Thesis ID: CBB411319578

What Theories Are Made Of: How Industry and Culture Shaped Maxwell's Theories of Electromagnetism (2021)

unapi

James Clerk Maxwell's theories of electromagnetism are uniquely Victorian products. Maxwell and his physics have traditionally been viewed as aloof and disinterested, dating to the mid-to-late-19th century, but not party to the cultural, industrial, political, economic, and environmental turmoil of the era. This dissertation examines often ignored corners of Maxwell's electromagnetic theories and those of his successors to demonstrate that they were shaped by the technologies of their time. These technologies, steam engine governors, capacitors, and undersea telegraph cables are each, in their own way, responsible for the varying forms taken by Maxwellian electromagnetic theory. Each of these technologies also has its own history. These histories connect these technologies and thus Maxwellian theory to the newly emerging concept of efficiency, as well as the colonialism, economics, religion, and ecology of the British Empire. Governors, capacitors, and submarine telegraph cables serve as a historiographical bridge, allowing for the exploration of how empire-wide forces shaped the minutiae of Maxwellian electromagnetic theory.

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Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB411319578/

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Authors & Contributors
Hon, Giora
Goldstein, Bernard R.
Bordoni, Stefano
Pelosi, Giuseppe
Stefano Selleri
Hubert, Mario
Concepts
Electromagnetism
Physics
Models and modeling in science
Methodology of science; scientific method
Science education and teaching
Ether
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
Places
Great Britain
England
Scotland
Europe
Tuscany (Italy)
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