| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] namely 2 narrow 2 nations 2 natural 32 nature 15 nay 1 near 4 | Frequency [« »] 33 chemical 33 forces 33 so 32 natural 31 produced 30 only 30 same | Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz On the Conservation of Force IntraText - Concordances natural |
Part
1 I | have devoted myself. The natural sciences, partly in consequence 2 I | which exist between the natural and the mental sciences 3 I | conformity with law which natural phenomena and natural products 4 I | which natural phenomena and natural products exhibit, and in 5 I | enormously extended series of natural phenomena with such accuracy 6 I | a well-recognised law of natural phenomena is that afforded 7 I | to be denied that, in the natural sciences, this kind of interest 8 I | new universal law of all natural phenomena, which, from its 9 I | which it constitutes between natural phenomena of all kinds, 10 I | as the character of the natural sciences, which I have chosen 11 I | for individual domains of natural phenomena it was enunciated 12 I | of work for machines, or natural processes, is taken from 13 I | work of machines and of natural forces we must, of course, 14 I | or by means of some other natural force. If it can flow from 15 II | different if by any other natural process I can place an elastic 16 II | capacity for work of the natural forces is either diminished 17 II | Conservation of Force to all natural processes. In the answer 18 II | fact, in a large number of natural processes, the quantity 19 II | unchangeable in quantity. The natural processes which have here 20 III| turn now to another kind of natural forces which can produce 21 III| relations between the various natural forces. We have decomposed 22 III| telegraph in one-third of the natural size. The essential part 23 III| universal character of all known natural forces that their capacity 24 III| capacity for work of one natural force is destroyed, it is 25 III| the circuit of inorganic natural forces, we can transform 26 III| by the aid of any other natural force which is capable of 27 III| connections between the various natural forces which modern physics 28 III| equivalent in work of the other natural forces may be expressed 29 III| between various inorganic natural forces working force may 30 III| been led up to a universal natural law, which, as far as all 31 III| rules and embraces all natural processes; which is no longer 32 III| characteristic property of all natural forces, and which, as regards