Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PRELIMINARY DISSERTATION
- PHYSICAL ASTRONOMY
- BOOK I
- BOOK II
- CHAPTER I PROGRESS OF ASTRONOMY
- CHAPTER II ON THE LAW OF UNIVERSAL GRAVITATION, DEDUCED FROM OBSERVATION
- CHAPTER III ON THE DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS OF THE MOTION OF A SYSTEM OF BODIES, SUBJECTED TO THEIR MUTUAL ATTRACTIONS
- CHAPTER IV ON THE ELLIPTICAL MOTION OF THE PLANETS
- CHAPTER V THEORY OF THE PERTURBATIONS OF THE PLANETS
- CHAPTER VI SECULAR INEQUALITIES IN THE ELEMENTS OF THE ORBITS
- CHAPTER VII PERIODIC VARIATIONS IN THE ELEMENTS OF THE PLANETARY ORBITS
- CHAPTER VIII PERTURBATIONS OF THE PLANETS IN LONGITUDE, LATITUDE, AND DISTANCE
- CHAPTER IX SECOND METHOD OF FINDING THE PERTURBATIONS OF A PLANET IN LONGITUDE, LATITUDE, AND DISTANCE
- CHAPTER X THE THEORY OF JUPITER AND SATURN
- CHAPTER XI INEQUALITIES OCCASIONED BY THE ELLIPTICITY OF THE SUN
- CHAPTER XII PERTURBATIONS IN THE MOTIONS OF THE PLANETS OCCASIONED BY THE ACTION OF THEIR SATELLITES
- CHAPTER XIII DATA FOR COMPUTING THE CELESTIAL MOTIONS
- CHAPTER XIV NUMERICAL VALUES OF THE PERTURBATIONS OF JUPITER
- BOOK III
- BOOK IV
- Index
- Errata
CHAPTER I - PROGRESS OF ASTRONOMY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- PRELIMINARY DISSERTATION
- PHYSICAL ASTRONOMY
- BOOK I
- BOOK II
- CHAPTER I PROGRESS OF ASTRONOMY
- CHAPTER II ON THE LAW OF UNIVERSAL GRAVITATION, DEDUCED FROM OBSERVATION
- CHAPTER III ON THE DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS OF THE MOTION OF A SYSTEM OF BODIES, SUBJECTED TO THEIR MUTUAL ATTRACTIONS
- CHAPTER IV ON THE ELLIPTICAL MOTION OF THE PLANETS
- CHAPTER V THEORY OF THE PERTURBATIONS OF THE PLANETS
- CHAPTER VI SECULAR INEQUALITIES IN THE ELEMENTS OF THE ORBITS
- CHAPTER VII PERIODIC VARIATIONS IN THE ELEMENTS OF THE PLANETARY ORBITS
- CHAPTER VIII PERTURBATIONS OF THE PLANETS IN LONGITUDE, LATITUDE, AND DISTANCE
- CHAPTER IX SECOND METHOD OF FINDING THE PERTURBATIONS OF A PLANET IN LONGITUDE, LATITUDE, AND DISTANCE
- CHAPTER X THE THEORY OF JUPITER AND SATURN
- CHAPTER XI INEQUALITIES OCCASIONED BY THE ELLIPTICITY OF THE SUN
- CHAPTER XII PERTURBATIONS IN THE MOTIONS OF THE PLANETS OCCASIONED BY THE ACTION OF THEIR SATELLITES
- CHAPTER XIII DATA FOR COMPUTING THE CELESTIAL MOTIONS
- CHAPTER XIV NUMERICAL VALUES OF THE PERTURBATIONS OF JUPITER
- BOOK III
- BOOK IV
- Index
- Errata
Summary
308. The science of astronomy was cultivated very early, and many important observations and discoveries were made, yet no accurate inferences leading to the true system of the world were drawn from them, until a much later period. It is not surprising, that men deceived by appearances, occasioned by the rotation of the earth, should have been slow to believe the diurnal motion of the heavens to be an illusion ; but the absurd consequence which the contrary hypothesis involves, convinced minds of a higher order, that the apparent could not be the true system of nature.
Many of the ancients were aware of the double motion of the earth ; a system which Copernicus adopted, and confirmed by the comparison of a series of observations, that had been accumulating for ages ; from these he inferred that the precession of the equinoxes might be attributed to a motion in the earth's axis. He ascertained the revolution of the planets round the sun, and determined the dimensions of their orbits, till then unknown. Although he proved these truths by evidence which has ultimately dissipated the erroneous theories resulting from the illusions of the senses, and overcame the objections which were opposed to them by ignorance of the laws of mechanics, this great philosopher, constrained by the prejudices of the times, only dared to publish the truths he had discovered, under the less objectionable name of hypotheses.
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- Mechanism of the Heavens , pp. 145 - 151Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1831