98 results
- Books
Marginalia in Newtoni "Principia mathematica" : 1687 / G.W. Leibniz ; editio prima ab E.A. [Emil Alfred] Fellmann.
Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm, Freiherr von, 1646-1716.Date: 1973- Books
A treatise of the system of the world ... / By Sir Isaac Newton. Translated into English [by A. Motte].
Newton, Isaac, 1642-1727.Date: 1731- Books
A treatise of the system of the world ... / By Sir Isaac Newton. Translated into English [by A. Motte].
Newton, Isaac, 1642-1727.Date: 1728- Books
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A treatise of the system of the world. By Sir Isaac Newton. Translated into English.
Newton, Isaac, 1642-1727.Date: M.DCCXXVIII. [1728]- Books
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A treatise of the system of the world. By Sir Isaac Newton. Translated into English.
Newton, Isaac, 1642-1727.Date: MDCCXXXVII. [1737]- Books
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A treatise of the system of the world. By Sir Isaac Newton. Translated into English.
Newton, Isaac, 1642-1727.Date: MDCCXXXI. [1731]- Books
The mathematical principles of natural philosophy / by Sir Isaac Newton ; Translated into English by Andrew Motte. To which are added, Newton's System of the world; A short comment on, and defence of, the Principia, by William Emerson. With The laws of the moon's motion according to gravity. By John Machin.
Newton, Isaac, 1642-1727.Date: 1803- Books
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A view of Sir Isaac Newton's philosophy / [Henry Pemberton].
Pemberton, Henry, 1694-1771.Date: 1728- Books
Newton's Principia : the central argument translations, notes and expanded proofs / Dana Densmore ; translations and illustrations by William H. Donahue.
Newton, Isaac, 1642-1727.Date: [1996, ©1995]- Books
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A view of Sir Isaac Newton's method for comparing the resistance of solids. By Christopher Robinson.
Robinson, Christopher, of London.Date: Printed in the Year MDCCXXXIV. [1784]- Books
An account of Sir Isaac Newton's philosophical discoveries, in four books / By Colin Maclaurin ... Published from the author's manuscript papers, by Patrick Murdoch.
MacLaurin, Colin, 1698-1746.Date: 1748- Books
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An account of Sir Isaac Newton's philosophical discoveries : in four books / by Colin Maclaurin ; Published from the author's manuscript papers, by Patrick Murdoch.
MacLaurin, Colin, 1698-1746.Date: 1775- Books
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An account of Sir Isaac Newton's philosophical discoveries, in four books. By Colin Maclaurin, A. M. Late Fellow of the Royal Society, Professor of Mathematics in the University of Edinburgh, and Secretary to the Philosophical Society there. Published from the Author's Manuscript Papers, By Patrick Murdoch, M. A. and F.R.S.
Maclaurin, Colin, 1698-1746.Date: M.DCC.L. [1750]- Books
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An account of Sir Isaac Newton's philosophical discoveries, in four books. By Colin Maclaurin, A. M. Late Fellow of the Royal Society, Professor of Mathematics in the University of Edinburgh, and Secretary to the Philosophical Society there. Published from the author's manuscript papers, by Patrick Murdoch, M. A. and F. R. S.
Maclaurin, Colin, 1698-1746.Date: M.DCC.XLVIII. [1748]- Books
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An account of Sir Isaac Newton's philosophical discoveries, in four books. By Colin Maclaurin, A. M. Late Fellow of the Royal Society, Professor of Mathematics in the University of Edinburgh, and Secretary to the Philosophical Society there. Published from the author's manuscript papers, by Patrick Murdoch, M. A. and F. R. S.
Maclaurin, Colin, 1698-1746.Date: MDCCLXXV. [1775]- Books
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The general laws of nature and motion: with their application to mechanicks. Also the doctrine of the centripetal forces, and velocities of bodies, describing any of the conick sections. Being a part of the great Mr. Newton's principles. The whole illustrated with variety of useful theorems and problems, and accommodated to the use of the younger mathematicians. By Humphry Ditton.
Ditton, Humphry, 1675-1715.Date: MDCCIX. [1709]- Books
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Astronomy explained upon Sir Isaac Newton's principles / [James Ferguson].
Ferguson, James, 1710-1776.Date: [1794]- Books
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The case of the learned represented according to the merit of the ill progress hitherto made in arts and sciences, chiefly in philosophy, of which the author gives an entire new system: Shewing, I. The cause of gravity and attraction, otherwise speaking, of attraction and repulsion, how and after what manner nature thereby produces all its most important effects, chiefly in respect to the planetary and animal motion; which he shews to be very far from depending either on the Cartesian or Newtonian principles. II. What nature is, and the effects it is capable of; as also the true difference between the effects of God and those of nature, and thereby renders the existence of God and the immortality of the soul absolutely indisputable, even to the most confirmed atheists, and shews that Sir Isaac Newton, instead of having prov'd those most important points, and establish'd natural religion better than ever any philosopher did, Has he and his disciples pretend, he has entirely disprov'd them, and overturn'd both natural and reveal'd religion. III. How and after what manner vice may be suppress'd, and virtue encreased in the world. IV. How arts and sciences may soon be brought to, and continue at their point of perfection, and to establish a sole Christian faith all over the world. The whole grounded upon phn̆omena, well made experiments, and irresistible arguments, contained in two letters to the Royal Society, one relating to mechanics, and the other to philosophy, &c.
Hatzfeld, John Conrad Francis de.Date: 1724- Books
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An essay on Sir Isaac Newton's second law of motion. By the Reverend Mr. Ludlam.
Ludlam, William, 1717-1788.Date: M.DCC.LXXX. [1780]- Books
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An examination of the Newtonian argument for the emptiness of space, and of the resistance of subtile fluids.
Martine, George, 1702-1741.Date: MDCCXL. [1740]- Books
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An account of Sir Isaac Newton's philosophical discoveries : in four books / By Colin Maclaurin. Published from the author's manuscript papers, by Patrick Murdoch.
MacLaurin, Colin, 1698-1746.Date: 1750- Books
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A discourse on comets. Containing, a brief description of the true system of the world, And An Enumeration of all the Discoveries which have been yet made concerning those temporary Appearances, With respect to their Orbits, Forms, Velocity, Magnitudes, Distances, Tails, &c. Particularly that whose Return is expected in this or the following Year. Extracted from the writings of Sir Isaac Newton, and other astronomers. To which is added, the opinion of that illustrious author, concerning the use of comets, the origin of matter; and his definition of the supreme being of the universe. Collected by J. L. Cowley, Mathematician.
Cowley, John Lodge, 1719-1797.Date: MDCCLVII. [1757]- Books
The true theory of the tides, extracted from that admired treatise of Isaac Newton, intitled, Philosophiae naturalis principia mathematica : being a discourse presented with that book to the late King James / by Edmund Halley.
Halley, Edmond, 1656-1742.Date: 1708- Books
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A philosophical enquiry into the nature of gravity.
Philo-sophos.Date: 1726- Books
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A philosophical enquiry into the wonderful coney-warren, lately discovered at Godalmin near Guilford in Surrey: being an account of the birth of seventeen rabbits born of a woman at several Times, and ... still continues in strong Labour, at the Bagnio in Leicester-Fields.
Date: [1726]