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" I think it is imperfect and insufficient ; if it admits these things, or any part of them, then it prepares the natural philosopher to look for effects and conditions as yet unknown, and is open to any degree of development of the consequences and relations... "
Mechanics' Magazine - Page 280
1857
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Iron: An Illustrated Weekly Journal for Iron and Steel ..., Volume 66

Perry Fairfax Nursey - 1857 - 644 pages
...or any part .of them, then it prepares the natural philosopher to look for effects and conditions as yet unknown, and is open to any degree of development...conservation of force would lead us to assume, that when A and В attract each other less because of increasing distance, then some other exertion of power,...
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The London, Edinburgh and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science

1857 - 1142 pages
...or any part of them, then it prepares the natural philosopher to look for effects and conditions as yet unknown, and is open to any degree of development...conservation of force would lead us to assume, that when A and B attract each other less because of increasing distance, then some other exertion of power either...
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The Chemist

1857 - 796 pages
...open to any degree of developement of the consequences and relations of power : by denying, it opposed a dogmatic barrier to improvement; by ignoring it...conservation of force would lead us to assume, that when A and B attract eacfc other less because of increasing distance, then some other exertion of power,...
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The Civil Engineer and Architect's Journal, Volume 20

William Laxton - 1857 - 498 pages
...idea of gravitation is an erroneous one, and he ia thus led into the following speculation : — " The principle of the conservation of force would lead us to assume that when A and B attract each other less because of increasing distance, then some other exertion of power,...
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The Annual of Scientific Discovery, Or, Year-book of Facts in Science and Art

1858 - 448 pages
...or any part of them, then it prepares the natural philosopher to look for effects and conditions as yet unknown, and is open to any degree of development...conservation of force would lead us to assume, that when A and В attract each other less because of increasing distance, then some other exertion of power,...
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Notices of the Proceedings, Volume 2

Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1858 - 614 pages
...or any part of them, then it prepares the natural philosopher to look for effects and conditions as yet unknown, and is open to any degree of development of the consequences and relations of power: bydenying, it opposes a dogmatic barrier to improvement ; by ignoring, it becomes in many respects...
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Experimental Researches in Chemistry and Physics

Michael Faraday - 1859 - 522 pages
...or any part of them, then it prepares the natural philosopher to look for effects and conditions as yet unknown, and is open to any degree of development...conservation of force would lead us to assume, that when A and B attract each other less because of increasing distance, then some other exertion of power,...
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The Annual of Scientific Discovery, Or, Year-book of Facts in ..., Volume 9

1859 - 448 pages
...or any part of them, then it prepares the natural philosopher to look for effects and conditions as yet unknown, and is open to any degree of development...principle of the conservation of force would lead ns to assume, that when A and В attract each other less because of increasing distance, then some...
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The Correlation and Conservation of Forces: A Series of Expositions, by Prof ...

Edward Livingston Youmans, William Robert Grove - 1865 - 512 pages
...or any part of them, then it prepares the natural philosopher to look for effects and conditions as yet unknown, and is open to any degree of development...conservation of force would lead us to assume, that when A and B attract each other less, because of increasing distance, then some other exertion of • power,...
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Croonian Lectures on Matter & Force ...

Henry Bence JONES - 1868 - 240 pages
...natural philosopher is prepared to look for effects and conditions as yet unknown, and the way for him is open to any degree of development of the consequences and relations of power. By denying this principle, he opposes a dogmatic barrier to improvement ; whilst, by admitting it, he has a fresh...
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