The wedge and the vis viva controversy: how concepts of force influenced the practice of early eighteenth-century mechanics
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Publication:524416
DOI10.1007/s00407-016-0182-3zbMath1370.01012OpenAlexW2535069395MaRDI QIDQ524416
Publication date: 2 May 2017
Published in: Archive for History of Exact Sciences (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00407-016-0182-3
History of mathematics in the 18th century (01A50) History of mechanics of particles and systems (70-03)
Cites Work
- Historical roots of the rule of composition of forces
- Newton's interpretation of Newton's second law
- The impeccable credentials of an untrained philosopher: Willem Jacob 's Gravesande's career before his Leiden professorship, 1688–1717
- The Leibnizian-Newtonian Debates: Natural Philosophy and Social Psychology
- Force and inertia in seventeenth-century dynamics
- The Decline of Cartesianism in Mechanics: The Leibnizian-Cartesian Debates
- Competing to Popularize Newtonian Philosophy
- The Vis viva Controversy, a Post-Mortem
- D'Alembert and the vis viva controversy
- Leibniz and the Vis Viva Controversy
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