In a recent article Herman Erlichson called attention to a flaw in Newton's proof of Proposition IX of Book I of the Principia. How did Newton fall into this error? A valid proof was near to hand, by an easy addition to Lemma III of Book II; but evidently Newton wished to attempt a different line of argument. The figure for Proposition IX in the first two editions of the Principia differs from that in the third edition, and does not involve the quadrilateral “given in kind” that Erlichson rightly objects to. But the basic error remains: the assumption without proof of the similarity of all segments of the spiral with the same central angle. By 1671 Newton had proved this assumption by an integration, establishing the logarithmic property of...
International audienceIn this paper, I investigate some of the preliminary lemmas of Princip-ia and ...
Though Wallis’s Arithmetica infinitorum was one of Newton’s major sources of inspiration during the ...
This book is about James Gregory’s attempt to prove that the quadrature of the circle, the ellipse a...
In a recent article Herman Erlichson called attention to a flaw in Newton's proof of Proposition IX ...
AbstractThis paper is a study of Proposition IX of Book I of Newton's Principia, the problem of dete...
AbstractProposition XV/Theorem XII in Book Two of Newton'sPrincipiadeals with the spiral path of a b...
When Newton gave his general solution to the inverse problem of central forces in Proposition 41 of ...
AbstractAfter a brief review of the flaw in the treatment of inverse-square orbits in Newton's Princ...
AbstractM. Mersenne, first translator of Galileo's work into French, pointed out that Galileo's “tim...
. The theorem prover Isabelle is used to formalise and reproduce some of the styles of reasoning use...
AbstractIn this extended study of Proposition VI, and its first corollary, in Book I of Newton's Pri...
AbstractIsaac Newton's Lemma 28 (Principia, Book I) argues that the areas of oval figures are not ex...
To solve the direct problem of central forces when the trajectory is an ellipse and the force is dir...
In the Acta Eruditorum issue of May 1690, Jacob Bernoulli launches a challenge to the scientific com...
Newton described his Principia as a work of ‘experimental philosophy’, where theories were deduced f...
International audienceIn this paper, I investigate some of the preliminary lemmas of Princip-ia and ...
Though Wallis’s Arithmetica infinitorum was one of Newton’s major sources of inspiration during the ...
This book is about James Gregory’s attempt to prove that the quadrature of the circle, the ellipse a...
In a recent article Herman Erlichson called attention to a flaw in Newton's proof of Proposition IX ...
AbstractThis paper is a study of Proposition IX of Book I of Newton's Principia, the problem of dete...
AbstractProposition XV/Theorem XII in Book Two of Newton'sPrincipiadeals with the spiral path of a b...
When Newton gave his general solution to the inverse problem of central forces in Proposition 41 of ...
AbstractAfter a brief review of the flaw in the treatment of inverse-square orbits in Newton's Princ...
AbstractM. Mersenne, first translator of Galileo's work into French, pointed out that Galileo's “tim...
. The theorem prover Isabelle is used to formalise and reproduce some of the styles of reasoning use...
AbstractIn this extended study of Proposition VI, and its first corollary, in Book I of Newton's Pri...
AbstractIsaac Newton's Lemma 28 (Principia, Book I) argues that the areas of oval figures are not ex...
To solve the direct problem of central forces when the trajectory is an ellipse and the force is dir...
In the Acta Eruditorum issue of May 1690, Jacob Bernoulli launches a challenge to the scientific com...
Newton described his Principia as a work of ‘experimental philosophy’, where theories were deduced f...
International audienceIn this paper, I investigate some of the preliminary lemmas of Princip-ia and ...
Though Wallis’s Arithmetica infinitorum was one of Newton’s major sources of inspiration during the ...
This book is about James Gregory’s attempt to prove that the quadrature of the circle, the ellipse a...