SUMMARY. — Isaac Newton, throughout the Principia, seems to deal with one concept of impressed accelerative force. Actually there are two such concepts, and this distorts the logical structure of the work : the second Law of Motion plays but moderatly its parts as an axiom.RÉSUMÉ. — Isaac Newton donne l'impression, dans les Principia, de ne traiter que d'un concept de force accélératrice imprimée. En réalité il y en a deux, et la structure logique de l'ouvrage en est faussée : la seconde Loi du Mouvement ne joue que modérément son rôle d'axiome.Barthelemy Georges. De la force accélératrice dans les Principia. In: Revue d'histoire des sciences, tome 40, n°3-4, 1987. pp. 273-280
SUMMARY. — This article's purpose is to disengage and clarify certain aspects of Newton's approach t...
SUMMARY. — This article's purpose is to disengage and clarify certain aspects of Newton's approach t...
In the "principia", newton clearly distinguishes between the principle of inertia (the first law), i...
The aim of this article is twofold: 1) the discovery, in Newton's descriptions of forces observed in...
In the Principia, Newton clearly distinguishes between the principle of inertia (the first law), ine...
The aim of this article is twofold: 1) the discovery, in Newton's descriptions of forces observed in...
Book : Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica Philosophiae Naturalis (1687) represents a fundamental t...
Book : Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica Philosophiae Naturalis (1687) represents a fundamental t...
Book : Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica Philosophiae Naturalis (1687) represents a fundamental t...
SUMMARY. — Translation of and detailed commentary on Propositions 39, 40 and 41 of Book I of the Pri...
Le livre : Principia Mathematica Philosophiae Naturalis (1687) de Isaac Newton constitue pour la sci...
AbstractIn this extended study of Proposition VI, and its first corollary, in Book I of Newton's Pri...
National audienceThe aim of this work is to show that Newton’s laws of motion and their interpretati...
National audienceThe aim of this work is to show that Newton’s laws of motion and their interpretati...
National audienceWe revisit Newton's laws of motion by resting on the basic concepts of mass and for...
SUMMARY. — This article's purpose is to disengage and clarify certain aspects of Newton's approach t...
SUMMARY. — This article's purpose is to disengage and clarify certain aspects of Newton's approach t...
In the "principia", newton clearly distinguishes between the principle of inertia (the first law), i...
The aim of this article is twofold: 1) the discovery, in Newton's descriptions of forces observed in...
In the Principia, Newton clearly distinguishes between the principle of inertia (the first law), ine...
The aim of this article is twofold: 1) the discovery, in Newton's descriptions of forces observed in...
Book : Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica Philosophiae Naturalis (1687) represents a fundamental t...
Book : Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica Philosophiae Naturalis (1687) represents a fundamental t...
Book : Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica Philosophiae Naturalis (1687) represents a fundamental t...
SUMMARY. — Translation of and detailed commentary on Propositions 39, 40 and 41 of Book I of the Pri...
Le livre : Principia Mathematica Philosophiae Naturalis (1687) de Isaac Newton constitue pour la sci...
AbstractIn this extended study of Proposition VI, and its first corollary, in Book I of Newton's Pri...
National audienceThe aim of this work is to show that Newton’s laws of motion and their interpretati...
National audienceThe aim of this work is to show that Newton’s laws of motion and their interpretati...
National audienceWe revisit Newton's laws of motion by resting on the basic concepts of mass and for...
SUMMARY. — This article's purpose is to disengage and clarify certain aspects of Newton's approach t...
SUMMARY. — This article's purpose is to disengage and clarify certain aspects of Newton's approach t...
In the "principia", newton clearly distinguishes between the principle of inertia (the first law), i...