Trace the evolution of physics across a transformative era, where bold ideas shifted the way we understand matter, energy, and light.
The Progress of Physics, During 33 Years (1875–1908) by Sir Arthur Schuster surveys how scientific thinking changed, not just the order of discoveries, but the very viewpoint of physicists in that period.
The work blends reflection with accessible explanations, connecting major themes from thermodynamics and electromagnetism to the rise of radioactivity and the new theories of light. It highlights the move from classical concepts toward the modern framework that defines physics today, while preserving a human sense of inquiry and debate.
- See how energy, heat, and work became a unifying theme across disciplines.
- Explore pivotal moments in optics, radioactivity, and atomic theory that redefined fundamental concepts.
- Understand the role of key experiments and theoretical shifts that shaped the path of modern physics.
- Discover how ideas about gravitation, spectrum analysis, and atomic structure evolved through careful reasoning and evidence.
Ideal for readers with an interest in the history of science, science writing that blends narrative with ideas, and anyone curious about how physics became what it is today.