Los

16

MAXWELL CONCEIVES THE MODERN WORLD. MAXWELL, JAMES CLERK. 1831-1879. Treatise on Electricity and...

In Important Science, Philosophy & Alchemy: Rare ...

Diese Auktion ist eine LIVE Auktion! Sie müssen für diese Auktion registriert und als Bieter freigeschaltet sein, um bieten zu können.
Sie wurden überboten. Um die größte Chance zu haben zu gewinnen, erhöhen Sie bitte Ihr Maximal Gebot.
Ihre Registrierung wurde noch nicht durch das Auktionshaus genehmigt. Bitte, prüfen Sie Ihr E-Mail Konto für mehr Details.
Leider wurde Ihre Registrierung durch das Auktionshaus abgelehnt. Sie können das Auktionshaus direkt kontaktieren über +1 212 644 9001 um mehr Informationen zu erhalten.
Sie sind zurzeit Höchstbieter! Um sicherzustellen, dass Sie das Los erfolgreich ersteigern, loggen Sie sich erneut ein, bevor die Versteigerung des Loses am schließt, um Ihr Maximalgebot zu erhöhen.
Geben Sie jetzt ein Gebot ab! Ihre Registrierung war erfolgreich.
Entschuldigung, die Gebotsabgabephase ist leider beendet. Es erscheinen täglich 1000 neue Lose auf lot-tissimo.com, bitte starten Sie eine neue Anfrage.
Das Bieten auf dieser Auktion hat noch nicht begonnen. Bitte, registrieren Sie sich jetzt, so dass Sie zugelassen werden bis die Auktion startet.
1/4
MAXWELL CONCEIVES THE MODERN WORLD. MAXWELL, JAMES CLERK. 1831-1879. Treatise on Electricity and... - Bild 1 aus 4
MAXWELL CONCEIVES THE MODERN WORLD. MAXWELL, JAMES CLERK. 1831-1879. Treatise on Electricity and... - Bild 2 aus 4
MAXWELL CONCEIVES THE MODERN WORLD. MAXWELL, JAMES CLERK. 1831-1879. Treatise on Electricity and... - Bild 3 aus 4
MAXWELL CONCEIVES THE MODERN WORLD. MAXWELL, JAMES CLERK. 1831-1879. Treatise on Electricity and... - Bild 4 aus 4
MAXWELL CONCEIVES THE MODERN WORLD. MAXWELL, JAMES CLERK. 1831-1879. Treatise on Electricity and... - Bild 1 aus 4
MAXWELL CONCEIVES THE MODERN WORLD. MAXWELL, JAMES CLERK. 1831-1879. Treatise on Electricity and... - Bild 2 aus 4
MAXWELL CONCEIVES THE MODERN WORLD. MAXWELL, JAMES CLERK. 1831-1879. Treatise on Electricity and... - Bild 3 aus 4
MAXWELL CONCEIVES THE MODERN WORLD. MAXWELL, JAMES CLERK. 1831-1879. Treatise on Electricity and... - Bild 4 aus 4
Das Auktionshaus hat für dieses Los keine Ergebnisse veröffentlicht
New York, New York

MAXWELL CONCEIVES THE MODERN WORLD. MAXWELL, JAMES CLERK. 1831-1879. Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1873. 2 volumes. 8vo. Half-titles, 21 lithographed plates, errata slip in volume 1, without publisher's advertisements sometimes found in volume 2. Publisher's pebbled cloth, spines ruled and lettered in gilt, expertly rebacked, retaining original spines; custom cloth folding box. Provenance: Silas W. Holman (inscription: 'S.W. Holman / Boston / 1878'). 'From a long view of the history of mankind ... there can be little doubt that the most significant event of the 19th century will be judged as Maxwell's discovery of the laws of electrodynamics.' - Richard Feynman, Feynman Lectures on Physics. FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, of Maxwell's first complete presentation of the theory of electromagnetism, from the library of Silas Holman, founder of the original Heat Measurements Lab at M.I.T. Maxwell's treatise recognizing 'that light and electricity are the same in their ultimate nature' (Grolier/Horblit) created the framework for modern physics and Einstein's theory of relativity. Einstein himself summed up Maxwell's groundbreaking advance: 'Before Maxwell people thought of physical reality—in so far as it represented events in nature—as material points, whose changes consist only in motions which are subject to total differential equations. After Maxwell they thought of physical reality as represented by continuous fields, not mechanically explicable, which are subject to partial differential equations. This change in the conception of reality is the most profound and the most fruitful that physics has experienced since Newton....' (Einstein, 'Maxwell's Influence on the Development of the Conception of Physical Reality,' 1931). In 1861, working with a mechanical model for electromagnetic phenomena originally proposed by William Thomson (later Lord Kelvin), Maxwell realized that if he made his mechanical model more elastic he could then explain such current flow by introducing a 'displacement current' term modifying Ampere's Law. His new model would successfully describe not only Ampere's law, but also Gauss's and Faraday's, and also showed the electromagnetic medium was capable of supporting oscillating waves. Astonishingly, when Maxwell calculated the velocity of the waves, he found that they closely match that of light—'The velocity of transverse undulations in our hypothetical medium ... agrees so exactly with the velocity of light ... that we can scarcely avoid the inference that light consists in the transverse undulations of the same medium which is the cause of electric and magnetic phenomena.' Maxwell's insight changed physics from the Newtonian world of mechanic representation and introduced a universe constructed of fields. Maxwell's theory was so groundbreaking, the full consequences could not be fathomed in its time. According to Freeman Dyson, 'Maxwell's theory had to wait for the next generation of physicists, Hertz and Lorentz and Einstein, to reveal its power and clarify its concepts. The next generation grew up with Maxwell's equations and was at home in a universe built out of fields. The primacy of fields was as natural to Einstein as the primacy of mechanical structures had been to Maxwell' (Longair). In 1922, when Einstein was asked if he had accomplished his great work by standing on the shoulders of Newton, he replied, 'No, on the shoulders of Maxwell.' Maxwell's Treatise '[demonstrates] the special importance of electricity to physics as a whole. He began the investigation of moving frames of reference, which in Einstein's hands were to revolutionize physics; gave proofs of the existence of electromagnetic waves that paved the way for Hertz's discovery of radio waves; worked out connections between the electrical and optical qualities of bodies that would lead to modern solid-state physics; and applied Tait's quaternion formulae to the field equations, out of which Heaviside and Gibbs would develop vector analysis' (Norman 1466). Silas W. Holman (1856-1900, MIT, class of 1876) became a noted MIT professor in physics, and established the original Heat Measurements Lab there in 1889. The first edition of Maxwell's Treatise, the most important work in physics of the 19th-century, is rare, particularly in this condition with interesting provenance. Grolier/Horblit 72; Norman 1466; PMM 355. For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com For further information about this lot please visit the lot listing

MAXWELL CONCEIVES THE MODERN WORLD. MAXWELL, JAMES CLERK. 1831-1879. Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1873. 2 volumes. 8vo. Half-titles, 21 lithographed plates, errata slip in volume 1, without publisher's advertisements sometimes found in volume 2. Publisher's pebbled cloth, spines ruled and lettered in gilt, expertly rebacked, retaining original spines; custom cloth folding box. Provenance: Silas W. Holman (inscription: 'S.W. Holman / Boston / 1878'). 'From a long view of the history of mankind ... there can be little doubt that the most significant event of the 19th century will be judged as Maxwell's discovery of the laws of electrodynamics.' - Richard Feynman, Feynman Lectures on Physics. FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, of Maxwell's first complete presentation of the theory of electromagnetism, from the library of Silas Holman, founder of the original Heat Measurements Lab at M.I.T. Maxwell's treatise recognizing 'that light and electricity are the same in their ultimate nature' (Grolier/Horblit) created the framework for modern physics and Einstein's theory of relativity. Einstein himself summed up Maxwell's groundbreaking advance: 'Before Maxwell people thought of physical reality—in so far as it represented events in nature—as material points, whose changes consist only in motions which are subject to total differential equations. After Maxwell they thought of physical reality as represented by continuous fields, not mechanically explicable, which are subject to partial differential equations. This change in the conception of reality is the most profound and the most fruitful that physics has experienced since Newton....' (Einstein, 'Maxwell's Influence on the Development of the Conception of Physical Reality,' 1931). In 1861, working with a mechanical model for electromagnetic phenomena originally proposed by William Thomson (later Lord Kelvin), Maxwell realized that if he made his mechanical model more elastic he could then explain such current flow by introducing a 'displacement current' term modifying Ampere's Law. His new model would successfully describe not only Ampere's law, but also Gauss's and Faraday's, and also showed the electromagnetic medium was capable of supporting oscillating waves. Astonishingly, when Maxwell calculated the velocity of the waves, he found that they closely match that of light—'The velocity of transverse undulations in our hypothetical medium ... agrees so exactly with the velocity of light ... that we can scarcely avoid the inference that light consists in the transverse undulations of the same medium which is the cause of electric and magnetic phenomena.' Maxwell's insight changed physics from the Newtonian world of mechanic representation and introduced a universe constructed of fields. Maxwell's theory was so groundbreaking, the full consequences could not be fathomed in its time. According to Freeman Dyson, 'Maxwell's theory had to wait for the next generation of physicists, Hertz and Lorentz and Einstein, to reveal its power and clarify its concepts. The next generation grew up with Maxwell's equations and was at home in a universe built out of fields. The primacy of fields was as natural to Einstein as the primacy of mechanical structures had been to Maxwell' (Longair). In 1922, when Einstein was asked if he had accomplished his great work by standing on the shoulders of Newton, he replied, 'No, on the shoulders of Maxwell.' Maxwell's Treatise '[demonstrates] the special importance of electricity to physics as a whole. He began the investigation of moving frames of reference, which in Einstein's hands were to revolutionize physics; gave proofs of the existence of electromagnetic waves that paved the way for Hertz's discovery of radio waves; worked out connections between the electrical and optical qualities of bodies that would lead to modern solid-state physics; and applied Tait's quaternion formulae to the field equations, out of which Heaviside and Gibbs would develop vector analysis' (Norman 1466). Silas W. Holman (1856-1900, MIT, class of 1876) became a noted MIT professor in physics, and established the original Heat Measurements Lab there in 1889. The first edition of Maxwell's Treatise, the most important work in physics of the 19th-century, is rare, particularly in this condition with interesting provenance. Grolier/Horblit 72; Norman 1466; PMM 355. For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com For further information about this lot please visit the lot listing

Important Science, Philosophy & Alchemy: Rare Book

Endet ab
Ort der Versteigerung
580 Madison Avenue
New York
New York
10022
United States
...

Wichtige Informationen

This auction is now finished. If you are interested in consigning in future auctions, please contact the specialist department. If you have queries about lots purchased in this auction, please contact client services. View further information about this auction

AGB

https://www.bonhams.com/legals/
Vollständige AGBs

Stichworte: Book