| Adolph Judah Snow - 1926 - 270 стор.
...Motions, 'tis very certain that there is not always the same Quantity of Motion in the World. . . . Seeing therefore the variety of Motion which we find...of Gravity, by which Planets and Comets keep their Motion in their Orbs, and Bodies acquire great Motion in falling ; and the cause of fermentation, by... | |
| Adolph Judah Snow - 1926 - 268 стор.
...Again : ' 'Tis very certain that there is not always the same quantity of motion in the world. . . . Seeing, therefore, the variety of motion which we...necessity of conserving and recruiting it by active Principle, such as are 1 Letters to Bentley ; also Memoires de I'Academie Roy ale, Paris, 1732, p.... | |
| 1864 - 626 стор.
...bodies, the consequence is, that in vacua they must go on and penetrate one another's dimensions. . . . Seeing therefore the variety of motion, which we find...active principles ; such as are the cause of gravity and the cause of fermentation." I trust I shall be able to enter more fully upon some future occasion... | |
| R.S. Woolhouse - 1988 - 386 стор.
...elastic bodies, it was apparent that "some other principle is necessary for conserving the motion": "the variety of motion which we find in the world is always decreasing, [and hence) there is a necessity of conserving and recruiting it by active principles" ([18] 397—... | |
| H. B. Nisbet, Claude Rawson - 2005 - 978 стор.
...Newton's Opticks contains descriptions of the tumultuous forces at work in the 'caverns' of the Earth: Seeing therefore the variety of Motion which we find...of Gravity, by which Planets and Comets keep their Motion in their Orbs, and Bodies acquire great Motion in falling; 4* Copenhaver, 'Jewish theologies',... | |
| Philip Mirowski - 1991 - 468 стор.
...(Elkhana, 1974, p. 49). Indeed, in Newton's Optick s (4th ed., 1730, p. 399) one discovers the statement: "the variety of Motion which we find in the World is always decreasing." This is not a promising start down the road to the reification of invariants. Hence, strictly speaking,... | |
| Michael Alexander Stewart - 1990 - 340 стор.
...Fluids, and Attrition of their Parts, and the Weakness of Elasticity in Solids". He concluded that, since the variety of Motion which we find in the World is...by which Planets and Comets keep their Motions in the Orbs, and Bodies acquire great Motion in falling; and the cause of Fermentation, by which the Heart... | |
| Brian P. Levack - 1992 - 342 стор.
...maintain it. Because of factors such as friction, however, motion constantly tends to run down, and "there is a necessity of conserving and recruiting...active Principles, such as are the cause of Gravity ... and the cause of Fermentation... For we meet with very little Motion in the World, besides what... | |
| Graham Alan John Rogers - 1996 - 276 стор.
...lost in the collision of hard bodies, the physical world would, if left to itself, run down. However, 'Seeing therefore the variety of Motion which we find...active Principles, such as are the cause of Gravity . . . and the cause of fermentation'." Similarly, the causes of the heating of the inner parts of the... | |
| Valeria Tinkler-Villani, Peter Davidson, Jane Stevenson - 1995 - 338 стор.
...preoccupations of the scientists. In a passage which has not always received sufficient attention Newton said: Seeing therefore the variety of motion which we find...of Gravity, by which Planets and Comets keep their Motion on their Orbs, and Bodies acquire great Motion in falling; and the cause of Fermentation by... | |
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