When, in an experiment, all known causes being allowed for, there remain certain unexplained effects (excessively slight it may be), these must be carefully investigated, and every conceivable variation of arrangement of apparatus, etc., tried ; until,... The Quarterly Journal of Science - Page 3881873Full view - About this book
| William Thomson Baron Kelvin, Peter Guthrie Tait - 1867 - 914 pages
...must be carefully investigated, and every conceivable variation of arrangement of apparatus, etc., tried ; until, if possible, we manage so to exaggerate...so doing. Thus, to take only a very few instances, and to say nothing of the discovery r>t' electricity and magnetism by the ancients, the peculiar smell... | |
| Alfred Marshall Mayer - 1868 - 140 pages
...these must be carefully investigated, and every conceivable variation of arrangement of apparatus etc. tried; until,. if possible, we manage so to exaggerate...recent history of Natural Philosophy in so doing. Thus, for example, the slight anomalies observed in the motion of Uranus led Adams and Le Verrier to the... | |
| William Thomson Baron Kelvin, Peter Guthrie Tait - 1872 - 316 pages
...must be carefully investigated, and every conceivable variation of arrangement of apparatus, etc., tried ; until, if possible, we manage so to exaggerate...so doing. Thus, to take only a very few instances, and to say nothing of the discovery of electricity and magnetism by the ancients, the peculiar smell... | |
| James Samuelson, William Crookes - 1873 - 606 pages
...needle, we may adopt either of these methods. For instance, we may neutralise the disturbing effects of the earth's magnetism on the needle by properly...so doing. Thus, to take only a very few instances, to say nothing of the discovery of electricity and magnetism by the ancients, the peculiar smell observed... | |
| James Samuelson, Sir William Crookes - 1877 - 600 pages
...accepted hypothesis which becomes the means of guiding the investigator to a new and wider hypothesis. " When, in an experiment, all known causes being allowed...recent history of natural philosophy in so doing."* As an illustration of the use made by genius of " residual phenomena " I might cite the discovery of... | |
| 1877 - 612 pages
...accepted hypothesis which becomes the means of guiding the investigator to a new and wider hypothesis. " When, in an experiment, all known causes being allowed...recent history of natural philosophy in so doing."* As an illustration of the use made by genius of " residual phenomena " I might cite the discovery of... | |
| William Thomson Baron Kelvin, Peter Guthrie Tait - 1879 - 334 pages
...must be carefully investigated, and every conceivable variation of arrangement of apparatus, etc., tried; until, if possible, we manage so to exaggerate...Philosophy in so doing. Thus, to take only a very few T. • 8 instances, and to say nothing of the discovery of electricity and magnetism by the ancients,... | |
| William Thomson Baron Kelvin, Peter Guthrie Tait - 1879 - 572 pages
...conceivable variation of arrangement of apparatus, etc., tried; until, if possible, we manage so to isolate the residual phenomenon as to be able to detect its...Natural Philosophy in so doing. Thus, to take only ia very few instances, and to say nothing of the discovery of phenom<n*. . . . . .. 11 electricity... | |
| William Thomson Baron Kelvin, Peter Guthrie Tait - 1888 - 569 pages
...conceivable variation of arrangement of apparatus, etc., tried; until, if possible, we manage so to isolate the residual phenomenon as to be able to detect its...Natural Philosophy in so doing. Thus, to take only phenomena. ,.. , '-11 • i T a very few instances, and to say nothing of the discovery of electricity... | |
| William Thomson Baron Kelvin, Peter Guthrie Tait - 1890 - 536 pages
...conceivable variation of arrangement of apparatus, etc., tried; until, if possible, we manage so to isolate the residual phenomenon as to be able to detect its...so doing. Thus, to take only a very few instances, and to say nothing of the discovery of phenomena. » . • ii • T electricity and magnetism by the... | |
| |