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  1. 1 de ene. de 1996 · Jean-Antoine Nollet et la diffusion de l’étude de l’électricité : un nouveau lexique pour une nouvelle science. Les études sur l'électricité et le magnétisme n'ont pas subi un ...

  2. Jean-Antoine Nollet. Jean-Antoine Nollet (French: [ʒɑ̃ ɑ̃twan nole]; 19 November 1700 – 25 April 1770) was a French clergyman and physicist who did a number of experiments with electricity and discovered osmosis. Read more on Wikipedia. Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Jean-Antoine Nollet has received more than 92,837 page views.

  3. Abbe Nollet's Discovery of Osmosis. Jean Antoine Nollet was a Catholic deacon from the eighteenth century who championed the teaching of science in France. He became known as Abbe Nollet. His main area of study was electricity. In 1748, Abbe Nollet conducted an experiment where he took a vial of alcohol, covered it securely with some pig's ...

  4. 4 de ene. de 2002 · Meanwhile Nollet prepared a defense of his theories and questioned Franklin’s in a series of nine essays in the form of letters, six of them addressed to Franklin. The book was published about January in 1753. 9 Nollet raised some important questions, but in general refused to recognize the possibility that Franklin was correct.

  5. www.scientus.org › Abbe-Nollet-OsmosisAbbe Nollet and Osmosis

    Abbe Nollet's Discovery of Osmosis. Jean Antoine Nollet was a Catholic deacon from the eighteenth century who championed the teaching of science in France. He became known as Abbe Nollet. His main area of study was electricity. In 1748, Abbe Nollet conducted an experiment where he took a vial of alcohol, covered it securely with some pig's ...

  6. Jean Antoine Nollet, fue el primero en realizar estas demostraciones en París del poder de acumulación de su vasija. Se hizo tan famoso que sus demostraciones llegaron a oídos a del Rey Luis XV de Francia. 200 monjes saltando . A Nollet no le bastaba con haber mejorado la “Botella de Leyden”.

  7. Nollet’s rise from the semiliterate peasantry to the top of the aristocratic Paris Academy of Sciences was a chef d’oeuvre of the Age of Reason. His village curé had recognized his intelligence and recommended him for the Church; his father, a stranger to learning, reluctantly consented; Jean-Antoine, having completed the humanities course ...

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