WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Newton's Principia cover

Newton's Principia

Chapter 36: BOOK III.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The work develops a mathematical framework for natural motion by presenting precise definitions and axioms, deriving laws of motion from geometrical reasoning, and applying centripetal force principles to predict planetary and terrestrial phenomena. It demonstrates how inverse-square attraction explains orbital shapes and motions, analyzes motion in different media, and treats perturbations, tides, and precession through geometric proofs and limiting ratios. Organized into systematic books, it combines rigorous demonstration with physical interpretation, moving from fundamental principles and methods to applications that connect celestial mechanics with observable phenomena. The emphasis is on geometrical synthesis, the use of limiting ratios, and the deduction of physical laws from mathematical principles.

BOOK III.

BOOK III.

IN the preceding Books I have laid down the principles of philosophy, principles not philosophical, but mathematical: such, to wit, as we may build our reasonings upon in philosophical inquiries. These principles are the laws and conditions of certain motions, and powers or forces, which chiefly have respect to philosophy; but, lest they should have appeared of themselves dry and barren, I have illustrated them here and there with some philosophical scholiums, giving an account of such things as are of more general nature, and which philosophy seems chiefly to be founded on; such as the density and the resistance of bodies, spaces void of all bodies, and the motion of light and sounds. It remains that, from the same principles, I now demonstrate the frame of the System of the World. Upon this subject I had, indeed, composed the third Book in a popular method, that it might be read by many; but afterward, considering that such as had not sufficiently entered into the principles could not easily discern the strength of the consequences, nor lay aside the prejudices to which they had been many years accustomed, therefore, to prevent the disputes which might be raised upon such accounts, I chose to reduce the substance of this Book into the form of Propositions (in the mathematical way), which should be read by those only who had first made themselves masters of the principles established in the preceding Books: not that I would advise any one to the previous study of every Proposition of those Books; for they abound with such as might cost too much time, even to readers of good mathematical learning. It is enough if one carefully reads the Definitions, the Laws of Motion, and the first three Sections of the first Book. He may then pass on to this Book, and consult such of the remaining Propositions of the first two Books, as the references in this, and his occasions, shall require.