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20 Aug. 1813
Logic
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Ch. Language
1. Physical fictitious
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The earth which we inhabit is not at rest. The sun himself about which she moves is not at rest. The stars called fixed being but so many suns, are themselves no more at rest than is he.
Considered as a whole the parts of our earth are, as far as appears, with reference to one another, the greater part of them always at rest, - others, especially those near the surface, many of them occasionally in motion: and so in regard to the several separate bodies, consisting of such portions of the matter of which the earth is composed, as are detached and separate from one another, each of them having between itself and every other, with the exception of the base on which it stands, and upon which, by the principle of attraction under the several forms under which it operates, it is kept at that place, certain portions of intervening space.
Of such of them as are in a state of solidity, rest, relative rest, rest with relation to each other, in so far as they are in that state, is the naturally constant state. In motion they are not put but by some supervening accident operating from without. Of such of them as are in a state of fluidity, liquidity and gaseosity included, motion, relative motion is, in every instance, a natural state, exemplified to a greater or lesser extent, depending partly on the particular qualities of the several fluids, partly upon the accidents ab extra to which, individually taken, they happen to be /have been/ exposed.
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Title: [17 Feb. 1815 Didacologia Ch]Description: 17 Feb. 1815 Didacologia Ch. Art & Science Division 21 Of these eight abstractions, six, viz. 1. Place; 2. Motion; (viz. relative motion) 3. Time; 4. Number; 5. Figure; 6. Quantity - in a word, all but vacuity or void space and rest, have furnished so many distinguishable branches of science - branches, let us say, of Choristoscopic Somatology, each of them already furnished with a separate name, how far soever from being uniformly apposite and expressive. I. Sciences having for their Subject the Predicament of Place. Topography a term confined in its customary application to small portions of the surface of our earth though with equal original propriety applicable to any portion or portions of the whole universe. Chorography, a term not much in use, but, when in use, applied to portions larger than Topography is commonly applied to. Geography - a term exclusively and necessarily as its etymology shows, confined to this our earth, and subject to that limitation, applicable to any portions, so they be not so small as that the propriety of the application shall find on the part of Topography a ground or pretence for disputing it. By Uranography or rather /still better/ by Uranognosy, rather than Astronomy, may that branch of Topography, taken in its largest sense, which remains after the subtraction of Geography be designated. Uranognosy rather than Uranography; because, while on our earth the situations of its several parts, with relation to each other when measured upon a large scale, are never observed to undergo any considerable change, those of the bodies of which the whole universe is composed are as far as observation or indication may be depended upon - are all with relation to each other in a state of constant relative motion; and accordingly their relative situations undergoing continual change. Uranognosy, or even Uranography, in preference to Astronomy, because, by the word Astronomy, a needless separation is made of the bodies which, whilst some perceptibly, others imperceptibly, are continually moving in their boundless field. 27
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Title: [20 Aug. 1813 Logic 1]Description: 20 Aug. 1813 Logic 1 Ch. Language I. Physical fictitious 8 5. Motion. 6. Rest. 7. Action. 8. Passion. At every step the subject of consideration becomes more and more complicated. Rest is the absence or negation of motion. Every body is either in motion, or at rest. Here place, i.e. relative space is still the archetype. Motion is a thing an imaginary, an involuntarily imagined substance in which the body is conceived as being placed: rest a like body, at which the real body is considered as being placed. In the idea /consideration/ /notion/ of motion that of time is moreover involved; and again that of place, as being that in which the idea of time is, by the like necessity, involved. In motion a body cannot have been but it must have been in two different places, at or in two different, which is as much as to say, in two successive portions of time. For the space of time in question, i.e. for a portion of time composed of those same portions which were operative in the case of motion, the body has been at rest, in so far as in all that space or length of time it has not changed its place with reference to any others. Taken in the aggregate, in so far as can be concluded, either from observation or from analogy in the way of inference, no body whatsoever is, or ever has been, or ever will be, absolutely in a state of rest, i.e. without being in motion with reference to some other body or bodies. 25
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Title: [28 Sept. 1814 Logic Ch.2. Ontology]Description: 28 Sept. 1814 Logic Ch.2. Ontology Entities classed 21 15 Action. For /In/ the idea of action, the idea of motion is an essential ingredient. But to actual action actual motion can scarcely be regarded as necessary. Action is either motion itself or a /the/ tendency to motion. Under the term action, besides motion a tendency, though so it be without actual motion, seems to be included. Held back by strings, a magnet and a bar of iron, suspended at a certain distance from each other, remain both of them without motion: cut the strings of either of them, it moves till it comes in contact with the other; but for the state of mutual action which preceded the cutting of the strings no such motion would have taken place. 43
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