Let us take an example which is salient enough; for, however arbitrary
the conventional division of time may appear to a physicist's eyes, it
is natural, when instituting a comparison between two epochs, to
choose those which extend over a space of half a score of years, and
are separated from each other by the gap of a century. Let us, then,
go back a hundred years and examine what would have been the state of
mind of an erudite amateur who had read and understood the chief
publications on physical research between 1800 and 1810.
Let us suppose that this intelligent and attentive spectator witnessed
in 1800 the discovery of the galvanic battery by Volta. He might from
that moment have felt a presentiment that a prodigious transformation
was about to occur in our mode of regarding electrical phenomena.
Brought up in the ideas of Coulomb and Franklin, he might till then
have imagined that electricity had unveiled nearly all its mysteries,
when an entirely original apparatus suddenly gave birth to
applications of the highest interest, and excited the blossoming of
theories of immense philosophical extent.
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