| Science - 1888 - 936 pages
...particles in the beginning. And, therefore, that nature may be lasting, the changes of corporeal things are to be placed only in the various separations and new...associations, and motions of these permanent particles." The very form of this last-cited statement carries us back to the cradle of the Atomic Philosophy.*... | |
| Henry Enfield Roscoe - Chemistry - 1895 - 242 pages
...nature may be lasting, the changes of corporeal things are to be placed only in the various situations, and new associations and motions of these permanent...particles, but where those particles are laid together and only touch at a few points. . . . God is able to create particles of matter of several sizes and figures,... | |
| Henry Enfield Roscoe - Chemistry - 1895 - 234 pages
...nature may be lasting, the changes of corporeal things are to be placed only in the various situations, and new associations and motions of these permanent...compound bodies being apt to break, not in the midst at solid particles, but where those particles are laid together and only touch at a few points. . .... | |
| Henry Enfield Roscoe, Arthur Harden - Atomic theory - 1896 - 232 pages
...particles in the beginning. And therefore that nature may be lasting, the changes of corporeal things are to be placed only in the various separations and new...particles, but where those particles are laid together, and only touch in a few points. . . ."1 [2]. Again, ". . . God is able to create particles of matter of... | |
| W. Sedgwick - Argon - 1896 - 308 pages
...break in pieces .... And, therefore, that nature may be lasting, the changes of corporeal things are to be placed only in the various separations and new...associations and motions of these permanent particles." — • Newton, " Opticks," yd edition, pp. 375 and 376. IN the extract from Newton's " Opticks," with... | |
| Ida Freund - Chemical structure - 1904 - 682 pages
...particles, in the beginning. And therefore that nature may be lasting, the changes of corporeal things are to be placed only in the various separations and new...particles, but where those particles are laid together, and only touch in a few points.... These principles I consider not as occult qualities, supposed to result... | |
| Francis Preston Venable - Atomic theory - 1904 - 322 pages
...particles in the beginning. And, therefore, that nature may be lasting the changes of corporeal things are to be placed only in the various separations and new...particles, but where those particles are laid together, and only touch in a few points." Again, " God is able to create particles of matter of several sizes and... | |
| Ida Freund - Chemical structure - 1904 - 682 pages
...the beginning. And therefore that nature may be lasting, the changes of corporeal things are t<> l>e placed only in the various separations and new associations...particles, but where those particles are laid together, and onlv touch in a few points These principles I consider not as occult qualities The effect of Newton's... | |
| William Leighton Jordan - Gravitation - 1907 - 192 pages
...solid, massy, hard, impenetrable, moveable particles ; and that ' the changes of corporeal things are to be placed only in the various separations, and...associations, and motions of these permanent particles.' Tell me, Sir William Crookes, are not Arrhenius and Larmor mistaken in supposing that modern science... | |
| Joseph William Mellor - Chemistry, Inorganic - 1912 - 896 pages
...divide what God Himself made one in the first creation. . . . The changes of corporeal things are to bo placed only in the various separations and new associations and motions of these permanent particles. . . . These principles I consider not as occult qualities, but as general laws of nature by which the... | |
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