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" This depends upon three suppositions: — first, that all celestial bodies whatsoever have an attraction or gravitating power towards their own centres, whereby they attract not only their own parts and keep them from flying from them, as we may observe... "
Instructions Given in the Drawing School Established by the Dublin Society ... - Page xxviii
by Joseph Fenn - 1769
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Letters Written by Eminent Persons in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth ...

John Walker - English letters - 1813 - 326 pages
...coslestiall bodys whatsoever, have ati " attractive or gravitating power towards their centers, where" by they attract not only their own parts, and keep them " from flying from them, as we may observe the earth to doe, " but that they doe also attract all the other coelestial bodys " that are...
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Letters Written by Eminent Persons in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth ...

John Walker - English letters - 1813 - 1014 pages
...whatsoever, have an " attractive or gravitating power towards their centers, where" by they attract hot only their own parts, and keep them " from flying from them, as we may observe the earth to doe, " but that they doe also attract all the other ccelestial bodys •' that...
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Readings in Natural Philosophy: Or, A Popular Display of the Wonders of ...

Sir Richard Phillips - 1830 - 728 pages
...all celestial bodies whatsoever have an attraction or gravitating power towards their own centres, whereby they attract, not only their own parts, and keep them from flying from them, as we may observe the earth to do ; but also all other celestial bodies that are within the sphere of their activity....
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The Life of Sir Isaac Newton

David Brewster - Mathematics - 1832 - 340 pages
...all celestial bodies whatsoever have an attraction or gravitating power towards their own centres, whereby they attract, not only their own parts, and keep them from flying from them, as we may observe the earth to do, but that they also do attract all the other celestial bodies that are within...
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Lives of Eminent Persons

Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (Great Britain) - Biography - 1833 - 584 pages
...all celestial bodies whatsoever have an attraction or gravitating power towards their own centres, whereby they attract not only their own parts and keep them from flying from them, as we may observe the earth to do, but that they do also attract all the other celestial bodies that are within...
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Lives of eminent persons; consisting of Galileo, Kepler

Lives - 1833 - 588 pages
...all celestial bodies whatsoever have an attraction or gravitating power towards their own centres, whereby they attract not only their own parts and keep them from flying from them, as we may observe the earth to do, but that they do also attract all the other celestial bodies that are within...
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Lives of Eminent Persons: Consisting of Galileo, Kepler, Newton, Mahomet ...

Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (Great Britain) - Biography - 1833 - 584 pages
...all celestial bodies whatsoever have an attraction or gravitating power towards their own centres, whereby they attract not only their own parts and keep them from flying from them, as we may observe the earth to do, but that they do also attract all the other celestial bodies that are within...
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History of natural philosophy from the earliest periods to the present day

B. Powell - 1834 - 420 pages
...That all celestial bodies whatsoever have an atraction or gravitating power towards their own centres, whereby they attract not only their own parts, and keep them from flying from them, as we may observe the earth to do, but that they also do attract all the other celestial bodies that are within...
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The Monthly Review

Books - 1834 - 604 pages
...all celestial bodies whatsoever have an attraction or gravitating power towards their own centres, whereby they attract not only their own parts, and keep them from flying from them, as we may observe the earth to do, but that they also do attract all the other celestial bodies that are within...
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Historical Essay on the First Publication of Sir Isaac Newton's Principia

Stephen Peter Rigaud - Physics - 1838 - 208 pages
...516. iv. 1. has been made, but without suc" tion or gravitating power towards their own centres, " whereby they attract not only their own parts, and " keep them from flying from them, as we may observe " the earth to do, but that they do also attract all the " other celestial bodies that are...
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