"Two theories of the constitution of bodies have struggled for victory with various fortunes since the earliest ages of speculation: one is the theory of a universal plenum, the other is that of atoms and void. The theory of the plenum is associated with the doctrine of mathematical continuity, and its mathematical methods are those of the Differential Calculus, which is the appropriate expression of the relations of continuous quantity. The theory of atoms and void leads us to attach more importance to the doctrines of integral numbers and definite proportions; but, in applying dynamical principles to the motion of immense numbers of atoms, the limitation of our faculties forces us to abandon the attempt to express the exact history of each atom, and to be content with estimating the average condition of a group of atoms large enough to be visible. This method... which I may call the statistical method, and which in the present state of our knowledge is the only available method of studying the properties of real bodies, involves an abandonment of strict dynamical principles, and an adoption of the mathematical methods belonging to the theory of probability. ...If the actual history of Science had been different, and if the scientific doctrines most familiar to us had been those which must be expressed in this way, it is possible that we might have considered the existence of a certain kind of contingency a self evident truth, and treated the doctrine of philosophical necessity as a mere sophism."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/The_Scientific_Papers_of_James_Clerk_Maxwell
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
The Scientific Papers of James Clerk Maxwell
The Scientific Papers of James Clerk Maxwell were published in 1890 as a collection of works by James Clerk Maxwell. The publication was edited by W. D. Niven and printed in a two volume set.
37 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by The Scientific Papers of James Clerk Maxwell →
Related Quotes
"The new methods of measuring forces were successfully applied by Weber to the numerical determination of all the phen…"
"Whenever the subject admitted of it he had recourse to diagrams, though his fellow students might solve the question …"
"In January, 1854, Maxwell's undergraduate career closed. He was second wrangler, but shared with Dr Routh, who was se…"
"During his undergraduateship he had... found time for the study of Electricity. This had already borne fruit and now …"
"The most serious demands upon his powers and upon his time were made by his investigations on the Stability of Saturn…"
"The aim of an experiment of illustration is to throw light upon some scientific idea so that the student may be able …"
"The student who uses home made apparatus, which is always going wrong, often learns more than one who has the use of …"
"Science appears to us with a very different aspect after we have found out that it is not in lecture rooms only, and …"
"This habit of recognising principles amid the endless variety of their action can never degrade our sense of the subl…"
"The labour of drilling classes composed chiefly of young and untrained lads, in the elements of mechanics and physics…"