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Thomas Dick (scientist)

Reverend Thomas Dick (24 November 1774 – 29 July 1857), was a British church minister, science teacher and writer, known for his works on astronomy and practical philosophy, combining science and Christianity, and arguing for a harmony between the two.

Rev. Thomas Dick
Born24 November 1774
Hilltown, Dundee
Died29 July 1857 (age 82)
NationalityScottish
Scientific career
FieldsAstronomy, Christian ministry
Signature

Life and career edit

Early life edit

Thomas was brought up in the strict tenets of the Presbyterian United Secession Church of Scotland. His father, Mungo Dick, was a small linen manufacturer, and he raised Thomas to work in this trade. When he was nine years old, he saw a brilliant meteor and this sparked a passion for astronomy. He read, sometimes even when seated at the loom, every book on the subject within his reach. He acquired an old pair of spectacles, contrived a machine for grinding the lenses to the proper shape, mounted them in pasteboard tubes, and began celestial observations. His parents, at first afflicted by his eccentricities, let him choose his own lifestyle when he was sixteen years old.

Education edit

Dick became assistant at a school in Dundee, and in 1794 entered the University of Edinburgh, supporting himself by private tuition. His philosophical and theological studies terminated, he set up a school at Dundee, took out a licence to preach in 1801, and officiated as probationer during some years at Stirling and elsewhere. After about fifteen months, he was excommunicated and lost his job there due to an affair with his servant.[1] An invitation from the patrons to act as teacher in the Secession School at Methven resulted in a ten years' residence there, distinguished by efforts on his part towards popular improvement, including a zealous promotion of the study of science, the foundation of a people's library, and what was substantially a mechanic's institute. Under the name Literary and Philosophical Societies, adapted to the middling and lower ranks of the community, the extension of such establishments was recommended by him in five papers published in the Monthly Magazine in 1814; and, a year or two later, a society was organised near London on the principles there laid down, of which he was elected an honorary member.

As an undergraduate, Dick had several noteworthy classmates at the University of Edinburgh including Robert Brown, Joseph Black and Robert Jameson.

Writing career edit

On leaving Methven, Dick spent another decade as a teacher in Perth. During this interval he made his first independent appearance as an author. The Christian Philosopher, or the Connexion of Science and Philosophy with Religion, was published first during 1823. Several new editions were published during the next few years, the eighth edition being published in Glasgow during 1842. Its success determined the author's vocation to literature. He finally gave up school teaching in 1827, and built himself a small cottage, fitted up with an observatory and library, on a hill overlooking the Tay at Broughty Ferry, near Dundee. Here he wrote a number of works, scientific, philosophical, and religious, which acquired prompt and wide popularity both in the United Kingdom and the United States, and which are available on the internet and in print.[2]

 
Table of population of the planets in the Solar System, based on their surface area and the population density of England

Dick believed in the plurality of worlds or cosmic pluralism, that every planet in the Solar System was inhabited. In his book Celestial scenery, or, The Wonders of the planetary system displayed, among many other topics he computed that the Solar System contained 21,894,974,404,480 (21+ trillion) inhabitants. This was done using the surface area of each planet and the population density of England.[3] One of his articles that speculated about the possibility of communication with lunar inhabitants inspired the Great Moon Hoax.

Author William N. Griggs in his 1852 booklet The Celebrated Moon Story: its Origins and Incidents credits Dick's 1837 Celestial Scenery, collected in an anthology of Dick's works in 1851, as being an inspiration for Richard Adams Locke's moon hoax. It is worth noting that the earliest appearance of Locke's so-called Moon Hoax was a serialization of the story in August 1835 in a New York newspaper The Sun under the title of Great Astronomical Discoveries Lately Made by Sir John Herschel, LL.D, F.R.S., &c at the Cape of Good Hope. Following publication in the Sun, the five part series was collected in a pamphlet of the same year which is said to have sold more than 20,000 copies almost instantly. It would seem that Griggs would be in error in attributing Dick's 1837 Celestial Scenery as an inspiration for Locke's 1835 serialization, particularly since Dick condemns Locke's hoax. The hoax was republished in 1859 by New York publisher William Gowans as The Moon Hoax: Or a Discovery That The Moon Has A Vast Population of Human Beings.[4]

Dick worked with the Religious Tract Society to publish three of his books on science and religion, including one of his most successful books, The Telescope and Microscope.

An honorary degree of LL.D. was conferred upon him early in his literary career by Union College, New York, and he was admitted to the Royal Astronomical Society on 14 January 1853. A paper on Celestial Day Observations, giving the results of a series of observations on stars and planets in the daytime with a small equatorial at Methven in 1812–1813, was communicated by him in 1855 to the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (xv. 222). He had written on the same subject forty-two years previously in William Nicholson's Journal of Natural Philosophy (xxxvi. 109).

Later life edit

Despite the success of his books, however, Dick made such loose bargains with his publishers, that he derived little profits from them, and his poverty was relieved in 1847 by a pension of 50 pounds a year, and by a local subscription of 20 or 30 pounds. He died at the age of eighty-two, on 29 July 1857, and was buried at Broughty Ferry.

Influence and legacy edit

Thomas Dick's books enabled the advances made by the Scottish Enlightenment in the previous century to flourish alongside Victorian moral and religious thinking. They influenced many scientists, engineers, politicians, writers and thinkers. For instance David Livingstone, who inspired health care, education and the end of slavery in central Africa, regarded Dick's Philosophy of a Future State as his most important influence after the Bible.[5]

In 1851, Mr. Thomas met William Wells Brown, who later would describe Dick as "an abolitionist... who is willing that the world should know that he hates the "peculiar institution" [of slavery]".[6]

Asteroid (9855) Thomasdick is named after Thomas Dick.

Selected works edit

Among his works may be mentioned:

  • The Christian Philosopher, or the Connection of Science with Religion, Glasgow: William Collins; London: Whittaker & Co; (1823). His first popular work, from which he was sometimes known as "the Christian Philosopher".
  • The Philosophy of a Future State, Glasgow, 1829, in which he developed a Christian theology compatible with the empirical science of Francis Bacon who advocated "a progressive and continuously increasing mastery over nature through the systematic and uninterrupted pursuit of knowledge."
  • The Mental Illumination and Moral Improvement of Mankind, New York: 1836, developing a train of thought familiar to the writer during his upwards of twenty-six years, and partially indicated in several contributions to periodical literature.
  • Celestial scenery; or, The wonders of the planetary system displayed; illustrating the perfections of deity and a plurality of worlds, New York, Harper & brothers, 1838.
  • The Sidereal Heavens, and other subjects connected with Astronomy, London: 1840 and 1850, New York: 1844 (with portrait of author), presenting arguments for the plurality of worlds.
  • The Practical Astronomer, London: 1845, giving plain descriptions and instructions for the use of astronomical instruments; besides several small volumes published by the Religious Tract Society on the Telescope and Microscope, The Atmosphere and Atmospheric Phenomena, and The Solar System.

References edit

  1. ^ Astore, William J. "Dick, Thomas (1774–1857)." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press, 2006.
  2. ^ Complete Works of Thomas Dick, Parts 1 and 2. Kessinger Publishing, Whitefish, MT. (2003). Part 1: ISBN 0-7661-7067-5 ISBN 978-0766170674. Part 2: ISBN 0-7661-7068-3 ISBN 978-0-7661-7068-1.
  3. ^ Thomas Dick, Celestial Scenery, 1838, p305.
  4. ^ LOCKE, Richard Adams (1852). The Celebrated "Moon Story." (Great Astronomical Discoveries Lately Made by Sir J. Herschel ... at the Cape of Good Hope.) ... With a Memoir of the Author and an Appendix, Containing I. an Authentic Description of the Moon, II. a New Theory of the Lunar Surface in Relation to that of the Earth, by W. N. Griggs.
  5. ^ Blaikie, William Garden (1880): The Personal Life of David Livingstone. Project Gutenberg Ebook #13262, release date: 23 August 2004.
  6. ^ "Three Years in Europe by William Wells Brown, Letter XIV".

Further reading edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Thomas Dick (scientist) at Wikimedia Commons

thomas, dick, scientist, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, unclear, citation, style, references, used, made, clearer, with, different, cons. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting August 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Reverend Thomas Dick 24 November 1774 29 July 1857 was a British church minister science teacher and writer known for his works on astronomy and practical philosophy combining science and Christianity and arguing for a harmony between the two Rev Thomas DickBorn24 November 1774Hilltown DundeeDied29 July 1857 age 82 Broughty FerryNationalityScottishScientific careerFieldsAstronomy Christian ministrySignature Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early life 1 2 Education 1 3 Writing career 1 4 Later life 1 5 Influence and legacy 2 Selected works 3 References 4 Further reading 5 External linksLife and career editEarly life edit Thomas was brought up in the strict tenets of the Presbyterian United Secession Church of Scotland His father Mungo Dick was a small linen manufacturer and he raised Thomas to work in this trade When he was nine years old he saw a brilliant meteor and this sparked a passion for astronomy He read sometimes even when seated at the loom every book on the subject within his reach He acquired an old pair of spectacles contrived a machine for grinding the lenses to the proper shape mounted them in pasteboard tubes and began celestial observations His parents at first afflicted by his eccentricities let him choose his own lifestyle when he was sixteen years old Education edit Dick became assistant at a school in Dundee and in 1794 entered the University of Edinburgh supporting himself by private tuition His philosophical and theological studies terminated he set up a school at Dundee took out a licence to preach in 1801 and officiated as probationer during some years at Stirling and elsewhere After about fifteen months he was excommunicated and lost his job there due to an affair with his servant 1 An invitation from the patrons to act as teacher in the Secession School at Methven resulted in a ten years residence there distinguished by efforts on his part towards popular improvement including a zealous promotion of the study of science the foundation of a people s library and what was substantially a mechanic s institute Under the name Literary and Philosophical Societies adapted to the middling and lower ranks of the community the extension of such establishments was recommended by him in five papers published in the Monthly Magazine in 1814 and a year or two later a society was organised near London on the principles there laid down of which he was elected an honorary member As an undergraduate Dick had several noteworthy classmates at the University of Edinburgh including Robert Brown Joseph Black and Robert Jameson Writing career edit On leaving Methven Dick spent another decade as a teacher in Perth During this interval he made his first independent appearance as an author The Christian Philosopher or the Connexion of Science and Philosophy with Religion was published first during 1823 Several new editions were published during the next few years the eighth edition being published in Glasgow during 1842 Its success determined the author s vocation to literature He finally gave up school teaching in 1827 and built himself a small cottage fitted up with an observatory and library on a hill overlooking the Tay at Broughty Ferry near Dundee Here he wrote a number of works scientific philosophical and religious which acquired prompt and wide popularity both in the United Kingdom and the United States and which are available on the internet and in print 2 nbsp Table of population of the planets in the Solar System based on their surface area and the population density of EnglandDick believed in the plurality of worlds or cosmic pluralism that every planet in the Solar System was inhabited In his book Celestial scenery or The Wonders of the planetary system displayed among many other topics he computed that the Solar System contained 21 894 974 404 480 21 trillion inhabitants This was done using the surface area of each planet and the population density of England 3 One of his articles that speculated about the possibility of communication with lunar inhabitants inspired the Great Moon Hoax Author William N Griggs in his 1852 booklet The Celebrated Moon Story its Origins and Incidents credits Dick s 1837 Celestial Scenery collected in an anthology of Dick s works in 1851 as being an inspiration for Richard Adams Locke s moon hoax It is worth noting that the earliest appearance of Locke s so called Moon Hoax was a serialization of the story in August 1835 in a New York newspaper The Sun under the title of Great Astronomical Discoveries Lately Made by Sir John Herschel LL D F R S amp c at the Cape of Good Hope Following publication in the Sun the five part series was collected in a pamphlet of the same year which is said to have sold more than 20 000 copies almost instantly It would seem that Griggs would be in error in attributing Dick s 1837 Celestial Scenery as an inspiration for Locke s 1835 serialization particularly since Dick condemns Locke s hoax The hoax was republished in 1859 by New York publisher William Gowans as The Moon Hoax Or a Discovery That The Moon Has A Vast Population of Human Beings 4 Dick worked with the Religious Tract Society to publish three of his books on science and religion including one of his most successful books The Telescope and Microscope An honorary degree of LL D was conferred upon him early in his literary career by Union College New York and he was admitted to the Royal Astronomical Society on 14 January 1853 A paper on Celestial Day Observations giving the results of a series of observations on stars and planets in the daytime with a small equatorial at Methven in 1812 1813 was communicated by him in 1855 to the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society xv 222 He had written on the same subject forty two years previously in William Nicholson s Journal of Natural Philosophy xxxvi 109 Later life edit Despite the success of his books however Dick made such loose bargains with his publishers that he derived little profits from them and his poverty was relieved in 1847 by a pension of 50 pounds a year and by a local subscription of 20 or 30 pounds He died at the age of eighty two on 29 July 1857 and was buried at Broughty Ferry Influence and legacy edit Thomas Dick s books enabled the advances made by the Scottish Enlightenment in the previous century to flourish alongside Victorian moral and religious thinking They influenced many scientists engineers politicians writers and thinkers For instance David Livingstone who inspired health care education and the end of slavery in central Africa regarded Dick s Philosophy of a Future State as his most important influence after the Bible 5 In 1851 Mr Thomas met William Wells Brown who later would describe Dick as an abolitionist who is willing that the world should know that he hates the peculiar institution of slavery 6 Asteroid 9855 Thomasdick is named after Thomas Dick Selected works editAmong his works may be mentioned The Christian Philosopher or the Connection of Science with Religion Glasgow William Collins London Whittaker amp Co 1823 His first popular work from which he was sometimes known as the Christian Philosopher The Philosophy of a Future State Glasgow 1829 in which he developed a Christian theology compatible with the empirical science of Francis Bacon who advocated a progressive and continuously increasing mastery over nature through the systematic and uninterrupted pursuit of knowledge The Mental Illumination and Moral Improvement of Mankind New York 1836 developing a train of thought familiar to the writer during his upwards of twenty six years and partially indicated in several contributions to periodical literature Celestial scenery or The wonders of the planetary system displayed illustrating the perfections of deity and a plurality of worlds New York Harper amp brothers 1838 The Sidereal Heavens and other subjects connected with Astronomy London 1840 and 1850 New York 1844 with portrait of author presenting arguments for the plurality of worlds The Practical Astronomer London 1845 giving plain descriptions and instructions for the use of astronomical instruments besides several small volumes published by the Religious Tract Society on the Telescope and Microscope The Atmosphere and Atmospheric Phenomena and The Solar System References edit Astore William J Dick Thomas 1774 1857 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2006 Complete Works of Thomas Dick Parts 1 and 2 Kessinger Publishing Whitefish MT 2003 Part 1 ISBN 0 7661 7067 5 ISBN 978 0766170674 Part 2 ISBN 0 7661 7068 3 ISBN 978 0 7661 7068 1 Thomas Dick Celestial Scenery 1838 p305 LOCKE Richard Adams 1852 The Celebrated Moon Story Great Astronomical Discoveries Lately Made by Sir J Herschel at the Cape of Good Hope With a Memoir of the Author and an Appendix Containing I an Authentic Description of the Moon II a New Theory of the Lunar Surface in Relation to that of the Earth by W N Griggs Blaikie William Garden 1880 The Personal Life of David Livingstone Project Gutenberg Ebook 13262 release date 23 August 2004 Three Years in Europe by William Wells Brown Letter XIV Further reading editStephen Leslie ed 1888 Dick Thomas Dictionary of National Biography Vol 15 London Smith Elder amp Co Clerke Agnes Mary 1911 Dick Thomas Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 8 11th ed p 178 Brashear John A 1913 A Visit to the Home of Dr Thomas Dick Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada 7 19 30 Bibcode 1913JRASC 7 19B External links edit nbsp Media related to Thomas Dick scientist at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Dick scientist amp oldid 1179899882, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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