Preliminary Discourse on the Study of Natural Philosophy
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About This Book
The work argues that the study of physical science cultivates the mind and promotes social wellbeing while offering intellectual rewards beyond material comforts. It sets out methodological principles emphasizing experience, the cleansing of prejudice, the evidential role of the senses, attentive observation, careful classification, and clear nomenclature. It describes stages of inductive inquiry from discovery of proximate causes to higher generalizations and the formation and verification of theories. It surveys the main branches of physics—phenomena of force and motion, sound and light, cosmical occurrences, material composition, and imponderable agents—and reflects on the causes of the recent rapid progress of the sciences.
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