"Let us turn to the independent method of investigation employed by Faraday in those researches in electricity and magnetism which have made this Institution one of the most venerable shrines of science. No man ever more conscientiously and systematically laboured to improve all his powers of mind than did Faraday from the very beginning of his scientific career. But whereas the general course of scientific method then consisted in the application of the ideas of mathematics and astronomy to each new investigation in turn, Faraday seems to have had no opportunity of acquiring a technical knowledge of mathematics, and his knowledge of astronomy was mainly derived from books. Hence, though he had a profound respect for the great discovery of Newton, he regarded the attraction of gravitation as a sort of sacred mystery, which, as he was not an astronomer, he had no right to gainsay or to doubt, his duty being to believe it in the exact form in which it was delivered to him. Such a dead faith was not likely to lead him to explain new phenomena by means of direct attractions. Besides this, the treatises of Poisson and Ampère are of so technical a form, that to derive any assistance from them the student must have been thoroughly trained in mathematics, and it is very doubtful is such a training can be begun with advantage in mature years."
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On Action at a Distance
On Action at a Distance, is an article by James Clerk Maxwell which appeared in Nature (Mar 6, 1873) Vol VII, Issue 175. It was also published, with minor changes, both in the Proceedings of the of Great Britain Vol. VII. 1876, and in Vol. 2, The Scientific Papers of James Clerk Maxwell in 1890. The article is a discussion of scientific and mathematical investigations relating to the concepts of , Michael Faraday's lines of force, and the luminiferous aether. Maxwell was personally responsible f
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