If you want to criticize and point out the surrounding scenery, you must first climb onto the roof.
——Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
In the guest room of the University of Gottingen, researchers from the Royal Society who traveled from faraway London sat closely around a round table.
Each of them held a copy of "The Calculation of Current" translated into English by Arthur, and occasionally there was a rustling sound as they turned the pages in the guest room.
Perhaps for beginners, "The Calculation of Current" is enough to carefully study for a day, but for these researchers in electromagnetism, they can grasp the core concepts that Ohm wanted to convey in the book in as little as half an hour or as much as an hour.
Soon, some scholars put down the book, but no one spoke first. They looked at each other, seemingly intending to first hear others' views.