Instructions Given in the Drawing School Established by the Dublin Society: Course of mathematicks. System of the physical world. System of the moral world. Plan of the military art. Plan of the marcantile arts. Plan of naval art. Plan of mechanic arts. The elements of EuclidA. M'Culloch, 1769 - Mathematics |
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Page vi
... Force alone ; it is by it that the Theory of curve Lines have been unfold- ed , and have been distributed in different Orders , Classes , Genders , and Species , which as in an Arsenal , where Arms are properly arrang- ed , puts us in a ...
... Force alone ; it is by it that the Theory of curve Lines have been unfold- ed , and have been distributed in different Orders , Classes , Genders , and Species , which as in an Arsenal , where Arms are properly arrang- ed , puts us in a ...
Page xxvii
... Force which makes them describe this Curve ; in the Preface to his Commentaries on the Planet Mars , we discover the first Hints of the attractive Power ; he even goes so far as to say , that the Flux and Reflux of the Sea , arifes from ...
... Force which makes them describe this Curve ; in the Preface to his Commentaries on the Planet Mars , we discover the first Hints of the attractive Power ; he even goes so far as to say , that the Flux and Reflux of the Sea , arifes from ...
Page xxx
... Force , which all Matter is endued with ; he explains in the fourth what is to be understood by active Force ; he defines in the fifth the centripetal Force , and lays down in the fixth , seventh and eighth the Manner of measuring its ...
... Force , which all Matter is endued with ; he explains in the fourth what is to be understood by active Force ; he defines in the fifth the centripetal Force , and lays down in the fixth , seventh and eighth the Manner of measuring its ...
Page xxxi
... Force , by which Bodies tend meant bythe towards a Center , without pretending to assign the Cause of this Tendency . tion . T Principal Phenomena of the System of the World . I. HE Knowledge of the Disposition and Motions of the ...
... Force , by which Bodies tend meant bythe towards a Center , without pretending to assign the Cause of this Tendency . tion . T Principal Phenomena of the System of the World . I. HE Knowledge of the Disposition and Motions of the ...
Page xxxiv
... Force is exerted in drawing them off from the tangent ( i ) ; now the Orbits of Mercury and Venus , in fome Parts ... FORCE carries its Definition along with it , for it signiftes no more than that Force which makes a Body tend to ...
... Force is exerted in drawing them off from the tangent ( i ) ; now the Orbits of Mercury and Venus , in fome Parts ... FORCE carries its Definition along with it , for it signiftes no more than that Force which makes a Body tend to ...
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Common terms and phrases
ABCD alfo alſo altitude arch Axis bafe baſe becauſe Bodies Cauſe chords circle Comet cone Conſequently cylinder demonſtrated DEMONSTRATION deſcribe diameter Diſtance draw the ſtraight Earth ECAUSE Ecliptic equal Equator equiangular equimultiples fame manner fame multiple fides AC fimilar fince firſt folid Force given Glaſs Gravity Hypothefis impoſſible interfect inverſe Jupiter leaſt leſs Likewife magnitude Meridian Moon moſt Motion neceſſary Newton Nodes Number Obſervations oppoſite Orbit parallelepiped parallelogram paſs paſſes thro Perihelion plane plle Poſition Prep priſm produced proportional PROPOSITION pyramid Quadratures ratio Rays rectilineal figure reſpect Rgle right angles ſame Saturn ſecond ſegment ſenſible ſerve ſhall ſhewing ſhewn ſhould ſide ſmall ſphere ſquare ſuch ſuppoſed Syſtem Tangent THEOREM theſe Theſis thoſe Tides tion triangle true Anomaly Wherefore whoſe
Popular passages
Page 8 - Let it be granted that a straight line may be drawn from any one point to any other point.
Page 4 - A circle is a plane figure contained by one line, which is called the circumference, and is such that all straight lines drawn from a certain point within the figure to the circumference, are equal to one another.
Page 164 - When of the equimultiples of four magnitudes (taken as in the fifth definition), the multiple of the first is greater than that of the second, but the multiple of the third is not greater than the multiple of the fourth ; then the first is said to have to the second a greater ratio than the third magnitude has to the fourth : and, on the contrary, the third is said to have to the fourth a less ratio than the first has to the second. VIII. " Analogy, or proportion, is the similitude of ratios.
Page 165 - When four magnitudes are continual proportionals, the first is said to have to the fourth the triplicate ratio of that which it has to the second, and so on, quadruplicate, &c., increasing the denomination still by unity, in any number of proportionals.
Page 241 - The circumference of every circle is supposed to be divided into 360 equal parts, called degrees ; and each degree into 60 equal parts, called minutes ; and each minute into 60 equal parts, called seconds ; and these into thirds, etc.
Page xxviii - ... bodies that are within the sphere of their activity, and consequently, that not only the sun and moon have .an influence upon the body and motion of the earth, and the earth upon them, but that...
Page 165 - When three magnitudes are proportionals, the first is said to have to the third the duplicate ratio of that which it has to the second.
Page 226 - Equiangular parallelograms have to one another the ratio which is compounded of the ratios of their sides.
Page xiv - Oh! qui m'arrêtera sous vos sombres asiles? Quand pourront les neuf Sœurs, loin des cours et des villes, M'occuper tout entier, et m'apprendre des deux Les divers mouvements inconnus à nos yeux, Les noms et les vertus de ces clartés errantes Par qui sont nos destins et nos mœurs différentes.
Page xxviii - Now what these several degrees are I have not yet experimentally verified; but it is a notion which, if fully prosecuted, as it ought to be, will mightily assist the astronomers to reduce all the celestial motions to a certain rule, which I doubt will never be done true without it.