The Loss of the S. S. Titanic Its Story and Its Lessons
THE LOSS OF THE S. S. TITANIC ITS STORY AND ITS LESSONS BY LAWRENCE BEESLEY B. A. (_Cantab_.) Scholar of Gonville and Caius College ONE OF THE SURVIVORS PREFACE The circumstances in which this book came to be written are as follows. Some five weeks after the survivors from the Titanic landed
philosopher. It was natural to suppose that just as the moon was
guided and controlled by the attraction of the earth, so the earth
itself, in the course of its great annual progress, should be guided
and controlled by the supreme attractive power of the sun. If this
were so with regard to the earth, then it would be impossible to
doubt that in the same way the movements of the planets could be
explained to be consequences of solar attraction.
It was at this point that the great laws of Kepler became especially
significant. Kepler had shown how each of the planets revolves in an
ellipse around the sun, which is situated on one of the foci. This
discovery had been arrived at from the interpretation of
observations. Kepler had himself assigned no reason why the orbit of
a planet should be an ellipse rather than any other of the infinite
number of closed curves which might be traced around the sun. Kepler
had also shown, and here again he was merely deducing the results
from observation, that when the movements of two planets were
compared together, the squares of the periodic times in which each
planet revolved were proportional to the cubes of their mean
distances from the sun. This also Kepler merely knew to be true as a
fact, he gave no demonstration of the reason why nature should have
adopted this particular relation between the distance and the
periodic time rather than any other. Then, too, there was the law by
which Kepler with unparalleled ingenuity, explained the way in which
the velocity of a planet varies at the different points of its track,
when he showed how the line drawn from the sun to the planet
THE LOSS OF THE S. S. TITANIC ITS STORY AND ITS LESSONS BY LAWRENCE BEESLEY B. A. (_Cantab_.) Scholar of Gonville and Caius College ONE OF THE SURVIVORS PREFACE The circumstances in which this book came to be written are as follows. Some five weeks after the survivors from the Titanic landed