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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 February 2009
Popular interest in the progress of physical science has increased very rapidly in the last few years. Perhaps the spectacular ‘mysteries’ of wireless and the intriguing paradoxes of the theory of relativity are the chief causes. For every home now has its Magic Box—a piece of pure physics; there is not a familiar thing in it, not even that sine qua non of all things that ‘work’—a wheel, only mysterious parts called condensers, grid-leaks, inductances, and thermionic valves. And surely, when a Sunday newspaper produces a facsimile page of Einstein’s recent paper in German containing abstruse tensor equations, reverence for the mathematical physicist is nearing its zenith.
page 74 note 1 A. N. Whitehead, Science and the Modern World.
page 75 note 1 Oswald Spengler, The Decline of the West, vol. i.
page 78 note 1 Bertrand Russell, The Analysis of Matter.
page 80 note 1 Cf. Bertrand Russell, The Analysis of Matter.
page 83 note 1 Journal of Philosophical Studies, January 1928.