Agreeing with those who admit the conservation of force to be a principle in physics, as large and sure as that of the indestructibility of matter or the invariability of gravity, I think that no particular idea of force has a right to unlimited or unqualified... On Molecular and Microscopic Science - Page 24by Mary Somerville - 1869 - 432 pagesFull view - About this book
| 1858 - 620 pages
...we know matter only by it? forces.' ' Agreeing with those who admit the conservation of force to be a principle in physics as large and sure as that of...indestructibility of matter, or the invariability of gravity, I think that no particular idea of force has a right to unlimited or unqualified acceptance, that does... | |
| 1857 - 664 pages
...the matter which we recognize by it. " Agreeing with those who admit the conservation of force to be a principle in physics, as large and sure as that...indestructibility of matter or the invariability of gravity, I think that no particular idea of force has a right to unlimited or unqualified acceptance, that does... | |
| 1857 - 796 pages
...the matter which we recognise by it. Agreeing with those who admit the conservation of force to be a principle in physics, as large and sure as that...indestructibility of matter, or the invariability of gravity, I think that no particular idea of force has a right to unlimited or unqualified acceptance, that does... | |
| 1857 - 1142 pages
...the matter which we recognize by it. Agreeing with those who admit the conservation of force to be a principle in physics as large and sure as that of...indestructibility of matter, or the invariability of gravity, I think that no particular idea of force has a right to unlimited or unqualified acceptance that does... | |
| 1857 - 664 pages
...recognize by it. Agreeing with those who admit the conservation of force to be a principle in phy•ic» as large and sure as that of the indestructibility of matter, or the invariability of gravity, I think that no particular idea of force has a right to unlimited or unqualified acceptance, that does... | |
| 1857 - 666 pages
...which we recognize by it. jeing with those who admit the conservation of force to be a principle in as large and sure as that of the indestructibility of matter or the invaria' gravity, I think that no particular idea of force has a right to unlimited or led acceptance,... | |
| 1858 - 448 pages
...the matter which we recognize by it. Agreeing with those who admit the conservation of force to be a principle in physics, as large and sure as that...indestructibility of matter, or the invariability of gravity, I think that no particular idea of force has a right to unlimited or unqualified acceptance that does... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell, Henry T. Steele - 1858 - 638 pages
...151 with those who admit the conservation of force to bo a principle in physics as large and виге as that of the indestructibility of matter, or the invariability of gravity, I think that no particular idea of force has a right to unlimited or unqualified acceptance, that does... | |
| Michael Faraday - 1859 - 522 pages
...the matter which we recognize by it. Agreeing with those who admit the conservation of force to be a principle in physics as large and sure as that of...indestructibility of matter, or the invariability of gravity, I think that no particular idea of force has a right to unlimited or unqualified acceptance, that does... | |
| 1859 - 448 pages
...recognize by it. Agreeing with those who admit the conservation of force to be a principle in physics, аз large and sure as that of the indestructibility of matter, or the invariability of gravity, I think that no particular idea of force has a right to unlimited or unqualified acceptance that does... | |
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