(Co)homology theory and electrical circuit

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I have read that one of the origins of the theory of (co)homology is the study of electrical circuits by Poincare. I'd like to know more about that. Could someone sugest any reference on this subject?

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John Baez in "Circuit Theory" states: "In 1923, Hermann Weyl published a paper in Spanish which described electrical circuits in terms of the homology and cohomology of graphs (W). In this approach, Kirchhoff’s voltage and current laws simply say that voltage is a 1-coboundary and current is a 1-cocycle. Furthermore, the electrical resistances labelling edges of the graphs put an inner product on the space of 1-chains, allowing us to identify them with 1-cochains. Ohm’s law then says that voltage may then be identified with the current." http://ncatlab.org/johnbaez/show/Circuit+theory+I

The Weyl paper is H. Weyl, Repartición de corriente en una red conductora, Rev. Mat. Hisp. Amer. 5 (1923), 153-164. http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/weyl1923.pdf