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  1. The Moral Freedom of Man and the Determinism of Nature: The Catholic Synthesis of Science and History in the Revue des Questions Scientifiques.Mary Nye - 1976 - British Journal for the History of Science 9 (3):274-292.
    In 1877 the first issue of the Revue des questions scientifiques, published by the Scientific Society of Brussels, appeared in France and Belgium. The new journal was greeted with disdain and hostility by Emile Littrè and George Wyrouboff, the disciples of Auguste Comte and editors of La philosophie positive. The Scientific Society of Brussels was a Catholic organization, and the positivists' opinion was that ‘If science is spoken of in this assembly, it is in order to organize a veritable crusade (...)
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  • Theoretical derivations.Peter Achinstein - 1985 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 17 (4):375-414.
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  • Natural Philosophy and Thermodynamics: William Thomson and ‘The Dynamical Theory of Heat’.Crosbie Smith - 1976 - British Journal for the History of Science 9 (3):293-319.
    William Thomson's image as a professional mathematical physicist who adheres, particularly in his work in classical thermodynamics, to a strict experimental basis for his science, avoids speculative hypotheses, and becomes renowned for his omission of philosophical declarations has been reinforced in varying degrees by those historians who have attempted, as either admirers or critics of Thomson, to describe and assess his life. J. G. Crowther, for example, sees him as a thinker of great intellectual strength, but deficient in intellectual taste; (...)
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  • Victorian Science and Religion.David B. Wilson - 1977 - History of Science 15 (1):52-67.
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  • The Unseen Universe: Physics and the Philosophy of Nature in Victorian Britain.P. M. Heimann - 1972 - British Journal for the History of Science 6 (1):73-79.
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  • The Moral Freedom of Man and the Determinism of Nature: The Catholic Synthesis of Science and History in the Revue des Questions Scientifiques.Mary Jo Nye - 1976 - British Journal for the History of Science 9 (3):274-292.
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  • The Confined Atom: James Clerk Maxwell on the Fundamental Particles and the Limits of Scientific Knowledge.Charis Charalampous - 2021 - Perspectives on Science 29 (2):189-214.
    This paper distinguishes in Maxwell’s thought between “atomic molecules” and “ultimate atoms,” and arrives at a set of properties that characterize each type of atom. It concludes that Maxwell is a mathematical atomist, an approach that entails the notion that although it is impossible to observe the ultimate atoms as free particles, we can nevertheless study them as mathematical observables, on the caveat that mathematical formalism remains tied to phenomenalism and to theoretical interpretations of such phenomena as, for example, mass (...)
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  • Maxwell and the normal distribution: A colored story of probability, independence, and tendency toward equilibrium.Balázs Gyenis - 2017 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 57:53-65.
    We investigate Maxwell's attempt to justify the mathematical assumptions behind his 1860 Proposition IV according to which the velocity components of colliding particles follow the normal distribution. Contrary to the commonly held view we find that his molecular collision model plays a crucial role in reaching this conclusion, and that his model assumptions also permit inference to equalization of mean kinetic energies, which is what he intended to prove in his discredited and widely ignored Proposition VI. If we take a (...)
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  • On Maxwell's demons and the origin of evolutionary variations: An internalist perspective.Eugenio Andrade - 2004 - Acta Biotheoretica 52 (1):17-40.
    This paper defends an internalist perspective of selection based on the hypothesis that considers living evolutionary units as Maxwell's demons (MD) or Zurek's Information Gathering and Using Systems (IGUS). Individuals are considered as IGUS that extract work by means of measuring and recording processes. Interactions or measurements convert uncertainty about the environment (Shannon's information, H) into internalized information in the form of a compressed record (Chaitin's algorithmic complexity, K). The requirements of the model and the limitations inherent to its formalization (...)
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  • Two Faces of Maxwell's Demon Reveal the Nature of Irreversibility.John D. Collier - 1990 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 21 (2):257.
    demon thought experiment remains ambiguous even today. One of the most delightful thought It seems that Maxwell originally invoked experiments in the history of physical science is..
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  • Letter to the editor.John D. Collier - 1988 - Biology and Philosophy 3 (4):501-503.
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  • Maxwell's Methodology and his application of it to Electromagnetism.A. F. Chalmers - 1973 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 4 (2):107.
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  • From Design to Dissolution: Thomas Chalmers' Debt to John Robison.Crosbie Smith - 1979 - British Journal for the History of Science 12 (1):59-70.
    The claim that the nineteenth century was a period of major transition for the relation between theology and natural science has become a historical truism. With its implications for the design argument and the doctrines of divine providence, Darwin's theory of evolution has rightly attracted the attention of scholars of Victorian science. Yet so much emphasis not only on Darwin himself, but on the life sciences generally, has tended to obscure some important issues concerning the relation of theology to natural (...)
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  • A new chart for British natural philosophy: the development of energy physics in the nineteenth century.Crosbie Smith - 1978 - History of Science 16 (4):231-279.
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  • Maxwell's methodology and his.A. F. Chalmers - 1973 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 4 (2):107-164.
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