24 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEWTON 



Chapman, L. L. Chapman's Principia . . . exposing the numerous 

 discrepancies of the . . . (erroneously so-called) Newtonian theory 

 of gravitation alone, without repulsion. 1855, &c. 8vo. [61 



Clarke, John. A demonstration of some of the principal sections of 

 Sir I. Newton's principles of Natural Philosophy. 1730. [62 



Construction d'un Telescope par Reflexion, de Mr. Newton. Amster- 

 dam & Leipzig, 1756. i2mo. [63 



Cowley, J. L. Discourse on Comets . . . extracted from the work of 

 Sir I. Newton, &c. 1757. 8vo. [64 



D***, 1'Abbe". Reflexions sur la physique moderne, ou la philo- 

 sophic Newtonienne compared avec celle de Descartes, &c. 

 Paris, 1751, & 1757. 8vo. [65 



[Denison, J.] Commentaries on the Principia of Sir I. Newton, 

 respecting his theory that the forces of the gravitation of the 

 planets are inversely as the square of their mean distances from 

 the sun ... By the Author of ' A New Theory of Gravitation/ 

 1846. 8vo. [66 



Desaguliers, J. T. The Newtonian System of the World, the best 

 model of government, an allegorical poem, &c. 1728. 4to. [67 



Dieterich, C. Kant und Newton. Tubingen, 1876. 8vo. [68 



Ditton, Humphrey. General Treatise on the Laws of Nature and 

 Motion, with their Application to Mechanics ; also the Doctrine 

 of Centripetal Forces and Velocities of Bodies, describing any 

 of the Conick Sections, being a part of the great Mr. Newton's 

 principles. 1705. 8vo. [69 



Domcke, Geo. Peter. Philosophiae Mathematicae Newtonianae 

 Illustratae tomi duo. Plates. London, 1730. 8vo. [70 



Easy and Pleasant Introduction to Sir I. Newton's Philosophy. With 

 an Essay on the Advancement of Learning, by J. Ryland. 

 Plates. Second Edition, 1772. I2mo. [71 



