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" It must, however, always be remembered that he works at the very boundaries of our knowledge, and that his mind habitually dwells in the 'boundless contiguity of shade' by which that knowledge is surrounded. In the researches now under review the ratio... "
The American Journal of Science and Arts - Page 198
1868
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The Artizan, Volume 26

1868 - 346 pages
...higher than in any of Faraday's previous works. Amid much that is entangled and dark we have Hashes of wondrous insight and utterances which seem less...most ingenious device of a rapidly rotating mirror, Wlieatstoue had proved that electricity required time to pass through a wire, the current reaching...
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Notices of the Proceedings, Volume 5

Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1869 - 646 pages
...satisfactory to a mind versed in mechanics. And then again occur, I confess, dark sayings, ,1 i Him 1 1. to be understood, which disturb my confidence in this...than of revelation. I will confine myself here to ono example of this divining power : — By his most ingenious device of a rapidly rotating mirror,...
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Notices of the Proceedings at the Meetings of the Members of the ..., Volume 5

Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1869 - 636 pages
...is far higher than in any of Faraday's previous works. Amid mucli that is entangled and dark we havo flashes of wondrous insight and utterances which seem...most ingenious device of a rapidly rotating mirror, Wheatstono had proved that electricity required time to pass through a wire, the current reaching the...
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The Peerage of Poverty: Or, Learners and Workers in Fields, Farms, and Factories

Edwin Paxton Hood - 1870 - 552 pages
...boundless contiguity of shade," by which that knowledge is surrounded. But amidst so much which is dark, we have flashes of wondrous insight, and utterances...less the product of reasoning than of revelation. Such is the estimate a competent mind forms of this great intelligence, so that, in fact, ordinary...
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Faraday as a Discoverer

John Tyndall - 1873 - 202 pages
...boundaries of our knowledge, and that his mind habitually dwells in the 6 boundless contiguity of shade 3 by which that knowledge is surrounded. In the researches...reaching the middle of the wire later than its two ends. 6 If/ says Faraday, f the two ends of the wire in Professor Wheatstone's experiments were immediately...
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Faraday as a Discoverer

John Tyndall - 1877 - 208 pages
...that he works at the very boundaries of our knowledge, and that his niind habitually dwells in the e boundless contiguity of shade ' by which that knowledge...the wire later than its two ends. 'If/ says Faraday, c the two ends of the wire in Professor Wheatstone's experiments were immediately connected with two...
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Notices of the Proceedings at the Meetings of the Members of the ..., Volume 5

Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1869 - 652 pages
...under review the ratio of speculation and reasoning to experiment is far higher than in any of Faradajs previous works. Amid much that is entangled and dark...Faraday, “the two ends of the wire in Professor Wheatatone's experiments were immadiatoly connected with two large insulated metallic surfaces exposed...
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The Edge of Objectivity: An Essay in the History of Scientific Ideas

Charles Coulston Gillispie - 1960 - 596 pages
...'matter cannot act where it is not,' " and these were the dark views to which Tyndall alluded, these the "flashes of wondrous insight and utterances which...less the product of reasoning than of revelation." These, too, were the "theoretic views" of which Faraday persuaded very few. Nor was Tyndall, for all...
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