| William Whewell - 1833 - 416 páginas
...each other's motions, but these perturbations are not indefinitely progressive, they are periodical : they reach a maximum value and then diminish. The...sequel as complete as the derangement ; and in the meantime the disturbance never attains a sufficient amount seriously to alter the adaptations of the... | |
| William Whewell - 1833 - 298 páginas
...each other's motions, but these perturbations are not indefinitely progressive, they are periodical: they reach a maximum value and then diminish. The...sequel as complete as the derangement ; and in the meantime the disturbance never attains a sufficient amount seriously to alter the adaptations of the... | |
| 1836 - 566 páginas
...each other's motions, but these perturbations are not indefinitely progressive, they are periodical : they reach a maximum value and then diminish. The...hence it is, that some of these apparent derangements nave been going on in the same direction since the beginning of the history of the world. But the restoration... | |
| Denison Olmsted - 1839 - 300 páginas
...perturbations are not indefinitely progressive, but periodical, reaching a maximum value and then diminishing. The periods which this restoration requires are for...thousands, and in some instances millions of years. Indeed some of these apparent derangements, have been going on in the same direction from the creation... | |
| Denison Olmsted - 1839 - 504 páginas
...perturbations are not indefinitely progressive, but periodical, reaching a maximum value and then diminishing. The periods which this restoration requires are for...thousands, and in some instances millions of years. Indeed some of these apparent derangements, have been going on in the same direction from the creation... | |
| Denison Olmsted - 1839 - 304 páginas
...the most part enormous, — not less than thousands, and in some instances millions of years. Indeed some of these apparent derangements, have been going on in the same direction from the creation of the world. But the restoration is in the sequel as complete as the derangement... | |
| Denison Olmsted - 1841 - 486 páginas
...perturbations are not indefinitely progressive, but periodical, reaching a maximum value, and then diminishing. The periods which this restoration requires are, for...thousands, and in some instances, millions, of years. Indeed, some of these apparent derangements have been going on in the same direction from the creation... | |
| William Whewell - 1841 - 256 páginas
...each other's motions, but these perturbations are not indefinitely progressive, they are periodical : they reach a maximum value and then diminish. The...restoration requires are, for the most part, enormous j not less than thousands, and, in some instances, millions of years ; and hence it is, that some of... | |
| T H. Howe - 1842 - 458 páginas
...that, in the long run, the orbits and motions remained unchanged. • • * f^e perpetual perturbations reach a maximum value and then diminish. The periods...restoration requires are, for the most part, enormous. * * * But the restoration is, in the sequel, as complete as the derangement ; and, in the mean time,... | |
| William Benjamin Carpenter - 1843 - 290 páginas
...instances of thousands of years in length, and in some cases even of millions; and hence it is that these apparent derangements have been going on in...sequel, as complete as the derangement; and in the meantime, the disturbance never attains an amount sufficient to make a serious alteration in the adaptations... | |
| |