Page:Somerville Mechanism of the heavens.djvu/79

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INTRODUCTION.
3

seasons, and of day and night, may lead us to fancy that they are peopled with inhabitants like ourselves; yet, were it even permitted to form an analogy from the single instance of the earth, the only one known to us, certain it is that the physical nature of the inhabitants of the planets, if such there be, must differ essentially from ours, to enable them to endure every gradation of temperature, from the intensity of heat in Mercury, to the extreme cold that probably reigns in Uranus. Of the use of Comets in the economy of nature it is impossible to form an idea; still less of the Nebulæ, or cloudy appearances that are scattered through the immensity of space; but instead of being surprised that much is unknown, we have reason to be astonished that the successful daring of man has developed so much.

In the following pages it is not intended to limit the account of the Mécanique Céleste to a detail of results, but rather to endeavour to explain the methods by which these results are deduced from one general equation of the motion of matter. To accomplish this, without having recourse to the higher branches of mathematics, is impossible; many subjects, indeed, admit of geometrical demonstration; but as the object of this word is rather to give the spirit of La Place's method than to pursue a regular system of demonstration, it would be a deviation from the unity of his plan to adopt it in the present case.

Diagrams are not employed in La Place's works, being unnecessary to those versed in analysis; some, however, will be occasionally introduced for the convenience of the reader.