Kant: AA XI, Briefwechsel 1791 , Seite 253 |
|||||||
Zeile:
|
Text (Kant):
|
|
|
||||
01 | 2nd That the representation of the foggy stars, as a like number remote | ||||||
02 | milky ways is not, as Erxleben says in his natural philosophy 1772 p. 540, | ||||||
03 | and as is still extant in the new edition, augmented by the counsellor Lichtenberg | ||||||
04 | as an idea, ventured by Lambert, who rather supposed them (at least one of | ||||||
05 | them) to be obscure bodies, illuminated by neighboring suns. | ||||||
06 | 3rd That I have represented a long time ago, very nearly to that, what | ||||||
07 | recent observations have taught, the production and conservation of the ring of | ||||||
08 | Saturn, according to mere laws of the centripetal force, which appears now to | ||||||
09 | be so well confirmed, viz: a mist, moving round its centre, (which in the same | ||||||
10 | time is that of Saturn), which is composed of particles, not steady, but independently | ||||||
11 | revolving and performing their orbits in times, different according to | ||||||
12 | their distance from the centre; whereby at once the time of Saturn's revolution | ||||||
13 | on its axis, which I inferred from it, and its flatness, seem to be ratified. | ||||||
14 | 4th That this agreement of the theory of the production of yon ring from | ||||||
15 | a vaporous matter, moving after the laws of the centripetal force, is somewhat | ||||||
16 | favorable to the theory of the production of the great globes themselves according | ||||||
17 | to the same laws, except that their property of rotation is originally produced | ||||||
18 | by the fall of this dispersed substance by the general gravity. It does | ||||||
19 | so chiefly, if the later opinion, added as supplement to the theory of the | ||||||
20 | heavens, which is approved by the important applause of Mr. Lichtenberg, is | ||||||
21 | connected with it, that: yon prime matter, vaporously dispersed through the | ||||||
22 | universe, which contained all stuffs of an innumerable variety in an elastic | ||||||
23 | state, forming the globes, effected it only in this manner, that the matters of | ||||||
24 | any chemical affinity, if in their course, they met together according to the | ||||||
25 | laws of gravitation, destroyed mutually their elasticity, produced by its bodies | ||||||
26 | and in them that heat, joined in the larger globes, (the suns) externally with | ||||||
27 | the illuminated property, in the smaller ones (the planets) with the interior heat. | ||||||
28 | In the same time I beg you to entitle the appendix about in the following manner. | ||||||
29 | Appendix. | ||||||
30 | Occasion of it. | ||||||
31 | The apprehension, that several inquiries, both public and private, for | ||||||
32 | Kant's natural history and theory of the heavens, Michael 1755, might occasion | ||||||
33 | any unbidden new edition of it, moved its author to propose to me, to make | ||||||
34 | an extract of it, containing the most essential, however with regard to the great | ||||||
35 | progress of astronomy since its publication; with I lay down here, after his | ||||||
36 | review and with his approbation. | ||||||
37 | Here follows the extract. | ||||||
38 | Besides I beseech you, not to be offended at the trouble, I occasion you; | ||||||
39 | and to favor me with your company, if possible, tomorrow at the dinner. | ||||||
40 | I. Kant | ||||||
41 | Apr. 19. 1791. | ||||||
[ Seite 252 ] [ Seite 254 ] [ Inhaltsverzeichnis ] |