Astronomy The Science of the Heavenly Bodies (Classic Reprint)
Book Details
Author(s)David P. Todd
PublisherForgotten Books
ISBN / ASINB00874EL42
ISBN-13978B00874EL47
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,753,065
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Sir William Rowan Hamilton, the eminent mathematics of Dublin, has, of all writers ancient and modern, most fittingly characterized the ideal science of astronomy as man's golden chain connecting the heavens to the earth, by which we "learn the language and interpret the oracles of the universe."
The oldest of the sciences, astronomy is also the broadest in its relations to human knowledge and the interests of mankind. Many are the cognate sciences upon which the noble structure of astronomy has been erected: foremost of all, geometry and the higher mathematics, which tell us of motions, magnitudes and distances; physics and chemistry, of the origin, nature, and destinies of planets, sun, and star; meteorology, of the circulation of their atmospheres; geology, of the structure of the moon's surface; mineralogy, of the constitution of meteorites; while, if we attack, even elementally, the fascinating, though perhaps forever unsolvable, problem of life in other worlds, the astronomer must invoke all the resources that his fellow biologists and their many-sided science can afford him.
Tags: stars earth day astronomy planet solar motion light system distance telescope time planets mars astronomers type nearly round atmosphere stellar
Category: Science - Astronomy
Visit Forgotten Books at: http://www.forgottenbooks.org
The oldest of the sciences, astronomy is also the broadest in its relations to human knowledge and the interests of mankind. Many are the cognate sciences upon which the noble structure of astronomy has been erected: foremost of all, geometry and the higher mathematics, which tell us of motions, magnitudes and distances; physics and chemistry, of the origin, nature, and destinies of planets, sun, and star; meteorology, of the circulation of their atmospheres; geology, of the structure of the moon's surface; mineralogy, of the constitution of meteorites; while, if we attack, even elementally, the fascinating, though perhaps forever unsolvable, problem of life in other worlds, the astronomer must invoke all the resources that his fellow biologists and their many-sided science can afford him.
Tags: stars earth day astronomy planet solar motion light system distance telescope time planets mars astronomers type nearly round atmosphere stellar
Category: Science - Astronomy
Visit Forgotten Books at: http://www.forgottenbooks.org
