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" ... that the smallest particles of matter may cohere by the strongest attractions, and compose bigger particles of weaker virtue ; and many of these may cohere and compose bigger particles whose virtue is still weaker ; and so on for divers successions,... "
The History of Philosophy: From the Earliest Times to the Beginning of the ... - Page 564
by Johann Jakob Brucker - 1819
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General Biography: Or, Lives, Critical and Historical, of the Most ..., Volume 7

John Aikin - Biography - 1808 - 730 pages
...smallest particles of matter NEW NEW may cohere by the strongest attractions, and compose bigger panicles of weaker virtue ; and many of these may cohere, and...with heat, and condensing with cold, whilst others arc fixed, and not separable without a strong heat, or fermentation. Those particles recede from one...
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The British Encyclopedia: Or, Dictionary of Arts and Sciences ..., Volume 5

William Nicholson - Natural history - 1809 - 684 pages
...cohesion, and many of these cohering compose bigger particles, whose vigour is still weaker ; and hereupon the operations in chemistry, and the colours of natural...depend, and which, by cohering, compose bodies of feasible bulk. The cohesion of the particles of matter, the Epicureans imagined, "as effected by the...
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The British encyclopedia, or, Dictionary of arts and sciences, Volume 5

William Nicholson - 1809 - 716 pages
...compose bi«per particle.", whose vigonr is still weaker; and hereupon the operation1* in cbeniistry, and the colours of natural bodies depend, and which, by cohering, compose bodies of sensible bulk. The cohesion of the particles of matter, the Epicurean* imagined, was effected by the...
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A Philosophical and Mathematical Dictionary: Containing an ..., Volume 2

Charles Hutton - Astronomy - 1815 - 686 pages
...still weaker; and so on for divers successions, till the progression end in the largest particles, upon which the operations in chemistry, and the colours...depend ; and which, by cohering, compose bodies of sensilile magnitude. •PARTY Arches, in Architecture, arc arches built between separate tenures, where...
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American Edition of the British Encyclopedia: Or, Dictionary of ..., Volume 9

William Nicholson - Natural history - 1821 - 406 pages
...cohesion, and many of these cohering compose bigger particles, whose vigour is still weaker ; and hereupon the operations in chemistry and the colours of natural...depend, and which, by cohering, compose bodies of sensible bulk. The cohesion of the particles of matter, the Epicureans imagined, was effected by the...
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Encyclopaedia Britannica; Or A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and ..., Volume 16

Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1823 - 872 pages
...vigour is still weaker ; and so on for divers successions, till the progression end in the largest particles, on which the operations in chemistry, and...depend, and which, by cohering, compose bodies of sensible bulks. The cohesion of the particles of matter, according to the Epicureans, was effected...
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Encyclopaedia Britannica; Or A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and ..., Volume 6

Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1823 - 878 pages
...bigger particles, whose virtue is still less : and so on for divers successions, until the progression end in the biggest particles« on which the operations...the colours of natural bodies, depend ; and which, j by cohering, compose bodies of a sensible magnitude. Diitinetion If the body is compact, and bends...
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Glasgow Mechanics' Magazine, and Annals of Philosophy, Volume 5

Industrial arts - 1826 - 488 pages
...bigger particles, whose virtue is still less ; and so on for divers successions, until the progression end in the biggest particles, on which the operations...cohering, compose bodies of a sensible magnitude. If the body is compact and bends or yields inwards to près sure without any sliding of its pan it...
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Library for the people. (Division 1). The wonders of nature and art ..., Issue 2

Library - 1827 - 712 pages
...forces, by which they act at a distance, upon one another, for producing a great part of the phenomena of nature ; as in the attractions of gravity, magnetism,...separable without a strong heat, or fermentation. These particles recede from one another with the greatest force, and are with most difficulty brought...
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A London Encyclopaedia, Or Universal Dictionary of Science, Art ..., Volume 6

Thomas Curtis - Aeronautics - 1829 - 828 pages
...bigger particles, whose virtue is still less; and so on for divers successions, until the progression end in the biggest particles, on which the operations in chemistry, and the colors of natural bodies, depend ; and •which, by cohering, compose bodies of a sensible magnitude....
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