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2.2: Modern Ideas about Motion

  • Page ID
    472502
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    Modern ideas about motion originated during the Scientific Revolution. Prior to this time, logical reasoning alone was held to be the way to understand the natural world. During the Scientific Revolution, the need for measurements of the world around us became an important of understanding the world we live in.

    The predominant ideas about motion were built on the thoughts of the Greek philosopher Aristotle. Aristotle held the belief that heavy things fall faster than lighter things. There were other ideas at the time and proposed since that time, but this was the dominant view of motion for around 2000 years.

    There were many scientific endeavors even before the Scientific Revolution across the world that gradually built up the evidence for our modern understanding of motion. Some of the names of people who did this work before and during the Scientific Revolution are Abu’l-Barakāt al-Baghdādī, Al-Biruni, Albert of Saxony, Bhāskarāchārya, Brahmagupta, Jean Buridan, Jan Comets de Groot, Johannes Kepler, and Leonardo da Vinci.

    There was no single scientist who brought about our modern understanding, however the story that gained the most notoriety was that involving Galileo Galilei and the Leaning Tower of Pisa*. If two objects made of the same material but of differing masses were dropped from the Tower, they would arrive at the bottom at the same time. Galileo was not the first person to make this assertation, but along with his other contributions to the understanding of motion, it was ultimately convincing.

    In the rest of this chapter we will examine a few more ideas about motion. What is motion and how do we keep track of the changing of motion? What is mass, and what can cause a mass to move?

    *It is unclear if Galileo ever performed this experiment or whether it was a thought experiment. However, many such experiments have been performed from a variety of towers since that time to confirm that this is correct.


    This page titled 2.2: Modern Ideas about Motion is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jamie MacArthur.

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