Faraday wrote this 10 years before Maxwell published his first work on
electromgnetism in 1856 which was titled "On Faraday's lines of Force"
Maxwell's equations were first  published in 1862. It seems Maxwell
interpreted Faraday's writings in a manner that was consistent with an
aether.

I would say Faraday was frustrated by Maxwell's mathematical treatment of
his work. Since he could not comprehend it he could not judge it.
Here is a passage from a letter Faraday wrote to Maxwell asking all
mathematically adept theoreticians to express themselves in terms an
experimentalist can understand:

"There is one thing I would be glad to ask you. When a mathematician
engaged in investigating physical actions and results has arrived at his
own conclusions, may they not be expressed in common language as fully,
clearly, and definitely as in mathematical formula? If so, would it not be
a great boon to such as we to express them so—translating them out of their
hieroglyphics that we also might work upon them by experiment. I think it
must be so, because I have always found that you could convey to me a
perfectly clear idea of your conclusions, which, though they may give me no
full understanding of the steps of your process, gave me the results
neither above nor below the truth, and so clear in character that I can
think and work from them.
If this be possible, would it not be a good thing if mathematicians,
writing on these subjects, were to give us their results in this popular
useful working state as well as in that which is their own and proper to
them?"

Harry

On Mon, Apr 15, 2024 at 11:17 PM MSF <foster...@protonmail.com> wrote:

>
> Hmmm... A year after Maxwell's equations. Maxwell can't have been too
> happy about that, as his equations described the behavior of the aether.
> And he repeatedly claimed that he had merely expressed Faraday in
> conventional mathematical form.
> On Monday, April 15th, 2024 at 8:04 PM, MSF <foster...@protonmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>
> This gives you an idea what a deep thinker Faraday was. Do you know if he
> posited this idea before Maxwell published his equations? I thought I had
> read everything Faraday wrote. Somehow I missed this one.
>
> MIchael
> On Monday, April 15th, 2024 at 12:08 PM, H L V <hveeder...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> This is a quote from a letter written by Michael Faraday to Richard
> Philips on April 15, 1846 (bold letters were added by me)
>
> *"The view which I am so bold to put forth considers, therefore, radiation
> as a kind of species of vibration in the lines of force which are known to
> connect particles and also masses of matter together. It endeavors to
> dismiss the aether, but not the vibration. The kind of vibration which, I
> believe, can alone account for the wonderful, varied, and beautiful
> phaenomena of polarization, is not the same as that which occurs on the
> surface of disturbed water, or the waves of sound in gases or liquids, for
> the vibrations in these cases are direct, or to and from the centre of
> action, whereas the former are lateral. It seems to me, that the resultant
> of two or more lines of force is in an apt condition for that action which
> may be considered as equivalent to a lateral vibration; whereas a uniform
> medium, like the aether, does not appear apt, or more apt than air or
> water."*
>
> The idea of an aether which exists independently of matter and fills the
> vacuum is what the Michelson-Morely experiment was designed to detect.
> However, if I am reading Faraday correctly he is saying that the
> transmission of light depends on the source and the receiver being linked
> together by "lines of force". Unlike the hypothesized aether, Faraday's
> lines of force have _no_ existence independent of charged particles. While
> the MM apparatus is being built the lines of force would be constantly
> morphing but once the apparatus was complete they would quickly settle down
> into static lines. When the experiment begins the lines of force between
> the mirrors can be likened to straight fibre optic cables between the
> mirrors. At this stage since the lines of force would be moving in tandem
> with the entire apparatus Faraday's qualitative theory predicts the
> observed null result of the Michelson-Morely experiment.
>
> Harry
>
>
>
>
> Harry
>
>
>
>
>

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