1st Edition

Electricity and Experimental Physics in Eighteenth-Century Europe

By R.W. Home Copyright 1992
320 Pages
by Routledge

320 Pages
by Routledge

At the beginning of the 18th century there was no science of physics as we recognise it today; by the early years of the nineteenth century, there was. The articles in this volume are concerned with the process by which this came about. They focus, in particular, on the rise of experimental physics and the interactions between experiment, theory and mathematics in the study of electricity and, to... Read more
Contents: Preface; Newton on electricity and the aether; Force, electricity and the powers of living matter in Newton’s mature philosophy of nature; Francis Hauksbee’s theory of electricity; ’Newtonianism’ and the theory of the magnet; Out of the Newtonian straitjacket: alternative approaches to 18th-century physical science; Leonhard Euler’s anti-Newtonian theory of light; The notion of experimental physics in early 18th-century France; Nollet and Boerhaave: a note on 18th-century ideas about electricity and fire; Franklin’s electrical atmospheres; Some manuscripts on electrical and other subjects attributed to Thomas Bayes, F.R.S.; Electricity and the nervous fluid; Electricity in France in the post-Franklin era; On two supposed works by Leonhard Euler on electricity; Aepinus, the tourmaline crystal, and the theory of electricity and magnetism; Science as a career in 18th-century Russia: the case of F.U.T. Aepinus; Aepinus and the British electricians: the dissemination of a scientific theory; Scientific links between Great Britain and Russia in the second half of the 18th-century; Physical principles and the possibility of a mathematical science of electricity and magnetism; Poisson’s memoirs on electricity: academic politics and a new style in physics; Index.

Biography

R.W. Home