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Archimedes; or, the future of physics

Chapter 9: Transcriber’s note
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About This Book

The author argues that physics, biology, and psychology are converging on a unified study of the electrical processes underlying radiation, chemical bonding, and life. He reviews competing atomic views—discrete electron jumps, limits on simultaneous measurement, and wave descriptions—relates these to philosophical and scientific debates about the nature of time, and examines experimental and evolutionary approaches to bridging physical and biological explanation. Later chapters consider the implications of atomic theory for nervous activity and consciousness, survey methodological clashes between scientists and philosophers, and sketch possible future directions and responsibilities as scientific understanding grants greater control over living and mental processes.

Transcriber’s note

Minor punctuation errors have been changed without notice.

Other spelling has been retained as originally published except for the changes below.

Page 92: “be effectively exercized” “be effectively exercised”
Page 105: “Mr Colvin has the” “Mr McColvin has the”
Page 113: “their montrous slum-evil” “their monstrous slum-evil”