Gravesande, Willem Jacob 's, Physices elementa mathematica, experimentis confirmata sive introductio ad philosophiam Newtonianam; Tom. 1

Table of figures

< >
[Figure 21]
[Figure 22]
[Figure 23]
[Figure 24]
[Figure 25]
[Figure 26]
[Figure 27]
[Figure 28]
[Figure 29]
[Figure 30]
[Figure 31]
[Figure 32]
[Figure 33]
[Figure 34]
[Figure 35]
[Figure 36]
[Figure 37]
[Figure 38]
[Figure 39]
[Figure 40]
[Figure 41]
[Figure 42]
[Figure 43]
[Figure 44]
[Figure 45]
[Figure 46]
[Figure 47]
[Figure 48]
[Figure 49]
[Figure 50]
< >
page |< < (1) of 824 > >|
311 8[Figure 8]
PHYSICES
ELEMENTA MATHEMATICA,
EXPERIMENTIS CONFIRMATA.
LIBER I.
Pars I. de Corpore in genere.
CAPUT I.
De Scopo Phyſices & Regulis philoſophandi.
PHyſica circa res naturales & illarum Phænomena ver-
ſatur.
Definitio 1. & 2.
Res naturales ſunt omnia corpora; congerieſque illorum
111. omnium univerſum vocatur.
Definitio 3.
Phænomena naturalia, ſunt omnes ſitus & omnes mo-
222. tus corporum naturalium, ab actione entis intelligentis imme-
diate non pendentes, &
qui a nobis ſenſibus obſervari poſſunt.
Non excludimus ex numero Phænomenorum natu-
ralium motus, qui in corpore noſtro ad voluntatem fiunt,
pendent enim a motu muſculorum, qui etiam motu alio
agitantur, in hiſce ſolus motus ex actione immediata men-
tis oriundus, &
nobis omnino ignotus, non eſt Phænome-
non naturale.

Text layer

  • Dictionary

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index