"Galileo's comprehension of the concept of acceleration, which he defined as a change of velocity either in magnitude or direction... was an abstract idea that no one seems to have thought much about before. And in using it to test the still accepted Aristotelian precept that a moving object requires a force to maintain it, Galileo easily demonstrated that it is not motion but rather acceleration which cannot occur without an external force. Deliberately rejecting common sense as a prejudiced witness, he let nature herself speak in the form of a "hard, smooth and very round ball" rolling down a "very straight" ideal groove lined with polished parchment, and then rolling up another groove, clocking each roll "hundreds or times"... he showed that, while downward motion (helped by gravity force) makes speed increase and upward motion (hindered by gravity force) makes speed decrease, there is always a "boundary case" in between... where speed remains constant (without any appreciable force)—and that, by reducing friction, this boundary case can be made to approach a horizontal level where gravity has no effect. Similarly testing... he also drafted a law of falling bodies: "that the distances traversed, during equal intervals of time... stand to one another in the same ratio as the odd numbers beginning with unity." And his beautiful analysis of a cannonball's trajectory into horizontal and vertical components... was one day to be of enormous help to Isaac Newton in solving the riddle of gravity."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Guy Murchie, Music of the Spheres (1961)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Aristotelian_physics
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Aristotelian physics
14 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Aristotelian physics →
Related Quotes
"[T]he Aristotelian doctrine of inertia was a doctrine of rest—it was motion, not rest, that always required to be exp…"
"[T]he peculiar character of that Aristotelian universe... things... in motion had to be accompanied by a mover all of…"
"When mons. Descartes's philosophical Romance, by the Elegance of its Style and the plausible Accounts of natural Phæn…"
"With the discovery of the law of inertia and the subsequent downfall of the Aristotelian theory of motion on which Ke…"
"Gaukroger believes that contemporary physicists concern themselves with a kind of mathematical knowledge that“ is cle…"
"Let it be conceived that the [or a] particle acquires a tendency to move, and that nevertheless it does not move. It …"
"[An] example of the hubris of contemporary science is the rigorous banishment of the word "purpose" from its vocabula…"
"I could easily believe that Aristotle had stumbled, but not that, on entering physics, he had totally collapsed. Migh…"
"For Aristotelian physics the membership of an object in a given class was of critical importance, because for Aristot…"
"The attitude of Aristotelian physics toward lawfulness takes a new direction. So long as lawfulness remained limited …"