| Edward Livingston Youmans, William Robert Grove - 1865 - 500 páginas
...possesses a store of force which cannot in any way be either increased or diminished. And that, therefore, the quantity of force in nature is just as eternal...the wind, which drive our mills, the forest and the cealbed, which supply our steam engines and warm our rooms, are to us the bearers of a small portion... | |
| Edward Livingston Youmans, William Robert Grove - 1865 - 512 páginas
...possesses a store of force which cannot in any way be either increased or diminished. And that, therefore, the quantity of force in nature is just as eternal...We cannot create mechanical force, but we may help oureelves from the general store-house of Nature. The brook and the wind, which drive our mills, the... | |
| Edward Livingston Youmans - 1870 - 484 páginas
...a store of force which cannot in any way be either increased or diminished. And that, there-- fore, the quantity of force in nature is just as eternal...have named the general law " The Principle of the Conser vation of Force." We cannot create mechanical force, but we may help ourselves from the general... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - 1870 - 368 páginas
...the like. Scientists are now of accord that "force can neither be created nor destroyed," and that "the quantity of force in nature is just as eternal and unalterable as the quantity of matter." Its various forms are eminently convertible, yet utterly indestructible. And to avoid that fruitful... | |
| Hermann Ludwig F. von Helmholtz - 1873 - 424 páginas
...possesses a store of force which cannot in any way be either increased or diminished, and that therefore the quantity of force in Nature is just as eternal...mills, the forest and the coal-bed, which supply our steam-engines and warm our rooms, are to us the bearers of a small portion of the great natural supply... | |
| Helmholtz - 1873 - 452 páginas
...possesses a store of force which cannot in any way be either increased or diminished, and that therefore the quantity of force in Nature is just as eternal...mills, the forest and the coal-bed, which supply our steam-engines and warm our rooms, are to us the bearers of a small portion of the great natural supply... | |
| James Edmund Garretson - 1876 - 120 páginas
...possesses a store of force which cannot in any way be either increased or diminished ; and that therefore the quantity of force in nature is just as eternal and unalterable as the quantity of matter. Heed an example, Cebes, and consider a * Leibnitz. f Schelling. J Helmholtz. jelly-fish. Here is a... | |
| Joseph Smith Van Dyke - 1886 - 494 páginas
...Nature as a whole possesses a store of force which cannot in any way be either increased or diminished. The quantity of force in nature is just as eternal and unalterable as the quantity of matter. . . . From the fact that no portion of force can be absolutely lost, it does not follow that a portion... | |
| Thomas Hubbard Musick - 1890 - 390 páginas
...possesses a store of force which cannot in any way be increased or diminished, and that, therefore, the quantity of force in nature is just as eternal and unalterable as the quantity of matter."—Interaction of Natural Forces. Prof. Merriman says: " Not an impulse of motion, of light,... | |
| Geoorge W. Holley - 1894 - 312 páginas
...whole possesses a store of force which cannot in any way be increased or diminished. * * * Therefore the quantity of force in nature is just as eternal and unalterable as the quantity of matter. According to this we can divide the total force-store of the universe into two parts, one of which... | |
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