Unity of Purpose, Or Rational Analysis: Being a Treatise Designed to Disclose Physical Truths, and to Detect and Expose Popular Errors

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S.N. Dickinson & Company, 1846 - 292 sider
 

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Side 218 - The squares of the periods of revolution of any two planets are proportional to the cubes of their mean distances from the sun.
Side 267 - I then endeavoured to find out the cause of them. I was already convinced, that the apparent motion of the stars was not owing to a nutation of the earth's axis. The next thing that offered itself was an alteration in the direction of the plumb-line with which the instrument was constantly rectified...
Side 267 - At last I conjectured that all the phenomena, hitherto mentioned, proceeded from the progressive motion of light and the earth's annual motion in its orbit. For I perceived that, if light was propagated in time, the apparent place of a fixed object would not be the same when the eye is at rest, as when it is moving in any other direction than that of the line passing through the eye and object; and that when the eye is moving in different directions, the apparent place...
Side 26 - And I looked, and there was none to help; And I wondered that there was none to uphold : Therefore mine own arm brought salvation unto me; And my fury, it upheld me.
Side 248 - ... difference of attraction, in both cases, between the surface and the centre, which causes the lightness of the waters, and the consequent elevation. It will be seen, therefore, that, taking the whole earth into view, there are always two high tides diametrically opposite to each other, and two low tides also, midway between the high ones. The high tides are two great waves or swells, of small height, but extending each way through half a right angle. These waves follow the moon in its monthly...
Side 248 - XIT. 22 we have said with respect to the moon's influence in disturbing the level of the ocean, may be applied also to that of the sun; only, in the case of the sun, although its absolute action is about double that of the moon, yet, on account of its very great distance...
Side 265 - December, to the same situation it was in at that time twelve months, allowing for the difference of declination on account of the precession of the equinox. " This was a sufficient proof that...
Side 247 - Hence, for the same reason that a particle of water, on the side of the earth towards the moon, is drawn away from the centre, or has its downward tendency diminished, so the solid earth itself is drawn away from the mass of waters, on the side of the earth farthest from the moon. It is the difference of attraction, in both cases, between the surface and the centre, which causes the lightness of the waters, and the consequent elevation. It will be seen, therefore, that, taking the whole earth into...
Side 181 - D'Alembert, was the Precession of the equinoxes and the Nutation of the earth's axis, according to the theory of gravitation.
Side 267 - Object would not be the same when the Eye is at Rest, as when it is moving in any other Direction, than that of the Line passing through the Eye and Object ; and that, when the Eye is moving in different Directions, the apparent Place of the Object would be different.

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