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149:(33:65) that there are "few errors in the work, and even misprints are few and far between for a treatise of this kind." He did not approve of Clifford's coining of "odd new words as squirts, sinks, twists, and whirls." Proctor quoted the last sentence of the book: "Every continuous motion of an infinite body may be built up of squirts and vortices."
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said "we have here
Clifford pure and simple." It explained that he "had entirely shaken off the concept of force as an explanatory cause." It also expressed "the oft-told regret that Clifford did not live to reshape the teaching of elementary dynamics in this country, and we wait somewhat impatiently
216:, and that had been rushed through the presses in an incomplete form only during the last months of his life. Clifford's standing as both a leading mathematical specialist and an iconoclastic scientific publicist had instead been forged largely in the pages of the Victorian periodical press...
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in 1878. In 1887 it was supplemented by a fourth part and an appendix. The subtitle is "An introduction to motion and rest in solid and fluid bodies". It was reviewed positively, has remained a standard reference since its appearance, and is now available online as a
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said "It will probably not take high rank as a university text-book, for which it was intended, but is much admired by mathematicians for the elegance, freshness, and originality displayed in the treatment of mathematical problems."
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is the "study of the theory of pure motion". Noting the nature of "progressive training" required for mathematics, the reviewer wondered "For what class of readers is the book designed?"
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The work is unique for the clear ideas given of the science; ideas and principles are more prominent than symbols and formulae. He takes such familiar words as
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Gowan Dawson (2004) "Victorian periodicals and the making of
William Kingdon Clifford's posthumous reputation", pages 259 to 284 in
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In 2004 Gowan Dawson reviewed the situation of the book's publication. On the basis of a letter from
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Volume 1 (1878) containing books I-III and Volume 2 containing book IV (1887) of
Clifford's "
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in his development of vector analysis, first in a pamphlet acknowledging
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Table of contents page of Volume 1 (1878) containing books I-III of
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Clifford, by the time of his death, had published just a single monograph,
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First page of Volume 1 (1878) containing books I-III of
Clifford's "
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Title page of Volume 1 (1878) containing books I-III of
Clifford's "
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Lectures on Ten
British Mathematicians of the Nineteenth Century
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for his successor in this labour, who seems long in appearing."
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In a "Sketch of
Professor Clifford" in June 1879 the journal
368:(1878) London: MacMillan & Co; on-line presentation by
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1878 scientific reference book by
William Kingdon Clifford
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318:The Athenaeum, No. 3116, p 86, July 16, 1887
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133:explained for prospective readers that
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104:function frequently used in geometry.
52:On page 95 Clifford deconstructed the
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373:Historical Mathematical Monographs
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295:Philosophical Magazine
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333:John Wiley & Sons
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178:Alexander Macfarlane
164:Book IV and Appendix
262:Elements of Dynamic
231:Elements of Dynamic
206:Alexander MacMillan
186:Elements of Dynamic
117:Robert Stawell Ball
94:Elements of Dynamic
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25:Elements of Dynamic
370:Cornell University
345:Science Serialized
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47:Cornell University
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182:Lehigh University
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