he wrote 3 main books, the first was an inspirational cook book that defied the laws of bakery and patiserie. The second was on how sexually atracted he was to his neighbours cat. And the third was about the on going struggle with a tiny penis
'Unpopular laws' are laws which are not popular.
Readers and viewers of the play 'Antigone' learn from the first ode that mortals face a challenging choice between good and evil. According to the first ode, a good life is led when a mortal respects the laws of the city and the justice of the gods. But the problem with which the play begins is the contradiction between the laws of mortals and the justice of the gods. In the second ode, readers and viewers learn of another challenging problem. That problem is the mischievous role of the gods. According to the second ode, mortals are lured into offending the gods and therefore into cycles of divine punishment. In fact, their offenses bring upon them and their descendants divine curses from which there's no escape. Such indeed is the case of Antigone, whose great grandfather was the cursed Theban King Labdacus. The lesson that readers and viewers therefore learn from the two odes combined is the inevitability of suffering and death. The gods say that mortals must respect earthly laws and divine justice. The laws of Thebes contradict the justice of the gods. The Theban who respects one law violates the other. Violation of earthly laws is punished with death. Violation of god given justice is punished with curses and death.
Another name for a written law is a "statute."
That mortals can be defeated by death and by divine wrathis the meaning of the second ode in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the chorus begins with praises for human achievements and domination over nature and wildlife. But the members caution about two challenges to mortal powers. One is death, from which there is no escape. Another is foolishness in regard to divine and royal laws.
Newton's 2nd Law - Impulse and momentum Newtons third law - Free body diagram
the second law
Every single object that exists obeys ALL of Newtons Laws
His third.
For every action ,there is an opposite reaction ,that is perhaps Newtons third law of motion.
No, his three laws do not directly address work done.
All of Newton's laws are applicable to rocketry.The Second Law F=ma = dmV/dt = mdV/dt + Vdm/dt=0.The first and third law are the same equilibrium condition, No force no acceleration..
The law of gravity is not one of Newton's laws of motion. Newton's laws of motion include the first law (inertia), second law (force equals mass times acceleration), and third law (action and reaction).
Newtons laws have to do with lacrosse when (in guys lacrosse) you push the other player, which relates to newtons 2nd law, the larger the mass the harder the acceleration. Also, newtons 1st law involves throwing and catching a ball, newtons law says and object in motion will stay in motion until acted upon by an outside force. The object in motion is the ball and the outside force is the other person catching it, stopping the motion. Newtons third law relates to lacrosse when you make a shot and hit the post causing it to bounce off. The 3rd law states for every action theres an equal and opposite reaction. The reaction is the ball flying off the post.
Newton's third law states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. This means that when one object exerts a force on another object, the second object exerts an equal force in the opposite direction on the first object.
Newton's Second Law: force = mass x acceleration
the laws of motion