CLARKE, John (1682-1757). A Demonstration of some of the Principal Sections of Sir Isaac Newton's Principles of Natural Philosophy, London: for James and John Knapton, 1730, 8°, 17 folding engraved plates (offsetting from plates), contemporary calf (front cover detached). [Babson 46; Wallis 62]

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CLARKE, John (1682-1757). A Demonstration of some of the Principal Sections of Sir Isaac Newton's Principles of Natural Philosophy, London: for James and John Knapton, 1730, 8°, 17 folding engraved plates (offsetting from plates), contemporary calf (front cover detached). [Babson 46; Wallis 62]

Lot Essay

John Clark, Dean of Salisbury, was a distinguished mathematician and early exponent of Newtonian science. His work is described by Babson as "a full commentary on the chapters in the Principia dealing with the Laws of Motion, the Motion of bodies, Centripetal forces, Bodies vibrating in Pendulums, attractive Forces of Sphaerical Bodies, and Introduction on Definitions."

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