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Einstein's Relativity Great Britain: From Larmor And Eddington To Penrose Hawking: A Tale Of Physicists, Astronomers, Mathematicians Philosophers
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Einstein's Relativity Great Britain: From Larmor And Eddington To Penrose Hawking: A Tale Of Physicists, Astronomers, Mathematicians Philosophers
By None
Current price: $157.95


By None
Einstein's Relativity Great Britain: From Larmor And Eddington To Penrose Hawking: A Tale Of Physicists, Astronomers, Mathematicians Philosophers
Current price: $157.95
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Size: Hardcover
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Soon after their publication (1905, 1915), Einstein's special and general theories of relativity received attention by a wide variety of British scholars (astronomers, physicists, mathematicians and philosophers). That reaction varied from deep acceptance (as was the case of Arthur Eddington) to straightforward opposition. This book analyzes those reactions, which involved a large number of important scientists as well as philosophers, like Bertrand Russell or Alfred N. Whitehead. The study will cover from the 1910s till the 1960s, when the work of a group of relativists centered in London and Oxford (Penrose), Cambridge (Sciama and Hawking) as well as the Bondi's group at King's College London, who finally introduced a new, global approach to general relativity.
Readership: Historians of science, physicists, mathematicians, philosophers. General public. Science and philosophy university students.
Soon after their publication (1905, 1915), Einstein's special and general theories of relativity received attention by a wide variety of British scholars (astronomers, physicists, mathematicians and philosophers). That reaction varied from deep acceptance (as was the case of Arthur Eddington) to straightforward opposition. This book analyzes those reactions, which involved a large number of important scientists as well as philosophers, like Bertrand Russell or Alfred N. Whitehead. The study will cover from the 1910s till the 1960s, when the work of a group of relativists centered in London and Oxford (Penrose), Cambridge (Sciama and Hawking) as well as the Bondi's group at King's College London, who finally introduced a new, global approach to general relativity.
Readership: Historians of science, physicists, mathematicians, philosophers. General public. Science and philosophy university students.



















