Dissertations on Subjects of Science Connected with Natural Theology, Volume 2C. Knight, 1839 - Natural theology |
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Page 23
... consequently which was not of inferior power ; there- fore there is nothing which can limit the power of the first cause ; and there being no limiter or re- strainer , there can be no limitation or restriction . Again , the infinity of ...
... consequently which was not of inferior power ; there- fore there is nothing which can limit the power of the first cause ; and there being no limiter or re- strainer , there can be no limitation or restriction . Again , the infinity of ...
Page 31
... consequently every work of the Deity , in other words , everything but the Deity himself , must have imperfection in its nature . Nor is the existence of some beings which are im- perfect any interference with the attributes of others ...
... consequently every work of the Deity , in other words , everything but the Deity himself , must have imperfection in its nature . Nor is the existence of some beings which are im- perfect any interference with the attributes of others ...
Page 131
... consequently it must have lived in a colder climate than the present animal inhabits . But it appears to have been killed by some sudden catastrophe , and then to have been immediately frozen , else it would have undergone decomposition ...
... consequently it must have lived in a colder climate than the present animal inhabits . But it appears to have been killed by some sudden catastrophe , and then to have been immediately frozen , else it would have undergone decomposition ...
Page 201
... consequently , the characteristic argument will equally apply here . The proof of this in the struc- fure of the alimentary canal , which Cuvier was not acquainted with , will presently be considered . Secondly , With respect to the ...
... consequently , the characteristic argument will equally apply here . The proof of this in the struc- fure of the alimentary canal , which Cuvier was not acquainted with , will presently be considered . Secondly , With respect to the ...
Page 218
... Consequently , the animal must have been taller in proportion to his size . How much larger he was than the ostrich may be gathered from this , that the large African ostrich has only a foot of ten inches long , less than two - thirds ...
... Consequently , the animal must have been taller in proportion to his size . How much larger he was than the ostrich may be gathered from this , that the large African ostrich has only a foot of ten inches long , less than two - thirds ...
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action animals apsides argument ascertained attraction axis body moves bones calculus Cél central force centre of forces centre of gravity centripetal force circle common centre conic sections coprolites curve Cuvier cycloid Deity demonstration described diameter discovery distance disturbing force doctrine earth earth's orbit eccentricity ellipse equal equation evanescent evil examination existence expression extinct feet fluxion formation former fossil genera genus given globe human hyænas ichthyosaurus inquiry inversely investigation Jupiter kind known Laplace masses matter mean motion Méc moon's move round nature observed Osteology parabola Paris Basin particle period perpendicular planets portion position Principia principles problem proportion proposition quantity question radius vector ratio rectangle remarkable respecting revolution revolve round satellites Saturn scholium Sir Isaac Newton solution space species sphere square straight line strata suppose surface syzygy theory things tion trajectory variation velocity whole wholly
Popular passages
Page 102 - So also is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption; it is sown in dishonour; it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness; it is raised in power; it is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body. There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body.
Page 88 - Am I a God at hand, saith the Lord, and not a God afar off? Can any hide himself in secret places that I shall not see him ? saith the Lord. Do not I fill heaven and earth ? saith the Lord.
Page 164 - ... to an unlettered observer they may appear less strange than the tribe we have just been surveying. One of them has the muzzle of a dolphin, the teeth of a crocodile, the head and breast of a lizard, the fins or paddles of a whale, but four instead of two, and the back or vertebrae of a fish. This has been named the Ichthyosaurus. The other, being apparently nearer to the lizard, has been called the Plesiosaurus ;* and has also four paddles like those of a whale ; the head of...
Page 175 - ... bodies, he can convince himself of a truth yet more sublime than Newton's discovery though flowing from it, and must yield his assent to the marvellous position that all the irregularities occasioned in the system of the universe, by the mutual attraction of its members, are periodical, and subject to an eternal law which prevents them from ever exceeding a stated amount, and secures through all time the balanced structure of a universe composed of bodies, whose mighty bulk and prodigious swiftness...
Page 447 - ... proportion of its polar to its equatorial diameter. By a most refined process he gave this proportion upon the supposition of the mass being homogeneous. That the proportion is different in consequence of the mass being heterogeneous does not in the least affect the soundness of his conclusion. Accurate measurements of a degree of latitude in the equatorial and polar regions, with experiments on the force of gravitation in those regions, by the different lengths of a pendulum vibrating seconds,...
Page 297 - ... the squares of the periodic times are as the cubes of the distances from the common centre, the centripetal forces will be inversely as the squares of the distances.
Page 193 - ... globe, then it follows that between that period, whensoever it was, and the earliest to which the history of the world reaches back, an interposition of power took place to create those animals, and man among the rest. The atheistical argument, that the present state of things may have lasted for ever, is therefore now at an end.
Page 299 - ... that the squares of their periodic times are as the cubes of the mean distances from the focus* they are by these propositions of Sir Isaac Newton which we have been considering, shown to be deflected from the tangent of their orbit, and retained in their paths, by a force acting inversely as the squares of the distances from the centre of motion.
Page 304 - XXXV. nexion between its corollaries, and the Theory of Gravitation. The versed sine of the half of any evanescent arc (or sagitta of the arc) of a curve in which a body revolves, was proved to be as the centripetal force, and as the square of the times ; or as F x T2. Therefore the force F is directly as the versed sine, and inversely as the square of the time. From this it follows that the central force may be measured in several ways. The arc being QC, we are to measure the central force in its...
Page 174 - The reader of the Principia, if he be a tolerably good mathematician, can follow the whole chain of demonstration by which the universality of gravitation is deduced from the fact, that it is a power acting inversely as the square of the distance from the centre of attraction.