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Physics [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 205x125x10 mm, kaal: 145 g
  • Sari: Thrift Editions
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Jun-2017
  • Kirjastus: Dover Publications Inc.
  • ISBN-10: 0486813517
  • ISBN-13: 9780486813516
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 205x125x10 mm, kaal: 145 g
  • Sari: Thrift Editions
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Jun-2017
  • Kirjastus: Dover Publications Inc.
  • ISBN-10: 0486813517
  • ISBN-13: 9780486813516
Teised raamatud teemal:
The works of Aristotle, translated into English. The first four books were translated by R.P. Hardie and the last four by R.K. Gaye.

Written in the fourth century BCE by Greek philosopher and scientist Aristotle, Physics set out to define the principles and causes of change, movement, and motion. For 2,000 years ― until discoveries by Galileo, Newton, and other scientists ― this treatise was the primary source for explanations of falling rocks, rising flames, the circulation of air, and other physical phenomena.
Modern readers are required to bring a keen sense of criticism to these writings. Although Aristotle incorporated some degree of experience and observation in his thinking, the root of his reasoning lies in the philosophical approach. The brilliance of the philosopher's mind and his articulate manner of expression, together with the fact that he was among the first to undertake an intellectually rigorous investigation of nature's basic properties, contribute to the historic value of this book. It remains a foundational work of modern science and philosophy and a key to understanding the work of subsequent theorists and scholars.

For 2,000 years this foundational scientific treatise by the ancient philosopher and scientist was the primary source for explanations of falling rocks, rising flames, circulation of air, other physical phenomena.
Book I
1 The scope and method of this book
1(1)
2 The problem: the number and character of the first principles of nature. 185a
20. Reality is not one in the way that Parmenides and Melissus supposed
2(5)
3 Refutation of their arguments
7(3)
4 Statement and examination of the opinions of the natural philosophers
10(4)
5 The principles are contraries
14(2)
6 The principles are two, or three, in number
16(2)
7 The number and nature of the principles
18(5)
8 The true opinion removes the difficulty felt by the early philosophers
23(2)
9 Further reflections on the first principles of nature
25(3)
BOOK II
A
1 Nature and the natural
28(3)
B
2 Distinction of the natural philosopher from the mathematician and the metaphysician
31(3)
C The conditions of change
3 The essential conditions
34(3)
4 The opinions of others about chance and spontaneity
37(2)
5 Do chance and spontaneity exist? What is chance and what are its characteristics?
39(2)
6 Distinction between chance and spontaneity, and between both and the essential conditions of change
41(2)
D Proof in natural philosophy
7 The physicist demonstrates by means of the four conditions of change
43(2)
8 Does nature act for an end?
45(3)
9 The sense in which necessity is present in natural things
48(3)
BOOK III
A Motion
1, 2 The nature of motion
51(4)
3 The mover and the moved
55(3)
B The infinite
4 Opinions of the early philosophers. 203b
15. Main arguments for belief in the infinite
58(3)
5 Criticism of the Pythagorean and Platonic belief in a separately existing infinite. 204a
34. There is no infinite sensible body
61(6)
6 That the infinite exists and how it exists. 206b
33. What the infinite is
67(4)
7 The various kinds of infinite. 207b
34. Which of the four conditions of change the infinite is to be referred to
71(1)
8 Refutation of the arguments for an actual infinite
72(2)
BOOK IV
A Place
1 Does place exist? 209a
2. Doubts about the nature of place
74(2)
2 Is place matter or form?
76(2)
3 Can a thing be in itself or a place be in a place?
78(3)
4 What place is
81(4)
5 Corollaries
85(2)
B The void
6 The views of others about the void
87(3)
7 What `void' means. 214a
16. Refutation of the arguments for belief in the void
90(2)
8 There is no void separate from bodies. 216a
26. There is no void occupied by any body
92(5)
9 There is no void in bodies
97(3)
C Time
10 Doubts about the existence of time. 218a
31. Various opinions about the nature of time
100(2)
11 What time is. 219b
9. The `now.'
102(4)
12 Various attributes of time. 220b
32. The things that are in time
106(4)
13 Definitions of temporal terms
110(2)
14 Further reflections about time
112(4)
BOOK V
1 Classification of movements and changes. 224b
35. Classification of changes per se
116(4)
2 Classification of movements per se. 226b
10. The unmovable
120(4)
3 The meaning of'together,' `apart,' `touch,' `intermediate,' `successive,' `contiguous,' `continuous.'
124(3)
4 The unity and diversity of movements
127(4)
5 Contrariety of movement
131(2)
6 Contrariety of movement and rest. 230a
18. Contrariety of natural and unnatural movement or rest
133(5)
BOOK VI
1, 2 Every continuum consists of continuous and divisible parts
138(7)
3 A moment is indivisible and nothing is moved, or rests, in a moment
145(2)
4 Whatever is moved is divisible. 234b
21. Classification of movement. 235a
13. The time, the movement, the being-in-motion, the moving body, and the sphere of movement, are all similarly divided
147(4)
5 Whatever has changed is, as soon as it has changed, in that to which it has changed. 235b
32. That in which (directly) it has changed is indivisible. 236a
7. In change there is a last but no first element
151(4)
6 In whatever time a thing changes (directly), it changes in any part of that time. 236b
32. Whatever changes has changed before, and whatever has changed, before was changing
155(3)
7 The finitude or infinity of movement, of extension, and of the moved
158(3)
8 Of coming to rest, and of rest. 239a
23. A thing that is moved in any time directly is in no part of that time in a part of the space through which it moves
161(3)
9 Refutation of the arguments against the possibility of movement
164(5)
10 That which has not parts cannot move. 241a
26. Can change be infinite?
169(5)
BOOK VII
1 Whatever is moved is moved by something. 242a
19. There is a first movent which is not moved by anything else
174(4)
2 The movent and the moved are together
178(4)
3 All alteration pertains to sensible qualities
182(5)
4 Comparison of movements
187(6)
5 Proportion of movements
193(3)
BOOK VIII
1 There always has been and always will be movement
196(6)
2 Refutation of objections to the eternity of movement
202(2)
3 There are things that are sometimes in movement, sometimes at rest
204(4)
4 Whatever is in movement is moved by something else
208(5)
5 The first movent is not moved by anything outside itself. 257a
31. The first movent is immovable
213(10)
6 The immovable first movent is eternal and one. 259a
20. The first movent is not moved even incidentally. 259b
32. The primum mobile is eternal
223(5)
7 Locomotion is the primary kind of movement. 261a
28. No movement or change is continuous except locomotion
228(5)
8 Only circular movement can be continuous and infinite
233(10)
9 Circular movement is the primary kind of locomotion. 265a
27. Confirmation of the above doctrines
243(3)
10 The first movent has no parts nor magnitude, and is at the circumference of the world
246