A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, Volume 1

Front Cover
Courier Corporation, Jan 1, 1954 - Science - 560 pages
Volume 1 of an important foundation work of modern physics Brings to final form Maxwell's theory of electromagnetism and rigorously derives his general equations of field theory. 1891 edition.
 

Contents

I
1
II
2
III
3
IV
4
V
5
VI
6
VII
7
VIII
8
CXC
255
CXCI
257
CXCII
258
CXCIII
259
CXCIV
261
CXCVI
263
CXCVII
265
CXCVIII
266

IX
9
X
10
XI
11
XII
12
XIII
13
XIV
14
XV
15
XVI
17
XVII
20
XVIII
23
XIX
24
XX
29
XXI
32
XXII
33
XXIII
34
XXIV
35
XXV
36
XXVI
37
XXVIII
38
XXIX
39
XXX
41
XXXI
43
XXXII
44
XXXIII
45
XXXV
46
XXXVII
47
XXXVIII
48
XXXIX
49
XL
51
XLI
52
XLIII
54
XLIV
55
XLV
56
XLVI
57
XLVII
60
XLVIII
61
XLIX
62
L
64
LI
67
LII
68
LIII
71
LIV
72
LV
73
LVII
74
LVIII
75
LIX
77
LX
78
LXI
80
LXII
81
LXIII
83
LXIV
85
LXVI
87
LXXIV
89
LXXV
90
LXXVI
92
LXXVII
93
LXXVIII
95
LXXIX
96
LXXX
97
LXXXI
99
LXXXII
101
LXXXIII
103
LXXXIV
105
LXXXV
107
LXXXVI
110
LXXXVII
111
LXXXVIII
112
LXXXIX
113
XC
114
XCI
115
XCIII
118
XCV
119
XCVI
120
XCVII
123
XCVIII
124
XCIX
126
C
128
CI
130
CII
131
CIII
132
CIV
133
CV
135
CVI
136
CVII
138
CIX
139
CX
141
CXII
142
CXIII
143
CXV
144
CXVII
146
CXVIII
147
CXIX
148
CXX
152
CXXI
155
CXXII
156
CXXIII
157
CXXIV
159
CXXV
161
CXXVI
163
CXXVII
165
CXXVIII
166
CXXIX
169
CXXX
170
CXXXI
172
CXXXIII
174
CXXXIV
177
CXXXV
178
CXXXVI
179
CXXXVII
180
CXXXVIII
181
CXXXIX
182
CXL
182
CXLII
183
CXLIII
186
CXLIV
188
CXLV
190
CXLVI
191
CXLVII
194
CXLVIII
195
CXLIX
196
CL
197
CLII
198
CLIII
199
CLV
200
CLVI
201
CLVII
205
CLVIII
206
CLIX
207
CLX
208
CLXI
209
CLXII
210
CLXIV
213
CLXV
214
CLXVI
215
CLXVIII
216
CLXIX
217
CLXX
218
CLXXI
220
CLXXII
222
CLXXIII
223
CLXXIV
224
CLXXV
232
CLXXVI
233
CLXXVII
234
CLXXVIII
235
CLXXIX
236
CLXXX
238
CLXXXI
239
CLXXXII
240
CLXXXIII
244
CLXXXIV
245
CLXXXV
248
CLXXXVI
250
CLXXXVII
252
CLXXXVIII
253
CLXXXIX
254
CXCIX
268
CC
273
CCI
276
CCII
277
CCIII
278
CCV
279
CCVII
281
CCVIII
284
CCIX
285
CCX
286
CCXI
287
CCXII
289
CCXIII
290
CCXV
291
CCXVIII
292
CCXIX
296
CCXX
297
CCXXI
299
CCXXIII
300
CCXXIV
301
CCXXV
302
CCXXVI
303
CCXXVII
304
CCXXVIII
305
CCXXIX
308
CCXXX
309
CCXXXI
310
CCXXXIII
311
CCXXXIV
312
CCXXXV
314
CCXXXVI
317
CCXXXVII
319
CCXXXVIII
320
CCXXXIX
322
CCXL
323
CCXLI
326
CCXLII
327
CCXLIII
330
CCXLIV
331
CCXLV
334
CCXLVI
336
CCXLVII
339
CCXLVIII
340
CCXLIX
341
CCL
342
CCLI
343
CCLII
344
CCLIII
346
CCLIV
347
CCLV
349
CCLVI
350
CCLVII
354
CCLVIII
355
CCLIX
356
CCLXI
357
CCLXII
358
CCLXIII
359
CCLXIV
360
CCLXV
362
CCLXVI
363
CCLXVII
364
CCLXVIII
365
CCLXX
367
CCLXXI
368
CCLXXII
370
CCLXXIII
371
CCLXXIV
372
CCLXXVI
374
CCLXXVII
375
CCLXXVIII
377
CCLXXIX
378
CCLXXX
379
CCLXXXI
383
CCLXXXII
384
CCLXXXIII
387
CCLXXXIV
388
CCLXXXV
389
CCLXXXVI
390
CCLXXXVII
391
CCLXXXIX
394
CCXC
399
CCXCI
400
CCXCII
401
CCXCIII
402
CCXCV
403
CCXCVI
405
CCXCVII
406
CCXCIX
407
CCC
408
CCCI
409
CCCII
411
CCCIII
412
CCCIV
413
CCCVII
414
CCCX
415
CCCXI
417
CCCXII
418
CCCXIII
419
CCCXIV
420
CCCXV
421
CCCXVI
422
CCCXVII
423
CCCXVIII
425
CCCXIX
426
CCCXXI
429
CCCXXII
431
CCCXXIII
432
CCCXXIV
435
CCCXXV
437
CCCXXVI
439
CCCXXVII
441
CCCXXVIII
443
CCCXXIX
445
CCCXXX
446
CCCXXXI
447
CCCXXXII
448
CCCXXXIII
449
CCCXXXIV
450
CCCXXXV
451
CCCXXXVI
452
CCCXXXVII
453
CCCXXXVIII
454
CCCXXXIX
455
CCCXL
458
CCCXLI
460
CCCXLII
461
CCCXLIII
465
CCCXLIV
466
CCCXLVII
467
CCCXLVIII
468
CCCXLIX
469
CCCL
470
CCCLII
471
CCCLIII
472
CCCLIV
475
CCCLV
477
CCCLVI
478
CCCLVII
480
CCCLVIII
482
CCCLX
487
CCCLXI
488
CCCLXII
489
CCCLXIII
490
CCCLXIV
493
CCCLXV
495
CCCLXVI
496
CCCLXVII
497
CCCLXVIII
499
CCCLXIX
500
CCCLXX
501
CCCLXXII
503
CCCLXXIII
504
CCCLXXV
505
CCCLXXVI
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1954)

James Clerk Maxwell: In His Own Words — And Others
Dover reprinted Maxwell's Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism in 1954, surely one of the first classics of scientific literature over a thousand pages in length to be given new life and accessibility to students and researchers as a result of the paperback revolution of the 1950s. Matter and Motion followed in 1991 and Theory of Heat in 2001.

Some towering figures in science have to speak for themselves. Such is James Clerk Maxwell (1813–1879), the Scottish physicist and mathematician who formulated the basic equations of classical electromagnetic theory.

In the Author's Own Words:
"We may find illustrations of the highest doctrines of science in games and gymnastics, in traveling by land and by water, in storms of the air and of the sea, and wherever there is matter in motion."

"The 2nd law of thermodynamics has the same degree of truth as the statement that if you throw a tumblerful of water into the sea, you cannot get the same tumblerful of water out again." — James Clerk Maxwell

Critical Acclaim for James Clerk Maxwell:
"From a long view of the history of mankind — seen from, say, ten thousand years from now — there can be little doubt that the most significant event of the 19th century will be judged as Maxwell's discovery of the laws of electrodynamics. The American Civil War will pale into provincial insignificance in comparison with this important scientific event of the same decade." — Richard P. Feynman

"Maxwell's equations have had a greater impact on human history than any ten presidents." — Carl Sagan