Henry Hedworth

Henry Hedworth (1626–1705) of Huntingdon was a Unitarian writer.

Henry Hedworth is chiefly notable for being the first person in the English language to introduce Latin (and Dutch) term "Unitarian" into print in England 1673,[1] fourteen years before Stephen Nye of Hertfordshire became the first to use the word on a title page when he anonymously published Brief History of the Unitarians also called Socinians in 1687 (expanded 1691). The term was already found in private letters, since the term "Unitarian" was already known in England from works such as the Bibliotheca Fratrum Polonorum quos Unitarios vocant (catalogued "post A.D. 1656", in fact 1668).

At this point, and for nearly 100 years after, the Anglican church generally referred to those holding these beliefs as Socinians after Fausto Sozzini.[2]

Hedworth was a student of John Biddle (Unitarian) and friend of Thomas Firmin.[3][4]

Works

  • 1694 Stephen Nye, Henry Hedworth Considerations on the explications of the doctrine of the Trinity
  • 1672 The spirit of the Quakers tried, according to that discovery it hath made. Society of Friends
gollark: Did you just randomly decide to calculate that?
gollark: Well, you can, or also "it would have about the same mass as the atmosphere".
gollark: Wikipedia says that spider silk has a diameter of "2.5–4 μm", which I approximated to 3μm for convenience, so a strand has a 1.5μm radius. That means that its cross-sectional area (if we assume this long thing of spider silk is a cylinder) is (1.5e-6)², or ~7e-12. Wikipedia also says its density is about 1.3g/cm³, which is 1300kg/m³, and that the observable universe has a diameter of 93 billion light-years (8.8e26 meters). So multiply the length of the strand (the observable universe's diameter) by the density of spider silk by the cross-sectional area of the strand and you get 8e18 kg, while the atmosphere's mass is about 5e18 kg, so close enough really.
gollark: Okay, so by mass it actually seems roughly correct.
gollark: So, spider silk comes in *very* thin strands and is somewhat denser than water, interesting.

References

  1. Alexander Gordon (Unitarian) Henry Hedworth and the Early Unitarian movement in The Christian Life Vol.18 p400
  2. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes (1907–21). Volume X. The Age of Johnson. XVI. The Literature of Dissent. § 7. The spread of Arianism and the First Socinian Controversy.
  3. Herbert John McLachlan Socinianism in seventeenth-century England 1951 p299
  4. Sir Adolphus William Ward, Alfred Rayney Waller The Cambridge history of English literature, Volume 10 1913 Page 426
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