Opera, en anglois, avec notes par P. Shaw, Том 21738 |
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Сторінка xx
... OBSERVATIONS 2 .. UPON COLOURS. I. ARguments against a Vacuum confidered . p . 698 702 2. Glafs impervious to air . 3. The nature of rarifaction and con- denfation . 703 4. Whether air penetrates quick - filver in the Torricellian ...
... OBSERVATIONS 2 .. UPON COLOURS. I. ARguments against a Vacuum confidered . p . 698 702 2. Glafs impervious to air . 3. The nature of rarifaction and con- denfation . 703 4. Whether air penetrates quick - filver in the Torricellian ...
Сторінка xxi
Robert Boyle. ( 1 ) EXPERIMENTS AND OBSERVATIONS 2 .. UPON COLOURS . I SECT . I. IS often thought that a diverfity of colours conftantly argues Diverity of co- an equal diverfity in the nature of the bodies wherein they re- lours , what ...
Robert Boyle. ( 1 ) EXPERIMENTS AND OBSERVATIONS 2 .. UPON COLOURS . I SECT . I. IS often thought that a diverfity of colours conftantly argues Diverity of co- an equal diverfity in the nature of the bodies wherein they re- lours , what ...
Сторінка xxii
... OBSERVATIONS ..UPON COLOURS . SECT . I. IS. I. A Rguments against a Vacuum confidered . p . 698 2. Glafs impervious to air . 702 3. The nature of rarifaction and con- denfation . 703 4. Whether air penetrates quick - filver in the ...
... OBSERVATIONS ..UPON COLOURS . SECT . I. IS. I. A Rguments against a Vacuum confidered . p . 698 2. Glafs impervious to air . 702 3. The nature of rarifaction and con- denfation . 703 4. Whether air penetrates quick - filver in the ...
Сторінка 1
Robert Boyle. EXPERIMENTS AND OBSERVATIONS ..UPON COLOURS . SECT . I. IS often thought that a diverfity of colours conftantly argues Diversity of co- an equal diverfity in the nature of the bodies wherein they re- lours , what it fide ...
Robert Boyle. EXPERIMENTS AND OBSERVATIONS ..UPON COLOURS . SECT . I. IS often thought that a diverfity of colours conftantly argues Diversity of co- an equal diverfity in the nature of the bodies wherein they re- lours , what it fide ...
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Загальні терміни та фрази
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Популярні уривки
Сторінка 221 - I look upon a law as a moral, not a physical cause, as being indeed but a notional thing, according to which, an intelligent and free agent is bound to regulate its actions.
Сторінка 300 - Subtract the loss of the heavy body weighed by itself in water, previously known, from the loss sustained by the combined solids. The remainder will be the weight of as much water as is equal in bulk to the lighter body.
Сторінка 300 - This result gives the weight of a bulk of water equal to that of the specimen, and by dividing the weight of the specimen in air by this number, the specific gravity is obtained.
Сторінка 131 - Motion in falling; and the cause of Fermentation, by which the Heart and Blood of Animals are kept in perpetual Motion and Heat...
Сторінка 130 - But by reason of the Tenacity of Fluids, and Attrition of their Parts, and the Weakness of Elasticity in Solids, Motion is much more apt to be lost than got, and is always upon the Decay. For Bodies which are either absolutely hard, or so soft as to be void of Elasticity, will not rebound from one another.
Сторінка 131 - Earth are constantly warm'd, and in some places grow very hot; Bodies burn and shine, Mountains take fire, the Caverns of the Earth are blown up, and the Sun continues violently hot and lucid, and warms all things by his Light.
Сторінка 308 - I pretended; which was not to prove, that no angel or other immaterial creature could interpose in these cases; for concerning such agents, all that I need say, is, that in the cases proposed we have no need to recur to them.
Сторінка 216 - And the more wonderful things he discovers in the works of nature, the more auxiliary proofs he meets with to establish and enforce the argument, drawn from the universe and its parts, to evince that there is a God ; which is a proposition of that vast weight and importance, that it ought to endear every thing to us that is able to confirm it, and afford us new motives to acknowledge and adore the divine Author of things.
Сторінка 97 - I must freely observe that, to speak properly, a law being but a notional rule of acting according to the declared will of a superior, it is plain that nothing but an intellectual being can be properly capable of receiving and acting by a law.
Сторінка 514 - ... pressure of a mercurial cylinder of about 29 inches, as we are taught by the Torricellian experiment; so here the same air being brought to a degree of density about twice as great as that it had before, obtains a spring twice as strong as formerly. As may appear by its being able to sustain or resist a cylinder of 29 inches in the longer tube, together with the weight of the atmospherical cylinder that leaned upon those 29 inches of mercury; and, as we just now inferred from the Torricellian...