What were probably the historically earliest versions of critical-point exponent relations like ({{EquationNote|8}}) and ({{EquationNote|9}}) are due to Rice [10] and to Scott [11]. It was before Domb and Sykes [12] and Fisher [13] had noted that the exponent <math>\gamma</math> was in reality greater than its mean-field value <math>\gamma =1</math> but when it was already clear from Guggenheim's corresponding-states analysis [14] that <math>\beta</math> had a value much closer to 1/3 than to its mean-field value of 1/2. Then, under the assumption <math>\gamma | What were probably the historically earliest versions of critical-point exponent relations like ({{EquationNote|8}}) and ({{EquationNote|9}}) are due to Rice [10] and to Scott [11]. It was before Domb and Sykes [12] and Fisher [13] had noted that the exponent <math>\gamma</math> was in reality greater than its mean-field value <math>\gamma =1</math> but when it was already clear from Guggenheim's corresponding-states analysis [14] that <math>\beta</math> had a value much closer to 1/3 than to its mean-field value of 1/2. Then, under the assumption <math>\gamma |