| John Tyndall - 1863 - 500 pàgines
...materiality as applied to heat. The supporters of this theory do not believe heat to be matter, but an accident or condition of matter ; namely, a motion of its ultimate particles. From the direct contemplation of some of the phenomena of heat, a profound mind is led almost instinctively... | |
| John Tyndall - 1863 - 538 pàgines
...materiality as applied to heat. The supporters of this theory do not believe heat to be matter, but an accident or condition of matter ; namely, a motion of its ultimate particles. From the direct contemplation of some of the phenomena of heat a profound mind is led almost instinctively... | |
| 1865 - 648 pàgines
...materiality as applied to heat. The supporters of this theory do not believe heat to be matter, but an accident or condition of matter; namely, a motion of its ultimate particles." — Page 39. With regard to the precise character of this molecular motion, no satisfactory theory... | |
| John Tyndall - 1866 - 492 pàgines
...materiality as applied to heat. The supporters of this theory do not believe heat to be matter, but an accident or condition of matter ; namely, a motion of its •ultimate particles. From the direct contemplation of some of the phenomena of heat, a profound mind is led almost instinctively... | |
| Henry Bence Jones - 1868 - 240 pàgines
...materiality as applied to heat. The supporters of this theory do not believe heat to be matter, but to be an accident or condition of matter — namely, a motion of its ultimate particles. From the direct contemplation of some of the phenomena of heat, a profound mind is led almost instinctively... | |
| John Tyndall - 1873 - 582 pàgines
...materiality as applied to heat. The supporters of this theory do not believe.heat to be matter, but an accident or condition of matter ; namely, a motion of its ultimate particles. From the direct contemplation of some of the phenomena of heat, a ! profound mind is led almost instinctively... | |
| 1874 - 596 pàgines
...materiality as applied to heat. The supporters of this theory do not believe heat to be matter, but an accident or condition of matter, namely, a motion of its ultimate particles." — Tyndall, Heat as a mode of motion, page, 24. " The term force, although used in a different sense... | |
| 1874 - 612 pàgines
...said, attributed to the influence of heat, is heat itself. "Heat," says Tyndall, " is not matter, but an accident or condition of matter, namely, a motion of its ultimate particles." " The condition of heat," says Eankine, "is a condition of energy — ie, of capacity to effect changes."... | |
| John Tyndall - 1881 - 572 pàgines
...materiality as applied to heat. The supporters of this theory do not believe heat to be matter, but an accident or condition of matter ; namely, a motion of its ultimate particles. From the direct contemplation of some of the phenomena of heat, a profound mind is led almost instinctively... | |
| Alexander James Wallis-Tayler - 1902 - 710 pàgines
...from a cold body to a hotter one without compensation. According to Tyndall heat is not matter, but an accident or condition of matter, namely, a motion of its ultimate particles. Maxwell says that heat, considered with respect to its power of warming things, and changing their... | |
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