Lectures on Natural and Experimental Philosophy: Considered in It's [sic] Present State of Improvement. Describing in a Familiar and Easy Manner, the Principal Phenomena of Nature; and Shewing, that They All Co-operate in Displaying the Goodness, Wisdom, and Power of God, Volume 4R. Hindmarsh, 1794 |
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Pagina 2
... fire is in the midst of the world , and that the earth is one of the heavenly bodies . He afterwards fpeaks of a fet of men , who held a fyftem effentially fimilar to that of the modern Semitychonic . Eudemus , in his history of aftro ...
... fire is in the midst of the world , and that the earth is one of the heavenly bodies . He afterwards fpeaks of a fet of men , who held a fyftem effentially fimilar to that of the modern Semitychonic . Eudemus , in his history of aftro ...
Pagina 231
... fire , or luminous matter . On the 20th it burnt with greater violence , and might be computed to be about three miles in diameter : the eruption refembled a piece of burn- ing charcoal , covered by a thin coat of white afhes ; all the ...
... fire , or luminous matter . On the 20th it burnt with greater violence , and might be computed to be about three miles in diameter : the eruption refembled a piece of burn- ing charcoal , covered by a thin coat of white afhes ; all the ...
Pagina 247
... fire ? In a word , every experiment , every obfervation proves , that in all cafes where diftant bodies are found to affect each other , there is al- ways fomething to mediate , whether we do or do not perceive it ; and when this ...
... fire ? In a word , every experiment , every obfervation proves , that in all cafes where diftant bodies are found to affect each other , there is al- ways fomething to mediate , whether we do or do not perceive it ; and when this ...
Pagina 249
... fire ; light as it illuminates and ren- ders objects visible , fire as it burns and confumes what it acts upon . Thus you find the fluid etherial matter of the heavens acting by impulfe on the folid matter of the earth , being ...
... fire ; light as it illuminates and ren- ders objects visible , fire as it burns and confumes what it acts upon . Thus you find the fluid etherial matter of the heavens acting by impulfe on the folid matter of the earth , being ...
Pagina 255
... fire , which are the caufes thereof , fubfift in the world . In this experiment the caufes are not artificial and violent , as in the central force machine , but fuch as are fupplied by nature itself , in it's regular mode of action ...
... fire , which are the caufes thereof , fubfift in the world . In this experiment the caufes are not artificial and violent , as in the central force machine , but fuch as are fupplied by nature itself , in it's regular mode of action ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Lectures on Natural and Experimental Philosophy, Considered in It's Present ... George Adams Volledige weergave - 1794 |
Lectures on Natural and Experimental Philosophy: Considered in It ..., Volume 4 George Adams Volledige weergave - 1794 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
alfo appear atmoſphere axis ball barometer becauſe body cafe caufe cauſe circle clouds conductor confequently confiderable courfe defcribe degrees diameter difcharge difcovered diftance diurnal motion earth ecliptic electricity electrified equator faid fame fatellites feconds feems feen feven fhadow fhall fhew fhould fide fiderial figns filk fire firft fituation fixed ftars fluid fmall folar fome fometimes fouth fpark fphere ftate fubftances fuch fun's fuperior fuppofed furface fyftem glafs globe gravity greateſt heat heavens hemifphere hygrometer inches increaſe inferior planets inftrument interfects itſelf Jupiter lefs light magnet meaſure mercury moft moon moon's moſt motion move muſt nature neceffary needle nodes obferved occafioned oppofite orbit paffes pafs parallax phenomena philofophers planet pofition poles prefent rain reafon refpect rife round the fun Saturn ſmall ſpace ſtars teleſcope thefe theſe thofe thoſe tion tricity tube univerfe vapour Venus vitreous weft whofe wire
Populaire passages
Pagina 80 - ... the prince of the lights of heaven, which now as a giant doth run his unwearied course, should as it were through a languishing faintness begin to stand and to rest himself...
Pagina 81 - ... should wander from her beaten way, the times and seasons of the year blend themselves by disordered and confused mixture, the winds breathe out their last gasp, the clouds yield no rain, the earth be defeated of heavenly influence, the fruits of the earth pine away as children at the withered breasts of their mother no longer able to yield them relief; what would become of man himself, whom these things now do all serve ? See we not plainly that obedience of creatures unto the law of nature is...
Pagina 467 - Hauing made many and diuers compasses, and using alwaiea to finish and end them before I touched the needle, I found continually, that after I had touched the yrons with the stone, that presently the north point thereof would bend, or decline, downwards under the horizon in some...
Pagina 542 - Firft, they fee, as a prelude to the enftiing havock, whole fields of fugar canes whirled into the air, and fcattered over the face of the country. The ftrongeft trees of the foreft are torn up by the roots, and driven about like ftubble; their wind-mills are fwept away...
Pagina 221 - ... and calling this a sidereal stratum, an eye placed somewhere within it will see all the stars in the direction of the planes of the stratum projected into a great circle, which will appear lucid on account of the accumulation of the stars, while the rest of the heavens at the sides will only seem to be scattered over with constellations, more or less crowded, according to the distance of the planes or number of stars contained in the thickness or sides of the stratum.
Pagina 294 - The plain argument for the existence of the Deity, obvious to " all, and carrying irresistible conviction with it, is, From the evident " contrivance and fitness of things for one another, which we meet " with throughout all parts of the universe.
Pagina 166 - If one hour were like another; if the passage of the sun did not show that the day is wasting; if the change of seasons did not impress upon us the flight of the year; quantities of duration equal to days and years would glide unobserved. If the parts of time were not variously coloured, we should never discern their departure or succession, but should live thoughtless of the past, and careless of the future...
Pagina 72 - ... the inclination of the earth's axis to the plane of the ecliptic, and more remotely upon the variations in that inclination known as precession and nutation.
Pagina 466 - ... became stationary for some time ; after that, the absolute variation westward was decreasing, and the needle came back again to its former situation, or near it, in the night, or by the next morning. The diurnal variation is irregular when the needle moves slowly eastward in the latter part of the morning, or westward in the latter part of the afternoon ; also when it moves much either way after night, or suddenly both ways within a short time.
Pagina 166 - He that is carried forward, however swiftly, by a motion equable and easy, perceives not the change of place but by the variation of objects.