Lot 21
MAXWELL, James Clerk (1831-1879). A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1881. Second edition.
Sale 945 - Fine Printed Books & Manuscripts, Including Americana
Lots 1-307
Nov 9, 2021
4:00AM CT
Lots 308-687
Nov 10, 2021
4:00AM CT
Live / Chicago
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Estimate
$800 -
1,200
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$750
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Lot Description
MAXWELL, James Clerk (1831-1879). A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1881.
2 volumes, 8vo (222 x 140 mm). Half-titles; 20 engraved plates, numerous in-text engraved diagrams (some full-page). (Some minor staining.) Original publisher’s blind-stamped brown cloth spine gilt-lettered (a few corners bumped, vol. II hinges starting, one cover detaching). Provenance: A.S. Earl Youbridge? (partially effaced signature); Benjamin Lielowry? (signature).
Second edition of Maxwell's most comprehensive work, presenting ideas which would become essential to the development of modern physics. He viewed electricity not just as another branch of physics but "as an aid to the interpretation of nature," and saw the study of electromagnetism "as a means of promoting the progress of science" (Preface, p. vii). Maxwell advanced "the significant hypothesis that light and electricity are the same in their ultimate nature" (Grolier/Horblit). "He began the investigation of moving frames of reference, which in Einstein's hands were to revolutionize physics; gave proofs of the existence of electromagnetic waves that paved the way for Hertz's discovery of radio waves; worked out connections between the electrical and optical qualities of bodies that would lead to modern solid-state physics; and applied Tait's quaternion formulae to the field of equations, out of which Heaviside and Gibbs would develop vector analysis" (Norman 1466). Grolier/Horblit 72; PMM 355. Beal 793.
Property from the Thomas Sills Trust, Chicago. Illinois
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