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Glyn Hughes' Squashed Philosophers
The Condensed Edition of
Sir Isaac Newton's
Mathematical Principles of Natural
Philosophy
... in 3,000 words
"I am only a child playing on the beach,
while vast oceans of truth lie undiscovered
before me." |
INTRODUCTION to Sir Isaac Newton's
'PRINCICIA'
Born in 1642 (by the old Julian calendar, or in 1643
by the modern one) at Woolsthorpe-by-Colsterworth, a
hamlet in Lincolnshire, three months after the death of
his father, Isaac was premature and so small that his
mother said he could fit into a quart mug. He shone at
Grantham Grammar School, had a brief (and final, he
never married) fling with an apothecary's stepdaughter,
Anne Storer, and went off to Cambridge University to
produced tracts on literal interpretations of Scripture,
to make major discoveries in optics and mathematics and
to dabble in alchemy. In 1696 he was appointed Master of
the Royal Mint, and moved to London where he spent the
rest of his life.
The Principia was a true revolution in human
thinking- not only did it provide the famous explanation
of gravity, but a method by which almost any physical
event can be described in numbers. Newton's Laws,
although later found by Einstein to be ever so slightly
faulty, are still the rules by which we build bridges,
fly spacecraft and understand the world around us.
Sadly, the story of his being inspired to study gravity
by seeing an apple fall is probably made-up, but it
is probably true that, among his many great
achievements, he invented the cat-flap - a device which,
like everything else, can be understood through Newton's
numbers, as its swinging is described by his Third Law.
"Nature
and Nature's laws lay hid in night:
God said, Let Newton be! and all was light."
Alexander Pope
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THE VERY SQUASHED VERSION
NEWTON'S LAWS
LAW I: 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.
LAW II: 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.
LAW III: To every action there is always
opposed an equal reaction.
I do not know what gravity is. But it seems
to be the case that every body in the
universe attracts every other body with a
force called gravity, which is
proportional to the masses of the bodies,
and diminishes by the square of the distance
between them. No doubt God causes all this. |
ABOUT
THIS SQUASHED VERSION
This condensed edition of 3000 words is adapted from
Andrew Motte's translation from the original Latin, with
a few corrections paraphrased from the excellent 1999
translation by Cohen & Whitman. Newtons mathematical
explanations are omitted, to leave only conclusions and
general observations.
Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy
by Sir
Isaac Newton, 1687
Squashed version edited by
Glyn
Hughes
© 2005
An Ode
to the Splendid Ornament of Our Time and Our Nation:
the Treatise on Mathematics and Physics by the Eminent
Isaac Newton
by Edmond Halley
Behold! the compass of the skies,
Jove's firm foundation for his works
The Sun in his throne moves the starry greats,
The comet's bearded star, and wandering Diana
Such vexed the philosophers of old,
And caused the schools to shout and shake,
Here, by simple numbers is cleared of dust and haze.
Celebrate now with nectars and with song,
NEWTON! Has opened the treasure-chest of truth!
NEWTON! Soars with Phoebus and the muses!
And has touched most near the mind of God.
PREFACE.
Since the ancients made great account of the science of
mechanics in the investigation of natural things; and
the moderns have endeavoured to subject the phænomena of
nature to the laws of mathematics, I have in this
treatise cultivated mathematics so far as it regards
philosophy. For all the difficulty of philosophy seems
to consist in this - from the phænomena of motions to
investigate the forces of nature, and then from these
forces to demonstrate the other phænomena.
I heartily beg that what I have here done may be read
with candour; and that the defects in a subject so
difficult be not so much reprehended as kindly supplied,
and investigated by new endeavours of my readers.
ISAAC NEWTON.
Cambridge, Trinity College May 8, 1686.
BOOK
I.
OF THE MOTION OF BODIES
DEFINITIONS
DEFINITION
I.
The quantity of matter is the measure of the same,
arising from its density and bulk conjunctly.
THUS air of double density, in a double space, is
quadruple in quantity; in a triple space, sextuple in
quantity. And the same is known by the weight of each
body.
DEFINITION II.
The quantity of motion is the measure of the same,
arising from the velocity and quantity of matter
conjunctly.
The motion of the whole is the sum of the motions of all
the parts; and therefore in a body double in quantity,
with equal velocity, the motion is double; with twice
the velocity, it is quadruple.
DEFINITION III.
The vis insita, or innate force of matter, is a power of
resisting, by which every body endeavours to persevere
in its present state, whether it be of rest, or of
moving uniformly forward in a right line.
DEFINITION IV.
An impressed force is an action exerted upon a body, in
order to change its state, either of rest, or of moving
uniformly forward in a right line.
DEFINITION V.
A centripetal force is that by which bodies are drawn or
impelled, or any way tend, towards a point as a centre.
Of this sort is gravity, by which bodies tend to the
centre of the earth; magnetism, by which iron tends to
the load-stone; and that force, whatever it is, by which
the planets are perpetually drawn aside from the
rectilinear motions, which otherwise they would pursue,
and made to revolve in curvilinear orbits. A stone
whirled about in a sling, endeavours to recede from the
hand that turns it; and by that endeavour, distends the
sling.
DEFINITION VI.
The absolute quantity of a centripetal force is the
measure of the same proportional to the efficacy of the
cause that propagates it from the centre, through the
spaces round about.
Thus the magnetic force is greater in one load-stone and
less in another according to their sizes and strength of
intensity.
DEFINITION VII.
The accelerative quantity of a centripetal force is the
measure of the same, proportional to the velocity which
it generates in a given time.
Thus the force of the same load-stone is greater at a
less distance, and less at a greater: also the force of
gravity is greater in valleys, less on tops of exceeding
high mountains; and yet less at greater distances from
the body of the earth; but at equal distances, it is the
same everywhere; because (taking away, or allowing for
the resistance of the air), it equally accelerates all
falling bodies, whether heavy or light, great or small.
SCHOLIUM.
I do not define time, space, place and motion, as being
well known to all. Only I must observe, that the vulgar
conceive those quantities under no other notions but
from the relation they bear to sensible objects. And
thence arise certain prejudices.
AXIOMS, OR LAWS OF MOTION.
LAW I.
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 does
not cease its rotation, otherwise than 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.
LAW II.
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.
LAW III.
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.
BOOK
III.
THE SYSTEM OF THE WORLD
IN the
preceding Books I have laid down the principles of
philosophy, principles not philosophical, but
mathematical: such, to wit, as we may build our
reasonings upon in philosophical inquiries. It is enough
if one carefully read the Definitions, the Laws of
Motion, and the first three Sections of the first Book.
He may then pass on to this Book, and consult such of
the remaining Propositions of the first Books as his
occasions shall require.
RULES OF REASONING IN NATURAL PHILOSOPHY
RULE
I.
We are to admit no more causes of natural
things than are both true and sufficient to explain what
is observed.
To this purpose the philosophers say that Nature does
nothing in vain, and more is in vain when less will
serve; for Nature is pleased with simplicity, and
affects not the pomp of superfluous causes.
RULE II.
Therefore to the same natural effects we must, as far as
possible, assign the same causes.
Such as respiration in a man being as that in a beast;
the falling of stones in Europe being as in America; the
light of our cooking fire and of the sun; the reflection
of light in the earth, and in the planets.
RULE III.
The qualities of bodies, which admit neither
intension nor remission of degrees, and which are found
to belong to all bodies within the reach of our
experiments, are to be esteemed the universal qualities
of all bodies whatsoever.
We are certainly not to relinquish the evidence of
experiments for the sake of dreams and vain fictions of
our own devising; nor are we to recede from the analogy
of Nature, which uses to be simple, and always consonant
to itself. If it universally appears, by experiments and
astronomical observations, that all bodies about the
earth gravitate towards the earth, and that in
proportion to the quantity of matter which they
severally contain, that the moon likewise, according to
the quantity of its matter, gravitates towards the
earth; that, on the other hand, our sea gravitates
towards the moon; and all the planets mutually one
towards another; and the comets in like manner towards
the sun; we must, in consequence of this rule,
universally allow that all bodies whatsoever are endowed
with a principle of mutual gravitation. For the argument
from the appearances concludes with more force for the
universal gravitation of all bodies that for their
impenetrability; of which, among those in the celestial
regions, we have no experiments, nor any manner of
observation. Not that I affirm gravity to be essential
to bodies: by their vis insita I mean nothing but their
vis inertiæ. This is immutable. Their gravity is
diminished as they recede from the earth.
RULE IV.
In experimental philosophy we are to look upon
propositions collected by general induction from
phænomena as accurately or very nearly true,
notwithstanding any contrary hypotheses that may be
imagined, till such time as other phænomena occur, by
which they may either be made more accurate, or liable
to exceptions.
This rule we must follow, that the argument of induction
may not be evaded by hypotheses.
PROPOSITIONS
PROPOSITION
I.
That the forces by which the moons around Jupiter are
drawn off from a straight course and made to orbit the
planet tend to Jupiter’s centre; and are reciprocally as
the squares of the distances of the places of those
planets from that centre.
PROPOSITION II.
That the forces by which the primary planets are drawn
off from a straight course and made to orbit, tends
towards the sun; and are reciprocally as the squares of
the distances of the places of those planets from the
sun’s centre.
PROPOSITION III
That the force by which the moon is retained in its
orbit tends to the earth; and is reciprocally as the
square of the distance of its place from the earth's
centre.
PROPOSITION V.
That the moons around Jupiter gravitate towards Jupiter;
those around Saturn, towards Saturn; those around the
Sun, to the Sun; and by the forces of their gravity are
drawn off from straight motions, and retained in curved
orbits.
SCHOLIUM.
The force which retains the celestial bodies in their
orbits we shall hereafter call gravity.
PROPOSITION VI.
That all bodies gravitate towards every planet; and that
the weights of bodies towards any the same planet, at
equal distances from the centre of the planet, are
proportional to the quantities of matter which they
severally contain.
Cor. 1. The weights of bodies do not depend upon their
forms and textures.
Cor. 2. Universally, all bodies about the earth
gravitate towards the earth; and the weights of all, at
equal distances from the earth's centre, are as the
quantities of matter which they severally contain.
Cor. 5. The power of gravity is of a different nature
from the power of magnetism; for some bodies are
attracted more by the magnet; others less; most bodies
not at all.
PROPOSITION VII.
That there is a power of gravity tending to all bodies
proportional to the quantity of matter which they
contain.
Cor. 1. Therefore the force of gravity towards any whole
planet arises from, and is compounded of, the forces of
gravity towards all its parts.
Cor. 2. The force of gravity towards the several
particles of any body is reciprocally as the square of
the distance of places from the particles.
PROPOSITION IX.
That the force of gravity, considered downward from the
surface of the planets, decreases nearly in the
proportion of the distances from their centres.
PROPOSITION X.
That the motions of the planets in the heavens may
subsist an exceedingly long time
It is shewn that at the height of 200 miles above the
earth the air is more rare than it is at the superficies
of the earth in the ratio of 30 to 0,0000000000003998,
or as 75000000000000 to 1 nearly. And hence the planet
Jupiter, revolving in a medium of the same density with
that superior air, would not lose by the resistance of
the medium the 1,000,000th part of its motion in
1,000,000 years. In the spaces near the earth the
resistance is produced only by the air, exhalations, and
vapours. When these are carefully exhausted by the
air-pump from under the receiver, heavy bodies fall with
perfect freedom, and without the least sensible
resistance; gold itself, and the lightest down, let fall
together, will descend with equal velocity.
HYPOTHESIS I.
That the centre of the system of the world is immovable.
This is acknowledged by all, while some contend that the
earth, others that the sun, is fixed in that centre.
PROPOSITION XI.
That the common centre of gravity of the earth, the sun,
and all the planets, is immovable.
For if that centre moved, the centre of the world would
move also.
PROPOSITION XII.
That the sun is agitated by a perpetual motion, but
never recedes far from the common centre of gravity of
all the planets.
GENERAL SCHOLIUM.
The theory
of swirling vortices, we cannot accept, for comets are
carried with very eccentric motions with a freedom that
is incompatible with the notion of a vortex.
Bodies projected in our air suffer no resistance but
from the air. Withdraw the air, as is done in Mr.
Boyle's vacuum, and the resistance ceases; for in this
void a feather and a piece of solid gold descend with
equal velocity. And as reason must place the celestial
spaces above the earth's atmosphere, where there is no
air to resist their motions, all bodies will move with
the greatest freedom; and the planets and comets will
constantly pursue their revolutions in orbits according
to the mere laws of gravity, yet they could by no means
have first derived their orbits from those laws.
This most beautiful system of the sun, planets, and
comets, could only proceed from the counsel and dominion
of an intelligent and powerful Being. This Being governs
all things, not as the soul of the world, but as Lord
over all; and on account of his dominion he is wont to
be called Lord God pantokratwr, or Universal Ruler.
God is omnipresent not virtually only, but also
substantially; for virtue cannot subsist without
substance. In him are all things contained and moved;
yet neither affects the other. As a blind man has no
idea of colours, so have we no idea of the manner by
which the all-wise God perceives and understands all
things. He is utterly void of all body and bodily
figure, and can therefore neither be seen, nor heard, or
touched; nor ought he to be worshiped under the
representation of any corporeal thing. We have ideas of
his attributes, but what the real substance of any thing
is we know not. In bodies, we see only their figures and
colours, we hear only the sounds, we touch only their
outward surfaces, we smell only the smells, and taste
the savours; but their inward substances are not to be
known either by our senses, or by any reflex act of our
minds: much less, then, have we any idea of the
substance of God. We know him only by his most wise and
excellent contrivances of things, and final cause: we
admire him for his perfections; but we reverence and
adore him on account of his dominion: for a god without
dominion, providence, and final causes, is nothing else
but Fate and Nature. Blind metaphysical necessity, which
is certainly the same always and every where, could
produce no variety of things. All that diversity of
natural things which we find suited to different times
and places could arise from nothing but the ideas and
will of a Being necessarily existing. And thus much
concerning God; to discourse of whom from the
appearances of things, does certainly belong to Natural
Philosophy.
Hitherto we have explained the phænomena of the heavens
and of our sea by the power of gravity, but have not yet
assigned the cause of this power. This is certain, that
it must proceed from a cause that penetrates to the very
centres of the sun and planets, without suffering the
least diminution of its force; that operates not
according to the quantity of the surfaces of the
particles upon which it acts, but according to the
quantity, of the solid matter which they contain, and
propagates its virtue on all sides to immense distances,
decreasing always in the duplicate proportion of the
distances. Gravitation towards the sun is made up out of
the gravitations towards the several particles of which
the body of the sun is composed; but I have not been
able to discover the cause of those properties of
gravity from phænomena, and I frame no hypotheses; for
whatever is not deduced from the phænomena is to have no
place in experimental philosophy. To us it is enough
that gravity does really exist, and acts according to
the laws which we have explained.
And now we might add something concerning a certain most
subtle Spirit which pervades and lies hid in all gross
bodies; by the force and action of which Spirit the
particles of bodies mutually attract one another, and
cohere, and electric bodies operate, light is emitted,
reflected, refracted, inflected, and heats bodies; and
the members of animal bodies move at the command of the
will by the vibrations of this Spirit, mutually
propagated along the solid filaments of the nerves, from
the outward organs of sense to the brain, and from the
brain into the muscles.

Sir Isaac Newton
1642-1727
Isaac
Newton was the first scientist ever to be
honoured with a grave in Westminster Abbey.

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