"Toward the last quarter of the nineteenth century, it was accepted more and more that the phenomena of electromagnetism were not to be reduced to Newtonian mechanics, but were to be reduced from a separate system of principles, of which, in turn, the Newtonian laws were a special case. The "state of a system" is no longer described by the velocity at a certain point x, y, z and at a time t, but by the electric and magnetic field strengths at x, y, z and at a time t. A causal law in the theory of the electromagnetic field is now an equation that allows us to compute from the present distribution of field strengths the future value of field strengths. Mathematically, the causal laws look exactly like those in mechanics except that the velocities u, v, w are replaced by the field strengths. This theory... has been generalized into a "general field theory.""
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Philipp Frank, Philosophy of Science: The Link Between Science and Philosophy (1957) p. 272.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/History_of_science
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History of science
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