| Sir William Robert Grove - 1846 - 114 páginas
...subject, and brought their minds into a general accordance with the views I have submitted to them, that no force can, strictly speaking, be initial, as there...force or motion any more than we can create matter, Thus, to take an example previously noticed, and recede backwards; the spark of light is produced by... | |
| William Robert Grove - 1850 - 164 páginas
...subject, and brought their minds into a general accordance with the views I have submitted to them, that no force can, strictly speaking, be initial, as there...force or motion any more than we can create matter. Thus, to take an example previously noticed, and recede backwards ; the spark of light is produced... | |
| William Robert Grove - 1855 - 300 páginas
...subject, and brought their minds into a general accordance with the views I have submitted to them, that no force can, strictly speaking, be initial, as there must be some P 2 212 CORRELATION Or PHYSICAL FORCES. anterior force which produced it : we cannot create force or... | |
| Thomas Cromwell - 1859 - 332 páginas
...seems little short of a demonM3 strated truth, if the remarks of Professor Grove be well founded, that "no force can, strictly speaking, be initial, as there must be some anterior force which produced it ; . . . tracing any force to its antecedents, we are lost in an infinity of changing forms of force."... | |
| Edward Livingston Youmans, William Robert Grove - 1865 - 500 páginas
...subject, and brought their minds into a general accordance with the views I have submitted to them, that no force can, strictly speaking, be initial, as there...force or motion any more than we can create matter. Thus, to take an example previously noticed, and recede backwards; the spark of light is produced by... | |
| Edward Livingston Youmans, William Robert Grove - 1865 - 512 páginas
...the views I have submitted to them, that no force can, strictly speaking, be initial, as there most be some anterior force which produced it : we cannot...force or motion any more than we can create matter. Thus, to take an example previously noticed, and recede backwards ; the spark of light is produced... | |
| John James Drysdale - 1870 - 152 páginas
...motion, of arresting it, or of altering its direction; whatever possesses this power has been looked upon as a form of force. Motion is consequently regarded...called forces are themselves modes of motion." (p. 98.) In reference, probably, to these last views, Sir J. Herschel remarks that the tendency now is to deny... | |
| John James Drysdale, Robert Ellis Dudgeon, Richard Hughes, John Rutherfurd Russell - 1870 - 842 páginas
...upon as a form of force. Motion is consequently regarded as the signal of force." (p. 616.) " ^ § 47. According to Grove, " a force cannot originate otherwise...called forces are themselves modes of motion " (p. 98). In reference, probably, to these last views, Sir J. Herschel remarks that the tendency now is to deny... | |
| Geoorge W. Holley - 1894 - 312 páginas
...wealth of change which takes place in nature." * " No force," says Grove, f " can be, strictly speaking, initial, as there must be some anterior force which...force or motion any more than we can create matter. Can we, indeed, suggest a proposition definitely conceivable by the mind, of force without ante* Helmholtz,... | |
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