The Life of Sir Isaac NewtonHarper & Bros., 1843 - 314 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 23
Página 20
... continued to watch over her tender charge with parental anxiety ; but in consequence of her marriage to the Reverend Barnabas Smith , rector of North Witham , about a mile south of Woolsthorpe , she left him under the care of her own ...
... continued to watch over her tender charge with parental anxiety ; but in consequence of her marriage to the Reverend Barnabas Smith , rector of North Witham , about a mile south of Woolsthorpe , she left him under the care of her own ...
Página 22
... her many particulars respecting the early history of our author . Newton's esteem for her continued un- abated during his life . He regularly visited her when he went to Lincolnshire , and never failed to relieve 22 SIR ISAAC NEWTON .
... her many particulars respecting the early history of our author . Newton's esteem for her continued un- abated during his life . He regularly visited her when he went to Lincolnshire , and never failed to relieve 22 SIR ISAAC NEWTON .
Página 25
... continued his studies till the servant re- turned from Grantham . The more immediate affairs of the farm were not more prosperous under his management than would have been his marketings at Grantham . The perusal of a book , the execu ...
... continued his studies till the servant re- turned from Grantham . The more immediate affairs of the farm were not more prosperous under his management than would have been his marketings at Grantham . The perusal of a book , the execu ...
Página 46
... continued for a while to spread its waves over Europe ; but when it sank to its ebb in England , there was no other bark left upon the strand but that of the Deucalion of Science , whose home had been so long upon its waters . During ...
... continued for a while to spread its waves over Europe ; but when it sank to its ebb in England , there was no other bark left upon the strand but that of the Deucalion of Science , whose home had been so long upon its waters . During ...
Página 97
... continued exposure to light . The general effect of light is to diminish or dilute the colours of bodies , and in many cases to deprive them entirely of their colour . Now , it is not easy to understand how repeated undulations ...
... continued exposure to light . The general effect of light is to diminish or dilute the colours of bodies , and in many cases to deprive them entirely of their colour . Now , it is not easy to understand how repeated undulations ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Abbé Conti appear astronomical attraction Bentley Biot blue bodies calculus Cambridge centre colours Colsterworth comets Commercium consequence considered curves dated degree Descartes differential calculus discoveries distance doctrine earth edition experiment Flamstead force fringes Galileo genius glass gravity Halley heat Hipparchus honour Hooke Huygens infinite inquiries invention James Gregory John Newton Keill Kepler labours Leibnitz letter London manuscript mathematical ment method of fluxions mind moon motion nature never Newtonian philosophy observations Oldenburg opinion Optics orbit papers particles of light Pepys phenomena philosopher planets possession Principia principles prism produced published quadrature rays received reflecting telescope refraction refrangibility remarkable Royal Society scholium seems Sir Isaac Newton space spectrum speculum stars supposed surface theory thickness thin plates tion tonian transmitted Trinity College truth Tycho Tycho Brahe views violet Whiston white light Woolsthorpe yellow