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" To every action there is always opposed an equal reaction: or, the mutual actions of two bodies on each other are always equal, and directed to contrary parts. "
A New Treatise on the Use of the Globes, Or, A Philosophical View of the ... - Page 44
by Thomas Keith - 1811 - 346 pages
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A New Treatise on the Use of the Globes: Or, A Philosophical View of the ...

Thomas Keith - Astronomy - 1819 - 380 pages
...various, and in different directions, the body acted upon must take an oblique or compound direciion. Hence, a curvilinear motion cannot be produced by...LAW III. " To every action there is always opposed " bodies upon each other are always equal, and di" an equal re-action ; or the mutual actions of two...
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Encyclopædia Americana: A Popular Dictionary of Arts, Sciences ..., Volume 8

Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford, Henry Vethake - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1831 - 630 pages
...part only of its force. The other part has no effect, or that only of driving her out of her course. III." To every action there is always opposed an equal reaction ; or the mutual actions of two bodies on each other are equal and in opposite directions." If you press a stone with your finger, the imger...
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Encyclopædia Americana, ed. by F. Lieber assisted by E. Wigglesworth (and T ...

Encyclopaedia Americana - 1831 - 610 pages
...part only of its force. The other part has no effect, or that only of driving her out of her course. III. " To every action there is always opposed an...equal reaction ; or the mutual actions of two bodies on each other are equal and in opposite directions." If you press n stone with your finger, the finger...
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A New Treatise on the Use of the Globes; Or, A Philosophical View of the ...

Thomas Keith - Globes - 1832 - 370 pages
...published before Newton's Principia. not a direction coincident with or opposite to that of the moving body. LAW III. " To every action there is always opposed...or, the mutual actions of two bodies upon each other arc always equal, and directed to contrary points," — Newton's Princip. Book I. If we endeavour to...
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Encyclopædia Americana: A Popular Dictionary of Arts, Sciences ..., Volume 8

Francis Lieber, Edward Wigglesworth - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1835 - 608 pages
...part only of its force. The other part has no effect, or that only of driving her out of her course. III. " To every action there is always opposed an...equal reaction ; or the mutual actions of two bodies on each other are equal and in opposite directions." If you press a stone with your finger, the finger...
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The Popular Encyclopedia;: pt. 1: On the rise and progress of the fine arts ...

Sir Daniel Keyte Sandford - Art - 1841 - 490 pages
...part only of its force. The other part has no effect, or that only of driving her out of her course. III. " To every action there is always opposed an...equal reaction ; or the mutual actions of two bodies on each other are equ.il and in opposite directions." If you press a stone with your finger, the finger...
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The Treasury of Knowledge and Library of Reference: A million of facts [The ...

1850 - 766 pages
...impressed, and i.« made in the direction of the right line in which that force is impressed. ,1 3d law. To every action there is always opposed an equal re-action...the mutual actions of two bodies upon each other, arc always equal, and directed to contrary parts. • ! Thus, whatever draws or presses another, is...
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Elements of Physics, Volume 1

Carl Friedrich Peschel, Karl Friedrich Peschel - Physics - 1854 - 314 pages
...force impressed, and is made in the direction of the right line in which that force is impressed 3rd. To every action there is always opposed an equal reaction ; or the mutual actions of two bouies upon each other are always equal, and directed towards contrary paits. 19 condition of every...
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Elements of Natural Philosophy Designed for Academies and High Schools

Elias Loomis - Physics - 1858 - 374 pages
...giving motion to the water, which must be displaced in order to permit the progress of the vessel. 37. LAW III. — To every action there is always opposed an equal reaction. Thus, if we suspend a weight by a string from a hook, the hook pulls the weight as much as the weight...
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History of the Intellectual Development of Europe, Volume 2

John William Draper - Civilization - 1899 - 458 pages
...force impressed, and is made in the direction of the right lino in which that force is impressed. (3.) To every action there is always opposed an equal reaction,...or the mutual actions of two bodies upon each other arc always equal, and directed to contrary parts. Up to this time it was the general idea that motion...
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