‘To reason by means of images’: J. J. Thomson and the mechanical picture of nature

Annals of Science 37 (1):31-57 (1980)
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Abstract

Throughout his life J. J. Thomson was committed to a mechanical interpretation of nature. This work proceeded in several stages. Early in his career he attempted a Lagrangian formulation of mechanics. But due to certain epistemological difficulties with this approach, he began exploring various analogies and models, particularly those involving vortex motion. After his discovery of the electron in 1897, he commenced a synthesis of the electron with his previous physical conceptions. The result was a hypothesis of the ether as being composed of particles even smaller than electrons

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