Philosophical Observations on the Senses of Vision and Hearing
To Which Are Added, a Treatise on Harmonic Sounds, and an Essay on Combustion and Animal Heat
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:4th Jul '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Published in 1780, this was the first work to suggest that specific receptors were responsible for communicating auditory and optical sensation.
Published in 1780, this work was the first to suggest that specific receptors, tuned to only part of the physical spectrum, were responsible for communicating auditory and optical sensation. This insight led John Elliott (1747–87) to postulate the existence of ultraviolet and infrared radiation, prompting future discoveries in human sensory perception.Although first to suggest the possibility of light frequencies beyond the visible spectrum, the natural philosopher John Elliott (1747–87) was better known at his death for his failed suicide in front of the woman he loved. Tried for attempting to shoot her, he was acquitted but died in prison awaiting trial on the lesser charge of assault. First published in 1780, this work was his most important. Contemporary science held that vibrations of the air were directly communicated to the optic and auditory nerves and passed on to the sensorium, while Elliot proposed, through experimentation upon himself, the existence of sensory receptors, each tuned to only a limited part of the spectrum of physical frequencies. This insight led him to postulate the existence of what we now know to be ultraviolet and infrared radiation, thus paving the way for further discoveries in human sensory perception.
ISBN: 9781108061711
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 14mm
Weight: 310g
236 pages