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  1. The international electrical units: a failure in standardisation?Michael Kershaw - 2007 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 38 (1):108-131.
    The ‘international’ electrical units, initially defined by the International Electrical Congress of Chicago in 1893, represented a major step forward in international electrical standardisation. Yet they were flawed both theoretically and technically, were adopted inconsistently in different countries and were soon subject to criticism and revision. This paper addresses the extent to which the international units—notwithstanding their flaws—were in fact adequate for the needs of engineering, commerce and science at the time, and concludes that the practical position was actually very (...)
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  • Measurement in French Experimental Physics from Regnault to Lippmann. Rhetoric and Theoretical Practice.Daniel Jon Mitchell - 2012 - Annals of Science 69 (4):453-482.
    Summary This paper explores the legacy of the great French experimental physicist Victor Regnault through the example of Gabriel Lippmann, whose engagement with electrical standardization during the early 1880s was guided by Regnault's methodological precept to measure ‘directly’. Lippmann's education reveals that the theoretical practice of ‘direct’ measurement entailed eliminating extraneous physical effects through the experimental design, rather than, like physicists in Britain and Germany, making numerical ‘corrections’ to measured values. It also provides, paradoxically, exemplars of the qualitative theoretical practices (...)
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  • Maxwell's Dimensional Approach to the Velocity of Light.S. D'Agostino - 1986 - Centaurus 29 (3):178-204.
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