26 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF NEWTON 



's Gravesande, W. Ja. Philosophiae Newtonianae Institutiones in 

 usus Academicos. Plates. Lugd. Bat, 1723. I2mo. [81 



Physices elementa Mathematica, expertmentis confirmata. Sive 



Introductio ad Philosophiam Newtonianam. Plates. Lugd. Bat., 

 17201. 2 vols. 4to. [82 



Third Edition. Leide, 1742. 



Translation: Mathematical elements of natural philosophy, 



confirmed by experiments ; or an Introduction to Sir I. Newton's 

 Philosophy. Translated by J. T. Desaguliers. 32 plates. 1720. 

 2 vols. 8vo. [83 



Second Edition, one volume, 1721. 8vo. 4th Edn., 1731, 2 vols. 1726. 8vo. 6th Edn., 

 1747. 2 vols. 4to. 



French translation: traduit du Latin par Elie de Joncourt. 



Leide, 1746. 2 vols. 4to. [84 



Greene, R. Principles of the Philosophy of the Expansive and Con- 

 tractive Forces. Cambridge, 1727. [85 



Mentions the well-known anecdote of Newton and the Apple, on the authority of 

 Martin Folkes. 



Gregg, T. D. The Cosmology of Sir I. Newton proved to be in 

 accordance with the Bible. [1871.] 8vo. [86 



Gregory, David. Astronomiae physicae et geometricae elementa. 

 Oxon., 1702. Folio. [87 



Elements of Astronomy, physical and geometrical, translated. 



With Dr. Halley's Synopsis of the Astronomy of Comets. 2 

 vols. 1715. Second Edition. 2 vols. 1726. [88 



Gregory, James. Printed a Thesis at Edinburgh in 1690, containing 

 twenty-five positions, of which twenty-two were a compend of 

 Newton's Principia. (Brewster's Newton, 1855, I- 335-) [ 8 9 



I have not found a copy of this work. Charles Hutton, in his Philosophical and Mathe- 

 matical Dictionary, 1815 (I. 605), said he had a copy of the Thesis, but I do not find it in 

 his own manuscript catalogue of his library which I possess. 



