"Aspects of science" by J. W. N. Sullivan is a collection of essays on science written in the early 20th century. Framed from a humanistic and aesthetic point of view, it explores how scientific ideas emerge, evolve, and influence culture while clarifying methods, theories, and assumptions for the general reader. Expect reflective critiques of how science is pursued, taught, and popularized, alongside portraits of scientific minds and the philosophical implications of modern
physics. The opening of this collection sets out the premise that scientific ideas have histories and serve human needs, arguing that theories confer order, practical power, and aesthetic satisfaction even while remaining provisional. It explains scientific method as a selective, law-building enterprise whose “truth” rests on shared judgment but whose “meaning” is personal and artistic, citing the physicist’s perspective (via Norman Campbell) and the growing gap between specialists and the public as language grows technical. Through cultural reflections and a striking portrait of Maxwell, the essays show science as intuitive and imaginative—sometimes mystical—yet disciplined. A sequence on assumptions dismantles inherited certainties (circular planetary orbits, naïve probability, Euclidean space and time, the elastic æther, and anthropomorphic readings of animals), showing how reasonableness shifts with evidence. Pieces on learning and popularizing science urge historical teaching and reading original memoirs, and critique both suave synthesizers of science with philosophy and religion and marvel-mongering “popular” accounts. Overall, the start maps science’s aims, methods, and misreadings while inviting non-specialists into its human context. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
The interest of science -- A physicist on physics -- Science and culture -- James Clerk Maxwell -- Assumptions -- On learning science -- The entente cordiale -- Popular science -- Patient plodders -- The amateur astronomer -- Scientific citizens -- The sceptic and the spirits -- The scientific mind -- The scientific contribution -- Theories and personalities -- The ideal scientific man -- Parallel straight lines -- The new scientific horizon -- The hope of science -- The return of mystery -- Mathematics and music -- Human testimony.
Credits
Tim Lindell, Laura Natal and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)