Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/e9727f50efc3652e5cd08683a256115252995480532af31524357bbd8238ee6f> ?p ?o }
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- e9727f50efc3652e5cd08683a256115252995480532af31524357bbd8238ee6f first "R. Lanier".
- e9727f50efc3652e5cd08683a256115252995480532af31524357bbd8238ee6f isCitedBy Will_to_power.
- e9727f50efc3652e5cd08683a256115252995480532af31524357bbd8238ee6f issue "5".
- e9727f50efc3652e5cd08683a256115252995480532af31524357bbd8238ee6f journal "Studies in History and Philosophy of Science".
- e9727f50efc3652e5cd08683a256115252995480532af31524357bbd8238ee6f last "Anderson".
- e9727f50efc3652e5cd08683a256115252995480532af31524357bbd8238ee6f pages "738".
- e9727f50efc3652e5cd08683a256115252995480532af31524357bbd8238ee6f postscript ""Boscovich's theory of centers of force was prominent in Germany at the time. Boscovich’s theory 'is echoed in Immanuel Kant’s Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Science, which reduces matter to force altogether. Kant’s view, in turn, became very influential in German physics through the work of Hermann von Helmholtz and his followers. By the time Nietzsche wrote, treating matter in terms of fields of force was the dominant understanding of the fundamental notions of physics.".
- e9727f50efc3652e5cd08683a256115252995480532af31524357bbd8238ee6f title "Nietzsche’s Will to Power as a Doctrine of the Unity of Science".
- e9727f50efc3652e5cd08683a256115252995480532af31524357bbd8238ee6f volume "25".
- e9727f50efc3652e5cd08683a256115252995480532af31524357bbd8238ee6f year "1994".