Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- THE REMINISCENCES OF AN ASTRONOMER
- I THE WORLD OF COLD AND DARKNESS
- II DR. FOSHAY
- III THE WORLD OF SWEETNESS AND LIGHT
- IV LIFE AND WORK AT AN OBSERVATORY
- V GREAT TELESCOPES AND THEIR WORK
- VI THE TRANSITS OF VENUS
- VII THE LICK OBSERVATORY
- VIII THE AUTHOR'S SCIENTIFIC WORK
- IX SCIENTIFIC WASHINGTON
- X SCIENTIFIC ENGLAND
- XI MEN AND THINGS IN EUROPE
- XII THE OLD AND THE NEW WASHINGTON
- XIII MISCELLANEA
- INDEX
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- THE REMINISCENCES OF AN ASTRONOMER
- I THE WORLD OF COLD AND DARKNESS
- II DR. FOSHAY
- III THE WORLD OF SWEETNESS AND LIGHT
- IV LIFE AND WORK AT AN OBSERVATORY
- V GREAT TELESCOPES AND THEIR WORK
- VI THE TRANSITS OF VENUS
- VII THE LICK OBSERVATORY
- VIII THE AUTHOR'S SCIENTIFIC WORK
- IX SCIENTIFIC WASHINGTON
- X SCIENTIFIC ENGLAND
- XI MEN AND THINGS IN EUROPE
- XII THE OLD AND THE NEW WASHINGTON
- XIII MISCELLANEA
- INDEX
Summary
If the “Great Star-Catalogue Case” is not surrounded with such mystery as would entitle it to a place among causes célèbres, it may well be so classed on account of the novelty of the questions at issue. It affords an instructive example of the possibility of cases in which strict justice cannot be done through the established forms of legal procedure. It is also of scientific interest because, although the question was a novel one to come before a court, it belongs to a class which every leader in scientific investigation must constantly encounter in meting out due credit to his assistants.
The plaintiff, Christian H. F. Peters, was a Dane by birth, and graduated at the University of Berlin in 1836. During the earlier years of his manhood he was engaged in the trigonometrical survey of the kingdom of Naples, where, for a time, he had charge of an observatory or some other astronomical station. It is said that, like many other able European youth of the period, he was implicated in the revolution of 1848, and had to flee the kingdom in consequence. Five years later, he came to the United States. Here his first patron was Dr. B. A. Gould, who procured for him first a position on the Coast Survey, and then one as his assistant at the Dudley Observatory in Albany.
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- The Reminiscences of an Astronomer , pp. 372 - 416Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1903