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" Wheatstone's electro-magnetic chronoscope ; but from first to last understand that I merely threw out as matter for speculation, the vague impressions of my mind, for I gave nothing as the result of sufficient consideration, or as the settled conviction,... "
Faraday as a Discoverer - Page 125
by John Tyndall - 1868 - 171 pages
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Experimental Researches in Electricity: Series 19-29 [Phil. trans., 1846-52 ...

Michael Faraday - 1855 - 620 pages
...understand that I merely threw out as matter for speculation, the vague impressions of my mind, for I gave nothing as the result of sufficient consideration,...settled conviction, or even probable conclusion at which I had arrived. The point intended to be set forth for consideration of the hearers was, whether it...
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Experimental Researches in Chemistry and Physics

Michael Faraday - 1859 - 522 pages
...understand that I merely threw out as matter for speculation, the vague impressions of my mind, for I gave nothing as the result of sufficient consideration,...settled conviction, or even probable conclusion at which I had arrived. The point intended to be set forth for the consideration of the hearers was, whether...
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Notices of the Proceedings, Volume 5

Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1869 - 646 pages
...moreover, that from first to last " ho merely threw out as matter for speculation the vague impressions of his mind ; for he gave nothing as the result of...even probable conclusion at which he had arrived." * He compares the interpenetration of two atoms to the coalescence of two distinct waves, which though...
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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
...individuality, and afterwards separate. The gist of this communication is that gravitating force acts in linos across space, and that the vibrations of light and...the tremors of these lines of force. " This notion," ho says, "as far as it is admitted, will dispense with the ether, which, in another view, is supposed...
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Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Volume 17

Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1869 - 658 pages
...understand that I merely throw out, as matter for speculation, the vague impressions of my mind ; for I give nothing as the result of sufficient consideration...conviction, or even probable conclusion, at which I had arrived." His last Friday discourse was on the Cohesive Force of Water. He reported to the Trinity...
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The Life and Letters of Faraday, Volume 2

Bence Jones - 1870 - 512 pages
...moreover, that from first to last " he merely threw out as matter for speculation the vague impressions of his mind ; for he gave nothing as the result of...in lines across space, and that the vibrations of 1 He compares the interpenetration of two atoms to the coalescence of two distinct waves, which, though...
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The Life and Letters of Faraday, Volume 2

Bence Jones, Michael Faraday - 1870 - 522 pages
...understand that I merely throw out, as matter for speculation, the vague impressions of my mind ; for I give nothing as the result of sufficient consideration,...conviction, or even probable conclusion, at which I had arrived.' His last Friday discourse was on the cohesive force of water. To the Secretary of the...
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Worthies of Science

John Stoughton - 1879 - 358 pages
...moreover, that from first to last ' he merely threw out as matter for speculation the vague impressions of his mind ; for he gave nothing as the result of...settled conviction, or even probable conclusion at which ho had arrived/ " [ J Life and Loiters, vol. ii. p. 278. Of the common habit of misrepresenting the...
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Michael Faraday: His Life and Work

Silvanus Phillips Thompson - 1898 - 338 pages
...understand that I merely threw out, as matter for speculation, the vague impressions of my mind, for I gave nothing as the result of sufficient consideration,...settled conviction, or even probable conclusion at which I had arrived. The point intended to be set forth for the consideration of the hearers was whether...
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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
...to last “ho merely threw out as matter for speculation the vague impressions of his mind; for ho gave nothing as the result of sufficient consideration,...settled conviction, or even probable conclusion at which ho had arrived.” * He compares the interpenetration of two atoms to the coah'¿-nee of two di.. tinet...
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