Article ID: CBB773667166

Deducing Newton’s second law from relativity principles: A forgotten history (2020)

unapi

In French mechanical treatises of the nineteenth century, Newton’s second law of motion was frequently derived from a relativity principle. The origin of this trend is found in ingenious arguments by Huygens and Laplace, with intermediate contributions by Euler and d’Alembert. The derivations initially relied on Galilean relativity and impulsive forces. After Bélanger’s Cours de mécanique of 1847, they employed continuous forces and a stronger relativity with respect to any commonly impressed motion. The name “principle of relative motions” and the very idea of using this principle as a constructive tool were born in this context. The consequences of Poincaré’s and Einstein’s awareness of this approach are analyzed. Lastly, the legitimacy and significance of a relativity-based derivation of Newton’s second law are briefly discussed in a more philosophical vein.

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Authors & Contributors
Bordoni, Stefano
Maltese, Giulio
Capecchi, Danilo
Clarke, Bruce C.
Coelho, Ricardo Lopes
Giannetto, Enrico Antonio
Journals
Archive for History of Exact Sciences
Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
European Physical Journal H
International Philosophical Quarterly
Publishers
Springer
University of Minnesota
C. H. Beck
University of Chicago Press
University of Michigan Press
Pavia University Press
Concepts
Physics
Mechanics
Motion (physical)
Thermodynamics
Relativity
Philosophy of science
People
Newton, Isaac
Duhem, Pierre
Einstein, Albert
Hertz, Heinrich Rudolph
Boltzmann, Ludwig
Bruno, Giordano
Time Periods
18th century
19th century
17th century
20th century
20th century, early
16th century
Places
Europe
France
United States
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