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"... the basic laws of physics"



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84 "... the basic laws of physics"
"The early modern period is seen as a flowering of the Renaissance, in what is often known as the "Scientific Revolution, viewed as a foundation of modern science. Historians like Howard Margolis hold that the Scientific Revolution began in 1543, when Nicolaus Copernicus received the first copy of his De Revolutionibus, printed in Nuremberg (NĂ¼rn- berg) by Johannes Petreius. Most of its contents had been written years prior, but the publication had been delayed. Copernicus died soon after receiving the copy. Further significant advances were made over the following century by Galileo Galilei,
Christiaan Huygens, Johannes Kepler, and Blaise Pascal. During the early seventeenth century, Galileo made extensive use of experimentation to validate physical theories, which is the key idea in the modern scientific method. Galileo formulated and successfully tested several results in dynamics, in particular the Law of Inertia. In Galileo's Two New Sciences, a dialogue between the characters Simplicio and Salviati discuss the motion of a ship (as a moving frame) and how that ship's cargo is indifferent to its motion. Huygens used the motion of a boat along a Dutch canal to illustrate an early form of the conservation of momentum. The scientific revolution is considered to have culminated with the publication of the Phi- losophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica in 1687 by the mathematician, physicist, alchemist and inventor Sir Isaac Newton (1643-1727). In 1687, Newton published the Prin- cipia, detailing two comprehensive and successful physical theories Newton's laws of motion, from which arise classical mechanics and Newton's Law of Gravitation, which describes the fundamental force of gravity. Both theories agreed well with experiment. The
Principia also included several theories in fluid dynamics. After Newton defined classical mechanics, the next great field of inquiry within physics was the nature of electricity" Reference Wikipedia.org back to 84)

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