Difference between revisions of "Origin and Development of the Theory of Relativity"

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There is an explicit statement of a restricted form. of what Einstein later called the Principle of Relativity in Sir Isaac Newton's Principia. It may be translated:  "The motions of bodies enclosed in a given space are the same relatively to each other whether that space is at rest or moving uniformly in direction [i.e. "moving with a constant velocity in a straight line] without circular motion." ...
 
There is an explicit statement of a restricted form. of what Einstein later called the Principle of Relativity in Sir Isaac Newton's Principia. It may be translated:  "The motions of bodies enclosed in a given space are the same relatively to each other whether that space is at rest or moving uniformly in direction [i.e. "moving with a constant velocity in a straight line] without circular motion." ...
  
[[Category:Scientific Paper]]
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[[Category:Scientific Paper|origin development theory relativity]]
  
 
[[Category:Relativity]]
 
[[Category:Relativity]]

Revision as of 10:51, 1 January 2017

Scientific Paper
Title Origin and Development of the Theory of Relativity
Read in full Link to paper
Author(s) William Wilson
Keywords {{{keywords}}}
Published 1958
Journal Science Progress
Volume 46
No. of pages 7
Pages 241-247

Read the full paper here

Abstract

There is an explicit statement of a restricted form. of what Einstein later called the Principle of Relativity in Sir Isaac Newton's Principia. It may be translated: "The motions of bodies enclosed in a given space are the same relatively to each other whether that space is at rest or moving uniformly in direction [i.e. "moving with a constant velocity in a straight line] without circular motion." ...