
James Clerk Maxwell’s early investigations into light and vision come alive in this compact collection of five seminal papers. In the first essay he describes a curious dark spot that appears only within the blue portion of the spectrum, linking it to a specific retinal region and offering simple experiments—alternating blue and yellow filters—to make the phenomenon visible. The work blends careful observation with ingenious apparatus, inviting listeners to glimpse the subtle ways our eyes process colour.
The remaining essays explore how colours combine, why mixing blue and yellow paint does not behave like mixing blue and yellow light, and the underlying physics of colour perception. Maxwell’s clear explanations and hands‑on demonstrations reveal the surprising gaps between everyday colour mixing and the true behaviour of light, laying groundwork for modern optics. Together, these papers offer a fascinating glimpse into the mind of a scientist who turned simple observations into profound insights.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (84K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1831–1879
A brilliant Scottish physicist whose ideas helped explain electricity, magnetism, and light, leaving a lasting mark on modern science. He also made important contributions to color vision, thermodynamics, and the study of Saturn's rings.
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