 
AXIOMS, OR LAWS
OF MOTION.
Every body perseveres in its state
of rest, or of uniform motion in a right line, unless it is compelled to
change that state by forces impressed thereon.
PROJECTILES persevere in their motions, so far as they
are not retarded by the resistance of the air, or impelled downwards by
the force of gravity. A top, whose parts by their cohesion are
perpetually drawn aside from rectilinear motions, does not cease its
rotation, otherwise than as it is retarded by the air. The greater
bodies of the planets and comets, meeting with less resistance in more
free spaces, preserve their motions both progressive and circular for a
much longer time.
The alteration of motion is ever
proportional to the motive force impressed; and is made in the direction
of the right line in which that force is impressed.
If any force generates a motion, a double force will
generate double the motion, a triple force triple the motion, whether
that force be impressed altogether and at once, or gradually and
successively. And this motion (being always directed the same way with
the generating force), if the body moved before, is added to or
subtracted from the former motion, according as they directly conspire
with or are directly contrary to each other; or obliquely joined, when
they are oblique, so as to produce a new motion compounded from the
determination of both.
To every action there is always
opposed an equal reaction; or the mutual actions of two bodies upon each
other are always equal, and directed to contrary parts.
Whatever draws or presses another is as much drawn or
pressed by that other. If you press a stone with your finger, the finger
is also pressed by the stone. If a horse draws a stone tied to a rope,
the horse (if I may so say) will be equally drawn back towards the
stone: for the distended rope, by the same endeavour to relax or unbend
itself, will draw the horse as much towards the stone as it does the
stone towards the horse, and will obstruct the progress of the one as
much as it advances that of the other.
If a body impinges upon another, and by its force
change the motion of the other, that body also (became of the quality
of, the mutual pressure) will undergo an equal change, in its own
motion, towards the contrary part. The changes made by these actions are
equal, not in the velocities but in the motions of bodies; that is to
say, if the bodies are not hindered by any other impediments. For,
because the motions are equally changed, the changes of the velocities
made towards contrary parts are reciprocally proportional to the bodies.
This law takes place also in attractions, as will be proved in the next
scholium.
A body by two forces conjoined will
describe the diagonal of a parallelogram, in the same time that it would
describe the sides, by those forces apart.

If a body in a given time, by the force M impressed
apart in the place A, should with an uniform motion be carried from A to
B; and by the force N impressed apart in the same place, should be
carried from A to C; complete the parallelogram ABCD, and, by both
forces acting together, it will in the same time be carried in the
diagonal from A to D. For since the force N acts in the direction of the
line AC, parallel to BD, this force (by the second
law) will not at all alter the velocity generated by the other force
M, by which the body is carried towards the line BD. The body therefore
will arrive at the line BD in the same time, whether the force N be
impressed or not; and therefore at the end of that time it will be found
somewhere in the line BD. By the same argument, at the end of the same
time it will be found somewhere in the line CD. Therefore it will be
found in the point D, where both lines meet. But it will move in a right
line from A to D, by Law I.
And hence is explained the
composition of any one direct force AD, out of any two oblique forces AC
and CD; and, on the contrary, the resolution of any one direct force AD
into two oblique forces AC and CD: which composition and resolution are
abundantly confirmed from mechanics.

As if the unequal radii OM and ON drawn from the
centre O of any wheel, should sustain the weights A and P by the cords
MA and NP; and the forces of those weights to move the wheel were
required. Through the centre O draw the right line KOL, meeting the
cords perpendicularly in K and L; and from the centre O, with OL the
greater of the distances OK and OL, describe a circle, meeting the cord
MA in D: and drawing OD, make AC parallel and DC perpendicular thereto.
Now, it being indifferent whether the points K, L, D, of the cords be
fixed to the plane of the wheel or not, the weights will have the same
effect whether they are suspended from the points K and L, or from D and
L. Let the whole force of the weight A be represented by the line AD,
and let it be resolved into the forces AC and CD; of which the force AC,
drawing the radius OD directly from the centre, will have no effect to
move the wheel: but the other force DC, drawing the radius DO
perpendicularly, will have the same effect as if it drew perpendicularly
the radius OL equal to OD; that is, it will have the same effect as the
weight P, if that weight is to the weight A as the force DC is to the
force DA; that is (because of the similar triangles ADC, DOK), as OK to
OD or OL. Therefore the weights A and P, which are reciprocally as the
radii OK and OL that lie in the same right line, will be equipollent,
and so remain in equilibrio; which is the well known property of the
balance, the lever, and the wheel. If either weight is greater than in
this ratio, its force to move the wheel will be so much greater.
If the weight p, equal to the weight P, is
partly suspended by the cord Np, partly sustained by the oblique
plane pG; draw pH, NH, the former perpendicular to the
horizon, the latter to the plane pG; and if the force of the
weight p tending downwards is represented by the line pH,
it may be resolved into the forces pN, HN. If there was any plane
pQ, perpendicular to the cord pN, cutting the other plane
pG in a line parallel to the horizon, and the weight p was
supported only by those planes pQ, pG, it would press
those planes perpendicularly with the forces pN, HN; to wit, the
plane pQ with the force pN, and the plane pG with
the force HN. And therefore if the plane pQ was taken away, so
that the weight might stretch the cord, because the cord, now sustaining
the weight, supplies the place of the plane that was removed, it will be
strained by the same force pN which pressed upon the plane
before. Therefore, the tension of this oblique cord pN will be to
that of the other perpendicular cord PN as pN to pH. And
therefore if the weight p is to the weight A in a ratio
compounded of the reciprocal ratio of the least distances of the cords
PN, AM, from the centre of the wheel, and of the direct ratio of pH
to pN, the weights will have the effect towards moving the wheel
and will therefore sustain each other; as any one may find by
experiment.
But the weight p pressing upon those two
oblique planes, may be considered as a wedge between the two internal
surfaces of a body split by it; and hence the forces of the wedge and
the mallet may be determined; for because the force with which the
weight p presses the plane pQ is to the force with which
the same, whether by its own gravity, or by the blow of a mallet, is
impelled in the direction of the line pH towards both the planes,
as pN to pH; and to the force with which it presses the
other plane pG, as pN to NH. And thus the force of
the screw may be deduced from a like resolution of forces; it being no
other than a wedge impelled with the force of a lever. Therefore the use
of this Corollary spreads far and wide, and by that diffusive extent the
truth thereof is farther confirmed. For on what has been said depends
the whole doctrine of mechanics variously demonstrated by different
authors. For from hence are easily deduced the forces of machines, which
are compounded of wheels, pullies, levers, cords, and weights, ascending
directly or obliquely, and other mechanical powers; as also the force of
the tendons to move the bones of animals.
The quantity of motion, which is
collected by taking the sum of the motions directed towards the same
parts, and the difference of those that are directed to contrary parts,
suffers no change from the action of bodies among themselves.
For action and its opposite re-action are equal, by
Law
III, and therefore, by
Law II,
they produce in the motions equal changes towards opposite parts.
Therefore if the motions are directed towards the same parts, whatever
is added to the motion of the preceding body will be subducted from the
motion of that which follows; so that the sum will be the same as
before. If the bodies meet, with contrary motions, there will be an
equal deduction from the motions of both; and therefore the difference
of the motions directed towards opposite parts will remain the same.
Thus if a spherical body A with two parts of velocity,
is triple of a spherical body B which follows in the same right line
with ten parts of velocity, the motion of A will be to that of B as 6 to
10. Suppose, then, their motions to be of 6 parts and of 10 parts, and
the sum will be 16 parts. Therefore, upon the meeting of the bodies, if
A acquire 3, 4, or 5 parts of motion, B will lose as many; and therefore
after reflexion A will proceed with 9, 10, or 11 parts, and B with 7, 6,
or 5 parts; the sum remaining always of 16 parts as before. If the body
A acquire 9, 10, 11, or 12 parts of motion, and therefore after meeting
proceed with 15, 16, 17, or 18 parts, the body B, losing so many parts
as A has got, will either proceed with 1 part, having lost 9, or stop
and remain at rest, as having lost its whole progressive motion of 10
parts: or it will go back with 1 part, having not only lost its whole
motion, but (if I may so say) one part more; or it will go back with 2
parts, because a progressive motion of 12 parts is taken off. And so the
sums of the conspiring motions 15+1, or 16+0, and the differences of the
contrary motions 17-1 and 18-2, will always be equal to 16 parts, as
they were before the meeting and reflexion of the bodies. But the
motions being known with which the bodies proceed after reflexion, the
velocity of either will be also known, by taking the velocity after to
the velocity before reflexion, as the motion after is to the motion
before. As in the last case, where the motion of the body A was of 6
parts before reflexion and of 18 parts after, and the velocity was of 2
parts before reflexion, the velocity thereof after reflexion will be
found to be of 6 parts; by saying, as the 6 parts of motion, before to
18 parts after, so are 2 parts of velocity before reflexion to 6 parts
after.
But if the bodies are either not spherical, or, moving
in different right lines, impinge obliquely one upon the other, and
their motions after reflexion are required, in those cases we are first
to determine the position of the plane that touches the concurring
bodies in the point of concourse; the. The motion of each body (by Corol.
II) is to be resolved into two, one perpendicular to that plane, and
the other parallel to it. This done, because the bodies act upon each
other in the direction of a line perpendicular to this plane, the
parallel motions are to be retained the same after reflexion as before;
and to the perpendicular motions we are to assign equal changes towards
the contrary parts; in such manner that the sum of the conspiring and
the difference of the contrary motions may remain the same as before.
From such kind of reflexions also sometimes arise the circular motions
of bodies about their own centres. But these are cases which I do not
consider in what follows; and it would be too tedious to demonstrate
every particular that relates to this subject.
The common centre of gravity of two
or more bodies does not alter its state of motion or rest by the actions
of the bodies among themselves; and therefore the common centre of
gravity of all bodies acting upon each other (excluding outward actions
and impediments) is either at rest, or moves uniformly in a right line.
For if two points proceed with an uniform motion in
right lines, and their distance be divided in a given ratio, the
dividing point will be either at rest, or proceed uniformly in a right
line. This is demonstrated hereafter in Lem. XXIII and its Corol., when
the points are moved in the same plane; and by a like way of arguing, it
may be demonstrated when the points are not moved in the same plane.
Therefore if any number of bodies move uniformly in right lines, the
common centre of gravity of any two of them is either at rest, or
proceeds uniformly in a right line; because the line which connects the
centres of those two bodies so moving is divided at that common centre
in a given ratio. In like manner the common centre of those two and that
of a third body will be either at rest or moving uniformly in a right
line because at that centre the distance between the common centre of
the two bodies, and the centre of this last, is divided in a given
ratio. In like manner the common centre of these three, and of a forth
body, is either at rest, or moves uniformly in a right line; because the
distance between the common centre of the three bodies, and the centre
of the fourth is there also divided in a given ratio, and so on in
infinitum. Therefore, in a system of bodies where there is neither
any mutual action among themselves, nor any foreign force impressed upon
them from without, and which consequently move uniformly in right lines,
the common centre of gravity of them all is either at rest or moves
uniformly forward in a right line.
Moreover, in a system of two bodies mutually acting
upon each other, the distances between their centres and the common
centre of gravity of both are reciprocally as the bodies, the relative
motions of those bodies, whether of approaching to or of receding from
that centre, will be equal among themselves. Therefore since the changes
which happen to motions are equal and directed to contrary parts, the
common centre of those bodies, by their mutual action between
themselves, is neither promoted nor retarded, nor suffers any change as
to its state of motion or rest. But in a system of several bodies,
because the common centre of gravity of any two acting mutually upon
each other suffers no change in its state by that action; and much less
the common centre of gravity of the others with which that action does
not intervene; but the distance between those two centres is divided by
the common centre of gravity of all the bodies into parts reciprocally
proportional to the total sums of those bodies whose centres they are;
and therefore while those two centres retain their state of motion or
rest, the common centre of all does also retain its state: it is
manifest that the common centre of all never suffers any change in the
state of its motion or rest from the actions of any two bodies between
themselves. But in such a system all the actions of the bodies among
themselves either happen between two bodies, or are composed of actions
interchanged between some two bodies; and therefore they do never
produce any alteration in the common centre of all as to its state of
motion or rest. Wherefore since that centre, when the bodies do not act
mutually one upon another, either is at rest or moves uniformly forward
in some right line, it will, notwithstanding the mutual actions of the
bodies among themselves, always persevere in its state, either of rest,
or of proceeding uniformly in a right line, unless it is forced out of
this state by the action of some power impressed from without upon the
whole system. And therefore the same law takes place in a system
consisting of many bodies as in one single body, with regard to their
persevering in their state of motion or of rest. For the progressive
motion, whether of one single body, or of a whole system of bodies, is
always to be estimated from the motion of the centre of gravity.
The motions of bodies included in a
given space are the same among themselves, whether that space is at
rest, or moves uniformly forwards in a right line without any circular
motion.
For the differences of the motions tending towards the
same parts, and the sums of those that tend towards contrary parts, are,
at first (by supposition), in both cases the same; and it is from those
sums and differences that the collisions and impulses do arise with
which the bodies mutually impinge one upon another. Wherefore (by
Law II),
the effects of those collisions will be equal in both cases; and
therefore the mutual motions of the bodies among themselves in the one
case will remain equal to the mutual motions of the bodies among
themselves in the other. A clear proof of which we have from the
experiment of a ship; where all motions happen after the same manner,
whether the ship is at rest, or is carried uniformly forwards in a right
line.
If bodies, any how moved among
themselves, are urged in the direction of parallel lines by equal
accelerative forces, they will all continue to move among themselves,
after the same manner as if they had been urged by no such forces.
For these forces acting equally (with respect to the
quantities of the bodies to be moved), and in the direction of parallel
lines, will (by
Law II)
move all the bodies equally (as to velocity), and therefore will never
produce any change in the positions or motions of the bodies among
themselves.
Hitherto I have laid down such principles as have been
received by mathematicians, and are confirmed by abundance of
experiment. By the
first
two Laws and the
first
two Corollaries, Galileo discovered that the descent of bodies
observed the duplicate ratio of the time, and that the motion of
projectiles was in the curve of a parabola; experience agreeing with
both, unless so far as these motions are a little retarded by the
resistance of the air. When a body is falling, the uniform force of its
gravity acting equally, impresses, in equal particles of time, equal
forces upon that body, and therefore generates equal velocities; and in
the whole time impresses a whole force, and generates a whole velocity
proportional to the time. And the spaces described in proportional times
are as the velocities and the times conjunctly; that is, in a duplicate
ratio of the times. And when a body is thrown upwards, its uniform
gravity impresses forces and takes off velocities proportional to the
times; and the times of ascending to the greatest heights are as the
velocities to be taken off, and those heights are as the velocities and
the times conjunctly, or in the duplicate ratio of the velocities. And
if a body be projected in any direction, the motion arising from its
projection as compounded with the motion arising from its gravity.

As if the body A by its motion of
projection alone could describe in a given time the right line AB, and
with its motion of falling alone could describe in the same time the
altitude AC; complete the parallelogram ABDC, and the body by that
compounded motion will at the end of the time be found in the place D;
and the curve line AED, which that body describes, will be a parabola,
to which the right line AB will be a tangent in A; and whose ordinate BD
will be as the square of the line AB. On the same Laws and Corollaries
depend those things which have been demonstrated concerning the times of
the vibration of pendulums, and are confirmed by the daily experiments
of pendulum clocks. By the same, together with the third
Law, Sir Christ. Wren, Dr. Wallis, and Mr. Huygens, the greatest
geometers of our times, did severally determine the rules of the
congress and reflexion of hard bodies, and much about the same time
communicated their discoveries to the Royal Society, exactly agreeing
among themselves as to those rules. Dr. Wallis, indeed, was something
more early in the publication; then followed Sir Christopher Wren, and,
lastly, Mr. Huygens. But Sir Christopher Wren confirmed the truth of the
thing before the Royal Society by the experiment of pendulums, which Mr.
Mariotte soon after thought fit to explain in a treatise entirely upon
that subject. But to bring this experiment to an accurate agreement with
the theory, we are to have a due regard as well to the resistance of the
air as to the elastic force of the concurring bodies.

Let the spherical bodies A, B be suspended by the
parallel and equal strings AC, BD, from the centres C, D. About these
centres, with those intervals, describe the semicircles EAF, GBH,
bisected by the radii CA, DB. Bring the body A to any point R of the arc
EAF, and (withdrawing the body B) let it go from thence, and after one
oscillation suppose it to return to the point V: then RV will be the
retardation arising from the resistance of the air. Of this RV let ST be
a fourth part, situated in the middle, to wit, so as RS and TV may be
equal, and RS may be to ST as 3 to 2 then will ST represent very nearly
the retardation during the descent from S to A. Restore the body B to
its place: and, supposing the body A to be let fall from the point S,
the velocity thereof in the place of reflexion A, without sensible error
will be the same as if it had descended in vacuo from the point
T. Upon which account this velocity may be represented by the chord of
the arc TA. For it is a proposition well known to geometers, that the
velocity of a pendulous body in the lowest point is as the chord of the
arc which it has described in its descent. After reflexion, suppose the
body A comes to the place s, and the body B to the place k.
Withdraw the body B, and find the place v, from which if the body
A, being let go, should after one oscillation return to the place r,
st may be fourth part of rv, so placed in the middle
thereof as to leave rs equal to tv, and let the chord of
the arc tA represent the velocity which the body A had in the
place A immediately after reflexion. For t will be the true and
correct place to which the body A should have ascended, if the
resistance of the air had been taken off. In the same way we are to
correct the place k to which the body B ascends, by finding the
place l to which it should have ascended in vacuo. And
thus everything may be subjected to experiment, in the same manner as if
we were really placed in vacuo. These things being done, we are
to take the product (if I may so say) of the body A, by the chord of the
arc TA (which represents its velocity), that we may have its motion in
the place A immediately before reflexion; and then by the chord of the
arc tA, that we may have its motion in the place A immediately
after reflexion. And so we are to take the product of the body B by the
chord of the arc Bl, that we may have the motion of the same
immediately after reflexion. And in like manner, when two bodies are let
go together from different places, we are to find the motion of each, as
well before as after reflexion; and then we may compare the motions
between themselves, and collect the effects of the reflexion. Thus
trying the thing with pendulums of ten feet, in unequal as well as equal
bodies, and making the bodies to concur after a descent through large
spaces, as of 8, 12, or 16 feet, I found always, without an error of 3
inches, that when the bodies concurred together directly, equal changes
towards the contrary parts were produced in their motions, and, of
consequence, that the action and reaction were always equal. As if the
body A impinged upon the body B at rest with 9 parts of motion, and
losing 7, proceeded after reflexion with 2, the body B was carried
backwards with those 7 parts. If the bodies concurred with contrary
motions, A with twelve parts of motion, and B with six, then if A
receded with 2, B receded with 8; to wit, with a deduction of 14 parts
of motion on each side. For from the motion of A subducting twelve
parts, nothing will remain; but subducting 2 parts more, a motion will
be generated of 2 parts towards the contrary way; and so, from the
motion of the body B of 6 parts, subducting 14 parts, a motion is
generated of 8 parts towards the contrary way. But if the bodies were
made both to move towards the same way, A, the swifter, with 14 parts of
motion, B, the slower, with 5, and after reflexion A went on with 5, B
likewise went on with 14 parts; 9 parts being transferred from A to B.
And so in other cases. By the congress and collision of bodies, the
quantity of motion, collected from the sum of the motions directed
towards the same way, or from the difference of those that were directed
towards contrary ways, was ever changed. For the error of an inch or two
in measures may be easily ascribed to the difficulty of executing
everything with accuracy. It was not easy to let go the two pendulums so
exactly together that the bodies should impinge one upon the other in
the lowermost place AB; nor to mark the places s and k, to
which the bodies ascended after congress. Nay, and some errors, too,
might have happened from the unequal density of the parts of the
pendulous bodies themselves, and from the irregularity of the texture
proceeding from other causes.
But to prevent an objection that may perhaps be
alledged against the rule, for the proof of which this experiment was
made, as if this rule did suppose that the bodies were either absolutely
hard, or at least perfectly elastic (whereas no such bodies are to be
found in nature), I must add, that the experiments we have been
describing, by no means depending upon that quality of hardness, do
succeed as well in soft as in hard bodies. For if the rule is to be
tried in bodies not perfectly hard, we are only to diminish the
reflexion such a certain proportion as the quantity of the elastic force
requires. By the theory of Wren and Huygens, bodies absolutely hard
return one from another with the same velocity with which they meet. But
this may be affirmed with more certainty of bodies perfectly elastic. In
bodies imperfectly elastic the velocity of the return is to be
diminished together with the elastic force; because that force (except
when the parts of bodies are bruised by their congress, or suffer some
such extension as happens under the strokes of a hammer) is (as far as I
can perceive) certain and determined, and makes the bodies to return one
from the other with a relative velocity, which is in a given ratio to
that relative velocity with which they met. This I tried in balls of
wool, made up tightly, and strongly compressed. For, first, by letting
go the pendulous bodies, and measuring their reflexion, I determined the
quantity of their elastic force; and then, according to this force,
estimated the reflexions that ought to happen in other cases of
congress. And with this computation other experiments made afterwards
did accordingly agree; the balls always receding one from the other with
a relative velocity, which was to the relative velocity with which they
met as about 5 to 9. Balls of steel returned with almost the same
velocity: those of cork with a velocity something less; but in balls of
glass the proportion was as about 15 to 16. And thus the third
Law, so far as it regards percussions and reflexions, is proved by a
theory exactly agreeing with experience.
In attractions, I briefly demonstrate the thing after
this manner. Suppose an obstacle is interposed to hinder the progress of
any two bodies A, B, mutually attracting one the other: then if either
body, as A, is more attracted towards the other body B, than that other
body B is towards the first body A, the obstacle will be more strongly
urged by the pressure of the body A than by the pressure of the body B,
and therefore will not remain in equilibrio: but the stronger pressure
will prevail, and will make the system of the two bodies, together with
the obstacle, to move directly towards the parts of which B lies; and in
free spaces, to go forward in infinitum with a motion perpetually
accelerated; which is absurd and contrary to the
first
Law. For, by the
first
Law, the system ought to persevere in its state of rest, or of
moving uniformly forward in a right line; and therefore the bodies must
equally press the obstacle, and be equally attracted one by the other. I
made the experiment on the loadstone and iron. If these, placed apart in
proper vessels, are made to float by one another in standing
water, neither of them will propel the other; but, by being equally
attracted, they will sustain each other's pressure, and rest at last in
an equilibrium.

So the gravitation betwixt the earth and its parts is
mutual. Let the earth FI be cut by any plane EG into two parts EGF and
EGI, and their weights one towards the other will be mutually equal. For
if by another plane HK, parallel to the former EG, the greater part EGI
is cut into two parts EGKH and HKI, whereof HKI is equal to the part EFG,
first cut off, it is evident that the middle part EGKH, will have no
propension by its proper weight towards either side, but will hang as it
were, and rest in an equilibrium betwixt both. But the one extreme part
HKI will with its whole weight bear upon and press the middle part
towards the other extreme part EGF; and therefore the force with which
EGI, the sum of the parts HKI and EGKH, tends towards the third part EGF,
is equal to the weight of the part HKI, that is, to the weight of the
third part EGF. And therefore the weights of the two parts EGI and EGF,
one towards the other, are equal, as I was to prove. And indeed if those
weights were not equal, the whole earth floating in the nonresisting
æther would give way to the greater weight, and, retiring from it, would
be carried off in infinitum.
And as those bodies are equipollent in the congress
and reflexion, whose velocities are reciprocally as their innate force,
so in the use of mechanic instruments those agents are equipollent, and
mutually sustain each the contrary pressure of the other, whose
velocities, estimated according to the determination of the forces, are
reciprocally as the forces.
So those weights are of equal force to move the arms
of a balance; which during the play of the balance are reciprocally as
their velocities upwards and downwards; that is, if the ascent or
descent is direct, those weights are of equal force, which are
reciprocally as the distances of the points at which they are suspended
from the axis of the balance; but if they are turned aside by the
interposition of oblique planes, or other obstacles, and made to ascend
or descend obliquely, those bodies will be equipollent, which are
reciprocally as the heights of their ascent and descent taken according
to the perpendicular; and that on account of the determination of
gravity downwards.
And in like manner in the pully, or in a combination
of pullies, the force of a hand drawing the rope directly, which is to
the weight, whether ascending directly or obliquely, as the velocity of
the perpendicular ascent of the weight to the velocity of the hand that
draws the rope, will sustain the weight.
In clocks and such like instruments, made up from a
combination of wheels, the contrary forces that promote and impede the
motion of the wheels, if they are reciprocally as the velocities of the
parts of the wheel on which they are impressed, will mutually sustain
the one the other.
The force of the screw to press a body is to the force
of the hand that turns the handles by which it is moved as the circular
velocity of the handle in that part where it is impelled by the hand is
to the progressive velocity of the screw towards the pressed body.
The form by which the wedge presses or drives the two
parts of the wood it cleaves are to the force of the mallet upon the
wedge as the progress of the wedge in the direction of the force
impressed upon it by the mallet is to the velocity with which the parts
of the wood yield to the wedge, in the direction of lines perpendicular
to the sides of the wedge. And the like account is to be given of all
machines.
The power and use of mechanics consist only in this,
that by diminishing the velocity we may augment the force, and the
contrary: from whence in all sorts of proper machines, we have the
solution of this problem; To move a given weight with a given power,
or with a given force to overcome any other given resistance. For if
machines are so contrived that the velocities of the agent and resistant
are reciprocally as their forces, the agent will just sustain the
resistant, but with a greater disparity of velocity will overcome it. So
that if the disparity of velocities is so great as to overcome all that
resistance which commonly arises either from the attrition of contiguous
bodies as they slide by one another, or from the cohesion of continuous
bodies that are to be separated, or from the weights of bodies to be
raised, the excess of the force remaining, after all those resistances
are overcome, will produce acceleration of motion proportional thereto,
as well in the parts of the machine as in the resisting body. But to
treat of mechanics is not my present business. I was only willing to
show by those examples the great extent and certainty of the
third
Law of motion. For if we estimate the action of the agent from its
force and velocity conjunctly, and likewise the reaction of the
impediment conjunctly from the velocities of its several parts, and from
the forces of resistance arising from the attrition, cohesion, weight,
and acceleration of those parts, the action and reaction in the use of
all sorts of machines will be found always equal to one another. And so
far as the action is propagated by the intervening instruments, and at
last impressed upon the resisting body, the ultimate determination of
the action will be always contrary to the determination of the reaction.
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NEWTON'S PREFACE
DEFINITIONS
AXIOMS, OR LAWS OF MOTION
BOOK I. OF THE MOTION OF BODIES
SECTION
- Of the method of first and last ratios of quantities, by
the help whereof we demonstrate the propositions that follow
- Of the invention of centripetal forces
- Of the motion of bodies in eccentric conic sections
- Of the finding of elliptic, parabolic, and hyperbolic
orbits, from the focus given
- How the orbits are to be found when neither focus is
given
- How the motions are to be found in given orbits
- Concerning the rectilinear ascent and descent of bodies
- Of the invention of orbits wherein bodies will revolve,
being acted upon by any sort of centripetal force
- Of the motion of bodies in moveable orbits, and of the
motion of the apsides
- Of the motion of bodies in given superficies, and of the
reciprocal motion of funependulous bodies
- Of the motion of bodies to each other with centripetal
forces
- Of the attractive forces of spherical bodies
- Of the attractive forces of bodies which are not of a
spherical figure
- Of the motion of very small bodies when agitated by
centripetal forces tending to the several parts of any very
great body
BOOK II. OF THE MOTION OF BODIES (contd.)
SECTION
- Of the motion of bodies that are resisted in the ratio of
velocity
- Of the motion of bodies that are resisted in the
duplicate ratio of their velocities
- Of the motions of bodies which are resisted partly in the
ratio of the velocities, and partly in the duplicate of the same
ratio
- Of the circular motion of bodies in resisting mediums
- Of the density and compression of fluids; and of
hydrostatics
- Of the motion and resistance of funependulous bodies
- Of the motion of fluids and the resistance made to
projected bodies
- Of motion propagated through fluids
- Of the circular motion of fluids
BOOK III. THE SYSTEM OF THE WORLD
RULES OF REASONING IN PHILOSOPHY
PHÆNOMENA, OR APPEARANCES
PROPOSITIONS I-XVI
OF THE MOTION OF THE MOON'S NODES
GENERAL SCHOLIUM
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