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125:'s relativity are distinct; although both make different assumptions about physical reality, Berkson suggests that the assumptions of either conception of the field still remain as plausible today as when first conceived. These separate field theories share at least one significant and testable difference in comparison with Newtonian physics: whereas Newton's
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94:. It was republished in 2014 by Routledge, as part of their Library Editions: 20th Century Science. A Spanish Translation, Las teorías de los campos de fuerza was published in 1981 by Alianza Editorial.
188:"Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries - Fields of Force. The Development of a World View from Faraday to Einstein. By William Berkson. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1974. Pp. xiii + 370. £6.50"
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appendix on field theory, and name and subject indexes. The introduction and the ten chapters all consist of 6 or more sections.
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Fields of Force: The
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Fields of Force: The
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All these field theories (Eintstein's, Faraday's, and
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