Abstract
IN Great Britain the amateur photographer, unlike his colleague on the Continent, is not as a rule interested in stereoscopic photography: its developments therefore have been mainly scientific and industrial. The additional matter contained in this new edition of Mr. Judge's book reflects this condition. The most important advances perhaps are in connexion with medical work, ophthalmic appliances and the recording of X-ray ‘screening’ experiments under improved conditions. Nevertheless, the classical part of the subject permits of wide extension, such as the application of geometrical optics to the more refined problems of binocular vision. The book is thoroughly practical and provided with an abundance of illustrations.
Stereoscopic Photography:
its Application to Science, Industry and Education. By Arthur W. Judge. Second edition, revised and enlarged. Pp. xi + 340 + 22 plates. (London: Chapman and Hall, Ltd., 1935.) 21s. net.
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R., F. [Short Notices]. Nature 138, 637 (1936). https://doi.org/10.1038/138637b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/138637b0