La réforme de la dynamique: De corporum concursu (1678) et autres textes inédits

Передняя обложка
Vrin, 1994 - Всего страниц: 444
C'est en janvier 1678 que Leibniz a adopte la formule mv comme mesure de la force et a identifie en elle l'invariant d'un principe general de conservation, evincant le principe cartesien de conservation de la quantite de mouvement. Leibniz a caracterise comme reforme cette nouvelle formulation qui rendait possible d'apprehender dans une systematicite originale les lois du mouvement. Le De corporum concursu est publie ici pour la premiere fois, avec d'autres documents entierement inedits qui en eclairent les antecedents et les suites. L'Introduction restitue l'etat des problemes qui ont soutenu la formation des idees fondatrices de la philosophie de la nature leiblizienne. Un Commentaire suivi, faisant place a la traduction de larges extraits, restitue la signification historique et epistemologique d'un document qui apporte une information entierement nouvelle sur un moment essentiel dans la constitution de la pensee de Leibniz.
 

Содержание

REMERCIEMENTS
7
Première théorie du choc
185
Suite de la précédente
200
Section 22 Une vérification décisive
208
Suite de la précédente
223
Abandon de la première théorie Premières
229
Théorie du choc avec percussion élasticité
236
Section 62 Nouveau calcul Confrontation des résultats
255
Démonstration de la règle de la conservation
317
Programme des recherches ultérieures
331
Mars 1677
353
Prémices dune solution
395
Après le De corporum concursu
409
BIBLIOGRAPHIE
427
INDEX DES NOMS PROPRES français
435
TABLE DÉTAILLÉE DES MATIÈRE
441

Léquipollence de la cause pleine
277
La Réforme Estime de la force en mv2
303

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Об авторе (1994)

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, one of the last real polymaths, was born in Leipzig. Educated there and at the Universities at Jena and Altdorf, he then served as a diplomat for the Elector of Mainz and was sent to Paris, where he lived for a few years and came into contact with leading scientists, philosophers, and theologians. During a trip to England, he was elected to the Royal Society; he made a visit to Holland to meet Spinoza. Back in Germany he became librarian to the Duke of Brunswick, whose library was the largest in Europe outside the Vatican. From there he became involved in government affairs in Hanover and later settled in Berlin at the court of Queen Sophie Charlotte of Prussia. Leibniz was involved in the diplomatic negotiations that led to the Hanoverian succession to the English throne. From his university days he showed an interest in mathematics, logic, physics, law, linguistics, and history, as well as theology and practical political affairs. He discovered calculus independently of Newton and had a protracted squabble about which of them should be given credit for the achievement. The developer of much of what is now modern logic, he discovered some important physical laws and offered a physical theory that is close to some twentieth-century conceptions. Leibniz was interested in developing a universal language and tried to master the elements of all languages. Leibniz corresponded widely with scholars all over Europe and with some Jesuit missionaries in China. His philosophy was largely worked out in answer to those of other thinkers, such as Locke, Malebranche, Bayle, and Arnauld. Although he published comparatively little during his lifetime, Leibniz left an enormous mass of unpublished papers, drafts of works, and notes on topics of interest. His library, which has been preserved, contains annotations, analyses, and often refutations of works he read. The project of publishing all of his writings, undertaken in the 1920s by the Prussian Academy, was delayed by World War II but was resumed thereafter. It is not likely that the project will be completed in the twentieth century.

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