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  1. Coleridge's construction of newton.Janusz Sysak - 1993 - Annals of Science 50 (1):59-81.
    A self-conscious antagonism to Newtonian science is widely seen as characteristic of the Romantic movement, and Coleridge is routinely portrayed as one of the major representatives of this anti-Newtonian sentiment. Although such a view of Coleridge is correct, his hostility to Newton is puzzling. The attitudes that Coleridge objected to are often expressly denied in Newton's published writings, and Coleridge's own ‘dynamic’ philosophy was, in fact, remarkably like the conception of nature personally favoured by Newton. Coleridge, then, must have been (...)
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  • Leonhard euler's wave theory of light.Kurt Møller Pedersen - 2008 - Perspectives on Science 16 (4):pp. 392-416.
    Euler ’s wave theory of light developed from a mere description of this notion based on an analogy between sound and light to a more and more mathematical elaboration on that notion. He was very successful in predicting the shape of achromatic lenses based on a new dispersion law that we now know is wrong. Most of his mathematical arguments were, however, guesswork without any solid physical reasoning. Guesswork is not always a bad thing in physics if it leads to (...)
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  • New insights into major theoretical research in optics in the Age of Enlightenment.Fabrice Ferlin - 2017 - Centaurus 59 (4):308-319.
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  • Local colour: John Dalton and the politics of colour blindness.Elizabeth Green Musselman - 2000 - History of Science 38 (4):401-424.
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  • Dollond & Son's Pursuit of Achromaticity, 1758–1789.Richard Sorrenson - 2001 - History of Science 39 (1):31-55.
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