scholarly journals P09 - O experimento demonstrativo de Oliver Lodge no ensino do eletromagnetismo no ensino médio

Author(s):  
Gilberto De Oliveira Paulino ◽  
Wilson De Souza Melo
Keyword(s):  

RESUMO - PÔSTER

Author(s):  
Michael H. Whitworth

This chapter examines Oliver Lodge’s popular science book Ether and Reality, which was published in 1925. In it, Oliver Lodge purported to give a non-technical account of the functions of the luminiferous ether. However, Lodge himself had a dilemma, as he wanted the ether to be different from material bodies but not wholly immaterial. Lodge thus needed to present both an account of the ether and an account of a scientific view that was sympathetic to its possible existence. This chapter examines Lodge’s expository strategies in his book. It considers Lodge’s creation of ethos, and the reader that his text implies, paying particular attention to his use of analogy, repetition, parallelism and allusion. It also identifies previously unremarked literary allusions and allusions to the Bible. Finally, as this chapter shows, much of Lodge’s work is done through suggestion and insinuation: Lodge requires the reader to complete his meaning for him.


1971 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 303-326 ◽  

Edward Armand Guggenheim was born on 11 August 1901 in Manchester; he was the elder brother of a family of three. His father, Armand Guggenheim, was of Swiss nationality but became a naturalized British subject at the age of forty-six in 1906. He was the senior partner in E. Spinner & Co., importers of Indian cotton and exporters of cotton cloth, especially khaki, and during the years 1917-1923 was also the Swiss Consul in Manchester. Edward after attending Terra Nova School, Birkdale, Southport, proceeded at the age of fourteen with a Junior Scholarship to Charterhouse. At first he was on the classical side but he switched to the science side where he came under the influence of two outstanding mathematics teachers, C. O. Tuckey and Alfred Lodge who was the brother of the more famous Oliver Lodge. His high intellectual qualities developed rapidly at Charterhouse, where he gained a Senior Scholarship in 1917 and was top of the sixth form in mathematical sciences for the period 1918-1920. His strong character and desire for authority were recognized by his election to the Head of House during his last year at School. Edward’s father died at the early age of 63, but his mother lived much longer and was an admirable hostess to Edward’s friends. After declining an Exhibition in the previous year, Edward won a Scholarship from Charterhouse to Cambridge University at Gonville and Caius College in 1920. One year later he obtained a first-class mathematical tripos in Part 1 and in 1923 a first-class in the natural science tripos, Part 2, in chemistry. One imagines that his theoretical papers were outstanding, since his practical ability at that time appears not to have been exceptionally high, particularly in preparative organic chemistry. After completion of an organic synthesis, which should have given a crystalline product, he was holding a test-tube containing a small volume of a viscous tarry material. It is reported that he contrived to collide with a perambulating demonstrator and, with studied carelessness, allowed the only record of his work to slip through his fingers with consequent breakage of the test-tube.


1. A glow-bulb rotating within a shallow cylindrical inductor made with a dome-shaped end (devised by my son, E. J. Jervis-Smith, R. F. A.), placed symmetrically, with respect to the axis of rotation of the glow-bulb, exhibited the glow and magnetic phenomena described in the former paper and exhibited at the Royal Society on May 13, 1908. Sir Oliver Lodge has kindly repeated some of my experiments with glass bulbs, as set forth in the former paper, and also surrounded by a ring-shaped inductor, and has produced the same effects.


Nature ◽  
1940 ◽  
Vol 146 (3697) ◽  
pp. 327-328
Author(s):  
AMBROSE FLEMING
Keyword(s):  

1975 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 125-126
Author(s):  
R G A Knott
Keyword(s):  

Ethics ◽  
1906 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 256
Author(s):  
M. Mackenzie
Keyword(s):  

Isis ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
pp. 321-323
Author(s):  
Seth Landefeld
Keyword(s):  

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