"The work before us is a proof that the doctrine of mechanics is of the utmost importance to mankind in general, and to civil society in particular, which could hardly subsist without it. The author of this work is Mr. W. Emerson who is well known in the literary world, from several ingenious writings with which he has obliged the public; some of which have passed under our consideration since the commencement of the Review. In this treatise Mr. Emerson has laid down the fundamental principles both of theory and practice, and demonstrated most of them from the common elementary geometry, and the rest from the common rules of algebra; which is certainly the best method of rendering a treatise of this kind useful to the generality of readers, the fluxionary calculus being too difficult for them to understand. The work is divided into thirteen sections: the 1st. contains the general laws of motion. 2. The laws of gravity, the descent of heavy bodies, and the motion of projectiles. 3. The properties of the mechanical powers; the balance, the leaver, the wheel, the pulley, the screw, and the wedge. 4. The descent of bodies upon inclined planes, and in curve surfaces; and the motion of pendulums. 5. The center of gravity, and its properties. 6. The centers of percussion, oscillation, and gyration. 7. The quantity and direction of the pressure of beams of timber, by their weight; and the forces necessary to sustain them. 8. The strength of beams of timber in all positions; and their stress by any weight acting upon them, or by any forces applied to them. 9. The properties of fluids, the principles of hydrostatics, hydraulics, and pneumatics, 10. The resistance of fluids, their forces and actions upon bodies; the motions of ships, and the positions of their fails. 11. Methods of communicating, directing, and regulating any motion in the practice of mechanics. 12. The powers and properties of compound engines; of forces acting within the machines; and concerning friction. 13. The description of compound machines or engines, and the methods of computing their powers or forces; with some account as the advantages or disadvantages of their construction."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
, ‎George Edward Griffiths (1754) The Monthly Review. Vol 11. p. 490-491.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Mechanics
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Mechanics
27 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Mechanics →
Related Quotes
"Within a certain kind of environment, an activity may be checked so that the only meaning which accrues is of its dir…"
"To the art of mechanics is owing all sorts of instruments to work with, all engines of war, ships, bridges, mills, cu…"
"I think I can safely say that nobody understands quantum mechanics."
"[T]he mere fact that a quantitative majority of causations are of vitalistic type, does not in the least mean that sc…"
"The laws of motion of visible and tangible, or molar, matter had been worked out to a great degree of refinement and …"
"[J]eder Fortschritt in der Theorie der partiellen Differentialgleichungen auch einen Fortschritt in der Mechanik herb…"
"Experimental physics was particularly interested in the processes taking place inside the atom, and in this field the…"
"Another conspicuous failure of classical mechanics was with one aspect of the problem of radiation. ...Imagine a crow…"
"The need for a fundamentally different approach to the study of physical processes at the molecular level motivated t…"
"People get a lot of confusion, because they keep trying to think of quantum mechanics as classical mechanics."