"During the first period in the history of our science (1638—1820) while these various investigations of special problems were being made, there was a cause at work which was to lead to wide generalizations. This cause was physical speculation concerning the constitution of bodies. In the eighteenth century the Newtonian conception of material bodies, as made up of small parts which act upon each other by means of central forces, displaced the Cartesian conception of a plenum pervaded by "vortices." Newton regarded his "molecules" as possessed of finite sizes and definite shapes, but his successors gradually simplified them into material points. The most definite speculation of this kind is that of Boscovich, for whom the material points were nothing but persistent centres of force. To this order of ideas belong Laplace's theory of capillarity and Poisson's first investigation of the equilibrium of an "elastic surface," but for a long time no attempt seems to have been made to obtain general equations of motion and equilibrium of elastic solid bodies."
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A Treatise on the Mathematical Theory of Elasticity
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