A History of MechanicsCourier Corporation, 7 лист. 2012 р. - 688 стор. "A remarkable work which will remain a document of the first rank for the historian of mechanics." — Louis de Broglie |
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... impetus ” (John Buridan) . . . . . . . . . 2. The sphericity of the earth and the oeeans——Albert of Saxony and the aristotelian tradition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3. Albert of Saxony's theory of centre of gravity . . . . . . . . 4 ...
... impetus OW-40\ 01»? “NH . Leonardo da Vinci's contribution to mechanics . Nicholas Copernicus (1472-1543). THE ITALIAN DOMINIC Soro Q . - - . - . . . - - - . - - . - . NICHOLAS Cornnmcos. . - . - . ¢ - 0 impressus ...
... impetus. This theory explicitly departs from the Peripatetic ideas, which demanded the constant intervention of a mover to maintain violent motion in the Aristotelian sense. Incorporated into a continued tradition in which it was ...
... impetus became, in the hands of Benedetti, an early form of the principle of inertia, while one of its other aspects was to become, after a long polemic, the doctrine of vis viva. And in the Fourteenth Century, the Oxford School, which ...
... IMPETUS ” (JOHN BURIDAN). The idea of attributing a certain energy to a moving body solely on account of its motion is entirely foreign to aristotelian dynamics. In Antiquity John of Alexandria—-surnamed Philopon—-who lived in the Vth ...