Matter, Ether, and Motion: The Factors and Relations of Physical Science by Dolbear

(8 User reviews)   2198
By Charlotte Girard Posted on Nov 15, 2025
In Category - Adventure
Dolbear, A. E. (Amos Emerson), 1837-1910 Dolbear, A. E. (Amos Emerson), 1837-1910
English
Hey, so I just finished this fascinating old book that feels like listening in on a scientific argument from the 1890s. It’s called ‘Matter, Ether, and Motion,’ and it’s not a story in the usual sense. Imagine a brilliant professor, Amos Dolbear, trying to build a single, unified theory to explain *everything* in physics—from what stuff is made of to how light travels. The real tension here is watching him wrestle with ideas we now know are wrong, like the ‘luminiferous ether,’ while also making some surprisingly sharp guesses. It’s a snapshot of science at a crossroads, full of confidence and confusion. If you’ve ever wondered how people thought about the universe before Einstein, this is a direct line to that moment.
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consulted widely on caring in nursing. Currently, she and Dr. Schoenhofer are engaged in a two-year funded demonstration project. The purpose of this project is to demonstrate the value of a model for health care delivery in an acute care setting that is intentionally grounded in Nursing as Caring. Savina O. Schoenhofer, Ph.D, is Professor of Graduate Nursing at Alcorn State University in Natchez, Mississippi. Dr. Schoenhofer is co-founder of the nursing aesthetics publication, Nightingale Songs. Her research and publications are in the areas of everyday caring, outcomes of caring in nursing, nursing values, nursing home management, and affectional touch. [Illustration: Button] FOREWORD Marilyn E. Parker, PhD, RN, Professor of Nursing Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida Caring may be one of the most often used words in the English language. Indeed, the word is commonly used as much in talking about our everyday lives and relationships as it is in the marketplace. At the same time, nurses thinking about, doing, and describing nursing know that caring has unique and particular meaning to them. Caring is one of the first synonyms for nursing offered by nursing students and is surely the most frequent word used by the public in talking about nursing. Caring is an essential value in the personal and professional lives of nurses. The formal recognition of caring in nursing as an area of study and as a necessary guide for the various avenues of nursing practice, however, is relatively new. Anne Boykin and Savina Schoenhofer have received many requests from academic peers and students to articulate the nursing theory they have been working to develop. This book is a response to the call for a theory of nursing as caring. The progression of nursing theory development often has been led by nurse theorists who stepped into other disciplines for ways to think about and study nursing and for structures and concepts to describe nursing practice. The opportunity to use language and methods of familiar, relatively established bodies of knowledge that could be communicated and widely understood took shape as many nursing scholars received graduate education in disciplines outside of nursing. Conceptions and methods of knowledge development often came then from disciplines in the biological and social sciences and were brought into ways of thinking about and doing nursing scholarship. Evolution of new worldviews opened the way for nurses to develop theories reflecting ideas of energy fields, wholeness, processes, and patterns. Working from outside the discipline of nursing, along with shifts in worldviews, has been essential to opening the way for nurses to explore nursing as a unique practice and body of knowledge from inside the discipline, and to know nursing in unprecedented ways. Nursing as Caring: A Model for Transforming Practice sets forth a different order of nursing theory. This nursing theory is personal, not abstract. In order to express nursing as caring there is a clear need to know self as caring person. The focus of the Nursing as Caring theory, then, is not toward an end product such as health or wellness. It is about a unique way of living caring in the world. It is about nurses and nursed living life and nurturing growing humanly through participation in life together. Nursing as caring sets forth nursing as a unique way of living caring in the world. This theory provides a view that can be lived in all nursing situations and can be practiced alone or in combination with other theories. The domain of nursing is nurturing caring. The integrity, the wholeness, and the connectedness of the person simply and assuredly is central. As such,...

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Published in 1892, this book isn't a novel with a plot. Think of it as a detailed map of the physical world, as understood by a leading thinker of his day. Professor Dolbear sets out to explain the fundamental principles of physics by focusing on three core concepts: Matter (the stuff things are made of), Ether (an invisible medium thought to fill all space), and Motion (how things change and interact). He connects these to explain heat, light, magnetism, and gravity, aiming for one grand, coherent system.

Why You Should Read It

What makes this book special is its personality. You're not just getting dry facts; you're getting Dolbear's strong, sometimes stubborn, opinions on how the universe works. Reading it feels like having a time capsule conversation. You'll see him defend the ether theory with total conviction, a concept that would be disproven just a decade later. But you'll also find him questioning the solidity of atoms and pondering the relationship between energy and matter in ways that feel oddly prescient. It's a humbling and exciting reminder that science is a process of brilliant, flawed people trying to figure things out.

Final Verdict

This is a perfect pick for curious readers who enjoy the history of ideas. It's for anyone who liked books like ‘The Age of Wonder’ or podcasts about scientific revolutions. You don't need a physics degree, just an interest in seeing how smart people grappled with the biggest questions before all the pieces of the modern puzzle were in place. It’s more of an intellectual adventure than a light read, but utterly rewarding for the right mindset.



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Anthony White
1 month ago

Citation worthy content.

Kevin King
5 months ago

Thanks for the recommendation.

Margaret Torres
1 year ago

Simply put, the character development leaves a lasting impact. I will read more from this author.

Elizabeth Rodriguez
1 year ago

I had low expectations initially, however the storytelling feels authentic and emotionally grounded. Highly recommended.

Donna Thomas
5 months ago

After hearing about this author multiple times, the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. A valuable addition to my collection.

4.5
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