In 1895, Lorentz further elaborated on his theory and introduced the " theorem of corresponding states ".
2.
Referring to the critique of Poincar?from 1900, Lorentz wrote in his famous paper in 1904, where he extended his theorem of corresponding states : " " Surely, the course of inventing special hypotheses for each new experimental result is somewhat artificial.
3.
The relative positions of the beads in the native state constitute the lattice protein's secondary structure; however, some researchers have claimed that they can be extrapolated onto real protein structures which do include secondary structure, by appealing to the same law by which the phase diagrams of different substances can be scaled onto one another ( the theorem of corresponding states ).
4.
In a September 1904 lecture in St . Louis named The Principles of Mathematical Physics, Poincar?drew some consequences from Lorentz's theory and defined ( in modification of Galileo's Relativity Principle and Lorentz's Theorem of Corresponding States ) the following principle : " " The Principle of Relativity, according to which the laws of physical phenomena must be the same for a stationary observer as for one carried along in a uniform motion of translation, so that we have no means, and can have none, of determining whether or not we are being carried along in such a motion . " " He also specified his clock synchronization method and explained the possibility of a " new method " or " new mechanics ", in which no velocity can surpass that of light for " all " observers.