| Isaac Newton - 1730 - 432 str.
...make Vibrations of feveral bignefles, which according to their bignefles excite Senfations of feveral Colours, 'much after the manner that the Vibrations of the Air, according to their feveral bigneftes excite Senfations of feveral Sounds ? And particularly do not the moft refrangible... | |
| 1776 - 646 str.
...vibrations of feveral bigntii'es, which, according to their bignefles, excite fenfations of fever.il colours, much after the manner that the vibrations of the air, 'according to their feveral bignefl'es, excite fcnlations of feveral founds? And'particularly, do not the mort refrangible... | |
| Thomas Curtis - 1829 - 856 str.
...Л gardener prepares the ground, and in all the ixtenmdial spaces he is careful to dress it. Evelyn. Zc ~O j Ĺ '3LC z6 i,rnI} - ` h CgiE : e0 kF P:85 b+ t sen ation of a deep violet, tiit least refrangible the largest for making a sensation of deep red,... | |
| Layman - 1881 - 168 str.
...it. In query 12 he asks, " Do not rays excite vibrations in the retina ? " and again in query 13, " Do not several sorts of rays make vibrations of several...sensations of several sounds ? And particularly do not themost refrangible rays excite the shortest vibrations?" This is wonderfully close to modern views,... | |
| 1893 - 630 str.
...of various bignesses, which according to their bignesses excite sensations of various colours . . . and, particularly, do not the most refrangible rays...refrangible the largest for making a sensation of deep red ? " The whole is but a development of a reply, written in 1672, to a criticism of Hooke's on his first... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1894 - 1272 str.
...various bignesses, which according to their bignesses excite sensations of various colours ; . . . and, particularly, do not the most refrangible rays...refrangible the largest for making a sensation of deep red ? ' The whole is but a development of a reply, written in 1672, to a criticism of Ilooke's on his first... | |
| Leslie Stephen, Sir Sidney Lee - 1894 - 470 str.
...of several bignesses which, according to their bignesses, excite sensations of several colours . . . and particularly do not the most refrangible rays...refrangible the largest for making a sensation of deep red ? ' The above is but a development of the reply to Hooke's criticism of 1672 (Phil. Trans. vii. 5080),... | |
| 1912 - 390 str.
...that the several sorts of rays of different colours make vibrations " of several bignesses . . . make after the manner that the vibrations of the air, according...several bignesses, excite sensations of several sounds " (query 13). Newton, " who looked all Nature through," who " surpassed the human race in power of... | |
| Mathematical Association - 1927 - 222 str.
...that differences of period correspond to differences of colour. The analogy with Sound is obvious : " much after the manner that the Vibrations of the Air,...several bignesses, excite sensations of several Sounds," he says : § and it may be remarked in passing that Newton's theory of periodic vibrations in an elastic... | |
| Frank Washington Very - 1927 - 686 str.
...into the brain, cause the sense of seeing?" (Opticks, third edition, London, 1721, Qu. 12, page 319) ; "Do not several sorts of rays make vibrations of several bignesses, which according to their bigness excite sensations of several colors?" (Qu. 13, page 320). Newton was also ob'iged to introduce... | |
| |