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Query was: distance
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- Title: Second Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- the distance through which it moves; then the resulting product is
- Title: Third Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- Within a certain distance either way, such a picture will be able to
- Title: Fifth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- you know, in dividing s, the distance which the mobile
- the distance s the body passes through, and the time
- distance s by the real time t, to get the velocity
- abstractions. Because there is a velocity, there is a distance moved
- through. This distance we envisage in the first place, and in the
- distance”; we ought only to say: “The body has a
- Title: Sixth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- It is a force acting at a distance and attracts the bodies towards
- it is unthinkable for any force to act at a distance. They then
- acting at a distance have been in the other theory. These
- Title: Eighth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- at some distance from you, you see the flash of light in the
- distance and hear the report some time later, just as you hear the
- the corresponding distance. So you can calculate how quickly the
- distance it has gone through, what we call the wave-length. If
- times s in a second. The path, the distance therefore,
- Title: Ninth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- them, opposite and at a suitable distance from one-another, and a
- spreads out in space and takes effect at a distance. In like
- effect of it is perceptible at a distance. Thus in his own
- spreads out through space and takes effect at a distance, unfolding
- taking effect once more — at a distance. You know how
- Title: Tenth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- they only meet at an infinite distance, or do not meet at all. They
- short of an infinite distance; then my whole proof, that the three
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