, and was engaged upon a work on the subject at the time of his death.
In 1785, he communicated to the Royal Society a paper containing 'Observations and Experiments on the Light of Bodies in a state of Combustion'.
He was also the author of 'Directions for the use of a Scientific Table in the Collection and Application of Knowledge, . . . with a Life of the Author'.
This contains an elaborate table for the systematisation of all knowledge.
He also made considerable progress in writing the memoirs of Dr. Richard Price.

He died on 17 November 1798 of a fever contracted, it was supposed, while making a chemical experiment in which he inhaled some poison.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「George Cadogan Morgan」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.