Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chronology
- Further reading
- Note on texts and translations
- I Correspondence with Robert Boyle [1679]
- II De Gravitatione [probably before 1685]
- III The Principia [1687, first edition]
- IV Correspondence with Richard Bentley [1692–3]
- V Correspondence with Leibniz [1693 and 1712]
- VI Correspondence with Roger Cotes [1713]
- VII An Account of the Book Entitled Commercium Epistolicum [1715]
- VIII Queries to the Opticks [1721]
- Index
- CAMBRIDGE TEXTS IN THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY
VIII - Queries to the Opticks [1721]
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chronology
- Further reading
- Note on texts and translations
- I Correspondence with Robert Boyle [1679]
- II De Gravitatione [probably before 1685]
- III The Principia [1687, first edition]
- IV Correspondence with Richard Bentley [1692–3]
- V Correspondence with Leibniz [1693 and 1712]
- VI Correspondence with Roger Cotes [1713]
- VII An Account of the Book Entitled Commercium Epistolicum [1715]
- VIII Queries to the Opticks [1721]
- Index
- CAMBRIDGE TEXTS IN THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY
Summary
Query 28
[…] And against filling the heavens with fluid mediums, unless they be exceeding rare, a great objection arises from the regular and very lasting motions of the planets and comets in all manner of courses through the heavens. For thence it is manifest, that the heavens are void of all sensible resistance, and by consequence of all sensible matter.
For the resisting power of fluid mediums arises partly from the attrition of the parts of the medium, and partly from the vis inertiae [force of inertia] of the matter. That part of the resistance of a spherical body which arises from the attrition of the parts of the medium is very nearly as the diameter, or at the most, as the factum [factor] of the diameter, and the velocity of the spherical body together. And that part of the resistance which arises from the vis inertiae of the matter, is as the square of that factum. And by this difference the two sorts of resistance may be distinguished from one another in any medium; and these being distinguished, it will be found that almost all the resistance of bodies of a competent magnitude moving in air, water, quicksilver, and such like fluids with a competent velocity, arises from the vis inertiae of the parts of the fluid.
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- Isaac Newton: Philosophical Writings , pp. 127 - 140Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004