<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:np="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/ns/nonTEI" xml:id="NATP00074" type="transcription" subtype="child">
<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title>Front Matter to the Principia (1687)</title>
<author xml:id="in"><persName key="nameid_1" sort="Newton, Isaac" ref="nameid_1" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/catalogue/xml/persNames.xml">Isaac Newton</persName></author>

</titleStmt>
<extent><hi rend="italic">c.</hi> <num n="word_count" value="1076">1,076</num> words</extent>

<publicationStmt>
<authority>Enlightening Science Project</authority>
<pubPlace>Falmer</pubPlace>
<date>2008</date>
<publisher>Newton Project, University of Sussex</publisher>
<availability n="lic-text" status="restricted"><licence target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/"><p>This text is licensed under a <ref target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License</ref>.</p></licence></availability>
</publicationStmt>
<notesStmt>
<note type="metadataLine">1687, <hi rend="italic">c.</hi> 1,088 words.</note>
<note n="related_texts">
<linkGrp n="document_relations" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/view/normalized/"><ptr type="next_part" target="NATP00075">Definitiones (1687) [<hi rend="italic">Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica</hi> (1687)]</ptr><ptr type="parent" target="NATP00071"><hi rend="italic">Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica</hi> (1687)</ptr></linkGrp>
</note>
</notesStmt>
<sourceDesc><bibl type="simple" n="custodian_3" sortKey="zz-philosophiae_naturalis_principia_mathematica_(london:_1687)." subtype="Printed"> <hi rend="italic">Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica</hi> (London: 1687).</bibl>
<biblStruct>
<monogr>
<author><persName ref="nameid_1" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/catalogue/xml/persNames.xml"><forename>Isaac</forename> <surname>Newton</surname></persName></author>
<title>Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica</title>
<imprint>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<publisher>Joseph Streater</publisher>
<date>1687</date>
</imprint>
</monogr>
</biblStruct>
</sourceDesc>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc>
<creation>
<origDate when="1687-01-01">1687</origDate>
<origPlace>England</origPlace>
</creation>
<langUsage>
<language ident="lat">Latin</language>
</langUsage>
<handNotes>
<handNote xml:id="printer" scribe="print">Print</handNote>
</handNotes>
</profileDesc>
<encodingDesc>
<classDecl><taxonomy><category><catDesc n="Science">Science</catDesc><category><catDesc n="Physics">Physics</catDesc></category></category><category><catDesc n="Mathematics">Mathematics</catDesc></category></taxonomy></classDecl>
</encodingDesc>
<revisionDesc>
<change when="2001-01-01" type="metadata">Catalogue information compiled by Rob Iliffe, Peter Spargo &amp; John Young</change>
<change when="2009-07-01">Transcription tagged by <name xml:id="aqs">Abdul Q. Sami</name></change>
<change when="2009-11-09" status="released">Code audited by <name xml:id="mjh">Michael Hawkins</name></change>
<change when="2011-09-29" type="metadata">Catalogue exported to teiHeader by <name>Michael Hawkins</name></change>
</revisionDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<div>
<pb xml:id="pA1" n="A1"/>
<head rend="center" xml:id="hd1"><hi rend="largest">PHILOSOPHIÆ</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l1"/><hi rend="larger">NATURALIS</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l2"/><hi rend="largest">PRINCIPIA</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l3"/><hi rend="larger">MATHEMATICA.</hi></head>
<p rend="center" xml:id="par1">Autore <hi rend="italic">IS. NEWTON, Trin. Coll. Cantab. Soc.</hi> Matheseos <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l4"/>Professore <hi rend="italic">Lucasiano</hi>, &amp; Societatis Regalis Sodali.</p>
<p rend="center" xml:id="par2"><hi rend="larger">IMPRIMATUR.</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l5"/>S. PEPYS, <hi rend="italic">Reg. Soc.</hi> PRÆSES. <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l6"/><hi rend="italic">Julii</hi> 5. 1686.</p>
<p rend="center" xml:id="par3"><hi rend="italic">LONDINI</hi>, <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l7"/>Jussu <hi rend="italic">Societatis Regiæ</hi> ac Typis <hi rend="italic">Josephi Streater</hi>. Prostat apud plures Bibliopolas. <hi rend="italic">Anno</hi> MDCLXXXVII.</p>
</div>
<div>
<pb xml:id="pA2" n="A2"/>
<p rend="center" xml:id="par4"><hi rend="large">ILLUSTRISSIMÆ</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l8"/><hi rend="larger">SOCIETATI REGALI</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l9"/>a Serenissimo <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l10"/><hi rend="largest">REGE CAROLO II</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l11"/>AD <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l12"/><hi rend="large">PHILOSOPHIAM PROMOVENDAM</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l13"/><hi rend="larger">FUNDATÆ,</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l14"/><hi rend="large">ET AUSPICIIS</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l15"/><hi rend="larger">POTENTISSIMI MONARCHÆ</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l16"/><hi rend="largest">JACOBI II</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l17"/><hi rend="large">FLORENTI.</hi></p>
<p xml:id="par5"><hi rend="large">Tractatum hunc humillime <hi rend="italic">D. D. D.</hi></hi></p>
<p rend="center" xml:id="par6"><hi rend="large"><hi rend="italic">J S. NEWTON</hi>.</hi></p>
</div>
<div>
<pb xml:id="pA3" n="A3"/>
<head rend="center" xml:id="hd2"><hi rend="larger">PRÆFATIO</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l18"/><hi rend="large">AD</hi>  <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l19"/><hi rend="largest">LECTOREM</hi></head>
<p xml:id="par7"><hi rend="dropCap">C</hi><hi rend="italic">Um Veteres</hi> Mechanicam (<hi rend="italic">uti Author est</hi> Pappus) <hi rend="italic">in rerum Naturalium investigatione maximi fecerint, &amp; recentiores, missis formis substantialibus &amp; qualitatibus occultis, Phænomena Naturæ ac leges Mathematicas revocare aggressi sint: Visum est in hoc Tractatu</hi> Mathesin <hi rend="italic">excolere quatenus ea ad</hi> Philosophiam <hi rend="italic">spectat</hi>. Mechanicam <hi rend="italic">vero duplicem Veteres constituerunt:</hi> Rationalem <hi rend="italic">quæ per Demonstrationes accurate procedit, &amp;</hi> Practicam. <hi rend="italic">Ad practicam spectant Artes omnes Manuales, a quibus uti<choice><orig>q;</orig><reg>que</reg></choice></hi> Mechanica <hi rend="italic">nomen mutuata est. Cum autem Artifices parum accurate operari soleant, fit ut</hi> Mechanica <hi rend="italic">omnis a</hi> Geometria <hi rend="italic">ita distinguatur, ut quicquid accuratum sit ad</hi> Geometriam <hi rend="italic">referatur, quicquid minus accuratum ad</hi> Mechanicam. <hi rend="italic">Attamen errores non sunt Artis sed Artificum. Qui minus accurate operatur, imperfectior est Mechanicus, &amp; si quis accuratissime operari posset, hic foret Mechanicus omnium perfectissimus. Nam &amp; Linearum rectarum &amp; Circulorum descriptiones in quibus</hi> Geometria <hi rend="italic">fundatur, ad</hi> Mechanicam <hi rend="italic">pertinent. Has lineas describere</hi> Geometria <hi rend="italic">non docet sed postulat. Postulat enim ut Tyro easdem accurate describere prius didicerit quam limen attingat</hi> Geometriæ; <hi rend="italic">dein, quomodo per has operationes Problemata solvantur, docet. Rectas &amp; circulos describere Problemata sunt sed non Geometrica. Ex</hi> Mechanica <hi rend="italic">postulatur horum solutio, in</hi> Geometria <hi rend="italic">docetur solutorum usus. Ac gloriatur</hi> Geometria <hi rend="italic">quod tam paucis principiis aliunde petitis tam multa præstet. Fundatur igitur</hi> Geometria <hi rend="italic">in praxi Mechanica, &amp; nihil aliud est quam</hi> Mechanicæ universalis <hi rend="italic">pars illa quæ artem mensurandi accurate proponit ac demonstrat. Cum autem artes Manuales in corporibus movendis præcipue versentur, fit ut</hi> Geometria <hi rend="italic">ad magnitudinem,</hi> Mechanica <hi rend="italic">ad motum vulgo reseratur. Quo sensu</hi> Mechanica rationalis <hi rend="italic">erit Scientia Motuum qui ex viribus quibuscun<choice><orig>q;</orig><reg>que</reg></choice> resultant, &amp; virium quæ ad motus quoscun<choice><orig>q;</orig><reg>que</reg></choice> requiruntur, accurate proposita ac demonstrata. Pars hæc</hi> Mechanicæ <hi rend="italic">a Veteribus in</hi> Potentiis quinque <hi rend="italic">ad artes manuales spectantibus exculta fuit, qui Gravitatem (cum potentia manualis non sit) vix aliter quam in ponderibus per potentias illas movendis considerarunt. Nos autem non Artibus sed Philosophiæ consulentes, de<choice><orig>q;</orig><reg>que</reg></choice> potentiis non manualibus sed naturalibus scribentes, ea maxime tractamus quæ ad Gravitatem, levitatem, vim Elasticam, resisten<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l20"/><pb xml:id="pA3v" n="A3v"/>tiam Fluidorum &amp; ejusmodi vires seu attractivas seu impulsivas spectant: Et ea propter hæc nostra tanquam Philosophiæ principia Mathematica proponimus. Omnis enim Philosophiæ difficultas in eo versari videtur, ut a Phænomenis motuum investigemus vires Naturæ, deinde ab his viribus demonstremus phænomena reliqua. Et huc spectant Propositiones generales quas Libro primo &amp; secundo pertractavimus. In Libro autem tertio exemplum hujus rei proposuimus per explicationem Systematis mundani. Ibi enim, ex phænomenis cælestibus, per Propositiones in Libris prioribus Mathematice demonstratas, derivantur vires gravitatis quibus corpora ad Solem &amp; Planetas singulos tendunt. Deinde ex his viribus per Propositiones etiam Mathematicas deducuntur motus Planetarum, Cometarum, Lunæ &amp; Maris. Utinam cætera Naturæ phænomena ex principiis Mechanicis eodem argumentandi genere derivare liceret. Nam multa me movent ut nonnihil suspicer ea omnia ex viribus quibusdam pendere posse, quibus corporum particulæ per causas nondum cognitas vel in se mutuo impelluntur &amp; secundum figuras regulares cohærent, vel ab invicem fugantur &amp; recedunt: quibus viribus ignotis, Philosophi hactenus Naturam frustra tentarunt. Spero autem quod vel huic Philosophandi modo, vel veriori alicui, Principia hic posita lucem aliquam præbebunt.</hi></p>
<p xml:id="par8"><hi rend="italic">In his edendis, Vir acutissimus &amp; in omni literarum genere eruditissimus</hi> Edmundus Halleius <hi rend="italic">operam navavit, nec solum Typothetarum Sphalmata correxit &amp; Schemata incidi curavit, sed etiam Author fuit ut horum editionem aggrederer. Quippe cum demonstratam a me figuram Orbium cælestium impetraverat, rogare non destitit ut eadem cum</hi> Societate Regali <hi rend="italic">communicarem, Quæ deinde hortatibus &amp; benignis suis auspiciis effecit ut de eadem in lucem emittenda cogitare inciperem. At postquam Motuum Lunarium inæqualitates aggressus essem, deinde etiam alia tentare cœpissem quæ ad leges &amp; mensuras Gravitatis &amp; aliarum virium, ad figuras a corporibus secundum datas quascunque leges attractis describendas, ad motus corporum plurium inter se, ad motus corporum in Mediis resistentibus, ad vires, densitates &amp; motus Mediorum, ad Orbes Cometarum &amp; similia spectant, editionem in aliud tempus differendam esse putavi, ut cætera rimarer &amp; una in publicum darem. Quæ ad motus Lunares spectant, (imperfecta cum sint,) in Corollariis Propositionis</hi> LXVI. <hi rend="italic">simul complexus sum, ne singula methodo prolixiore quam pro rei dignitate proponere, &amp; sigillatim demonstrare tenerer, &amp; seriem reliquarum Propositionum interrumpere. Nonnulla sero inventa locis minus idoneis inserere malui, quam numerum Propositionum &amp; citationes mutare. Ut omnia candide legantur, &amp; defectus, in materia tam difficili non tam reprehendantur, quam novis Lectorum conatibus investigentur, &amp; benigne suppleantur, enixe rogo.</hi></p>
</div>
<div>
<pb xml:id="pA4" n="A4"/>
<head rend="center" xml:id="hd3"><hi rend="large">IN <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l21"/>VIRI PRÆSTANTISSIMI</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l22"/><hi rend="larger">D. ISAACI NEWTONI</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l23"/><hi rend="large">OPUS HOCCE <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l24"/>MATHEMATICO-PHYSICUM</hi> <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l25"/>Sæculi Gentisque nostræ Decus egregium.</head>
<lg>
<l><hi rend="dropCap">E</hi>N tibi norma Poli, &amp; divæ libramina Molis,</l>
<l>Computus atque Jovis; quas, dum primordia rerum</l>
<l>Pangeret, omniparens Leges violare Creator</l>
<l>Noluit, æternique operis fundamina fixit.</l>
<l>Intima panduntur victi penetralia cæli,</l>
<l>Nec latet extremos quæ Vis circumrotat Orbes.</l>
<l>Sol solio residens ad se jubet omnia prono</l>
<l>Tendere descensu, nec recto tramite currus</l>
<l>Sidereos patitur vastum per inane moveri;</l>
<l>Sed rapit immotis, se centro, singula Gyris.</l>
<l>Jam patet horrificis quæ sit via flexa Cometis;</l>
<l>Jam non miramur barbati Phænomena Astri.</l>
<l>Discimus hinc tandem qua causa argentea Phœbe</l>
<l>Passibus haud æquis graditur; cur subdita nulli</l>
<l>Hactenus Astronomo numerorum fræna recuset:</l>
<l>Cur remeant Nodi, curque Auges progrediuntur.</l>
<l>Discimus &amp; quantis refluum vaga Cynthia Pontum</l>
<l>Viribus impellit, dum fractis fluctibus Ulvam</l>
<pb xml:id="pA4v" n="A4v"/>
<l>Deserit, ac Nautis suspectas nudat arenas;</l>
<l>Alternis vicibus suprema ad littora pulsans.</l>
<l>Quæ toties animos veterum torsere Sophorum,</l>
<l>Quæque Scholas frustra rauco certamine vexant</l>
<l>Obvia conspicimus nubem pellente Mathesi.</l>
<l>Jam dubios nulla caligine prægravat error</l> 
<l>Queis Superum penetrare domos atque ardua Cœli</l>
<l>Scandere sublimis Genii concessit acumen.</l>
<l>Surgite Mortales, terrenas mittite curas</l>
<l>Atque hinc cœligenæ vires dignoscite Mentis</l>
<l>A pecudum vita longe lateque remotæ.</l>
<l>Qui scriptis jussit Tabulis compescere Cædes</l>
<l>Furta &amp; Adulteria, &amp; perjuræ crimina Fraudis;</l>
<l>Quive vagis populis circumdare mœnibus Urbes</l>
<l>Autor erat; Cererisve beavit munere gentes;</l>
<l>Vel qui curarum lenimen pressit ab Uva;</l>
<l>Vel qui Niliaca monstravit arundine pictos</l>
<l>Consociare sonos, oculisque exponere Voces;</l>
<l>Humanam sortem minus extulit; utpote pauca</l> 
<l>Respiciens miseræ solummodo commoda vitæ.</l>
<l>Jam vero Superis convivæ admittimur, alti</l>
<l>Jura poli tractare licet, jamque abdita cœcæ</l>
<l>Claustra patent Terræ, rerumque immobilis ordo,</l>
<l>Et quæ pra teriti latuerunt sæcula mundi.</l>
<l>Talia monstrantem mecum celebrate Camænis,</l>
<l>Vos qui cœlesti gaudetis nectare vesci,</l>
<l><hi rend="italic">NEWTONUM</hi> clausi reserantem scrinia Veri,</l> 
<l><hi rend="italic">NEWTONUM</hi> Musis charum, cui pectore puro</l>
<l>Phœbus adest, totoque incessit Numine mentem:</l>
<l>Nec fas est propius Mortali attingere Divos.</l>
</lg>
<p rend="right" xml:id="par9"><hi rend="italic">EDM. HALLEY.</hi></p>
</div>
</body>
</text>
</TEI>