After a historical introduction and mathematical preliminaries the book
turns to electrostatics in vacuum, whereby Maxwells equations are not
postulated as axioms, but deduced from electrostatics plus Lorentz
invariance. These general ideas are then illustrated by many
applications, radiation phenomena in particular. Chapter 4 is devoted to
the completely different subject of phenomenological electrodynamics of
matter, with the equations derived by spatial averaging, assuming a
classical model for the atomic structure of matter. The chapter on
optics is not treated as an independent field, but rather an application
of Chapter 4, where significant themes such as wave optics, light
scattering, geometrical optics, diffraction theory, and the laser are
discussed. Finally, an epilogue relates the classical theory to modern
quantum electrodynamics.