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Kepler’s Planetary Species Immateriata

Kepler’s theory of the solar magnet can be distinguished from his theory of species Immateriata. Kepler’scelestial hypothesis also required a motion perpendicular to the radius vector (the species Immateriata). Following Aristotle’s principles of motion, that motion required a mover, Kepler was oblidged to explain why the planets moved at all. Further, he was obliged to […]

Kepler’s Magnetic Planetary Theory

A simplified illustration of Kepler’s solar magnetic theory. As a given planet circles the sun, the position of the planet’s axis remains fixed and constant. The sun’s outer surface constitutes one magnetic pole while its center is the opposite magnetic pole. The planet is thereby attracted to the sun through one half of its orbit […]

Ward’s Elliptical Hypothesis

In the above diagram ABPD is an ellipse, S and F foci, A and P aphelion and perihelion; the planet is at E, and angle AFE (the middle anomaly) changes uniformly. As Seth Ward defined it, the problem is to derive angle ASE (the true anomaly) from knowledge of angle AFE. Calculation requires plane trigonometric […]