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David Hartley was born in 1705 in the vicinity of Halifax, Yorkshire. His mother died three months after his birth. His father, an Anglican clergyman, died when David was fifteen. Hartley was educated at Bradford Grammar School and in 1722 was admitted as a Sizar to Jesus College, Cambridge, where he was a Rustat scholar.
Observations on Man, his Frame, his Duty, and his Expectations is 18th-century British philosopher David Hartley's major work. Published in two parts in 1749 by Samuel Richardson, it puts forth Hartley's principal theories: the doctrine of vibrations and the doctrine of associations. The first part of the text deals with the frame of the human ...
Bell House, home of David Hartley. David Hartley, who lived at a farm called Bell House, was the leader of the gang. He was married to Grace Sutcliffe in 1764. Isaac Hartley, David Hartley's brother, lived at Elphaborough Hall, Mytholmroyd. Recruited Matthew Normanton and Robert Thomas to kill William Dighton
David James Benedict Hartley (born 28 March 1963) is a former English List A cricketer. Hartley was a right-handed batsman who bowled leg break. He was born at Ruscombe, Berkshire. In 1982, Hartley played 3 Second XI Championship fixtures for the Middlesex Second XI, [1] but this did not earn him a contract with the county.
David Hartley (the Younger) (1732–1813), son of the philosopher and signatory to the Treaty of Paris; David Hartley (computer scientist) (born 1937), British computer scientist; David Hartley (cricketer) (born 1963), English cricketer; David Hartley (rugby league), rugby league footballer in the 1960s and 1970s; David Hartley (figure skater ...
David Hartley the Younger (1732 – 19 December 1813) was an English politician and inventor and the son of the philosopher David Hartley.He was Member of Parliament (MP) for Kingston upon Hull, and also held the position of His Britannic Majesty's Minister Plenipotentiary, appointed by King George III to treat with the United States of America as to American independence and other issues ...
David Hartley is the thinker most precisely identified with the Associationist School. In his Observations on Man , published in 1749 (11 years after Hume's A Treatise of Human Nature and one year after the better known An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding ), opened the path for all the investigations of like nature that have been so ...
David Fielding Hartley FBCS (born 14 September 1937) [1] is a computer scientist and Fellow of Clare College, Cambridge.He was Director of the University of Cambridge Computing Service from 1970–1994, Chief Executive of United Kingdom Joint Academic Network (JANET) 1994–1997, and Executive Director of Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre (CCDC) 1997–2002.