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Description

Sectional committee: [Physics]

Has difficulty in seeing any grounds for recommending the paper for acceptance. The variation in the Zeiss telemeter is, from a scientific point of view, so minute that he cannot find grounds for publication there. The description is in its present form so meagre that it is not possible to form a clear judgement on this point. Cannot agree to the opening statement at all. The speed and accuracy of binocular judgement is well know. Dr Czapski certainly takes this for granted in describing the Zeiss telemeter and the method is well known to be used for detecting forgery in bank notes. If the author were not a fellow he would without hesitation recommend that the imperfect and incomplete description received not be accepted and printed in the Proceedings.

[Not published].

Endorsed on verso as received 4 July 1901.

Reference number
RR/15/190
Earliest possible date
04 July 1901
Physical description
Letter on paper
Page extent
2 pages
Format
Manuscript

Creator name

Charles Vernon Boys

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Citation

Charles Vernon Boys, Referee's report by Charles Vernon Boys, on a paper 'Description of a range-finder' by George Forbes, 04 July 1901, RR/15/190, The Royal Society Archives, London, https://makingscience.royalsociety.org/items/rr_15_190/referees-report-by-charles-vernon-boys-on-a-paper-description-of-a-range-finder-by-george-forbes, accessed on 26 March 2025

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  • Referee Reports

    This collection contains reports on scientific papers submitted for publication to the Royal Society. Started in 1832 when the system was formalised, it is a record of the origins of peer review publishing in practice.

    Dates: 1832 - 1954

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