Terrestrial
Motion
Terrestrial Motion
• the movement that the
earth makes.
Terrestrial
• Not straying far from its Latin
root terra meaning "earth,"
terrestrial means "of the
earth." If it's terrestrial, you'll
find it on earth. If it's
extraterrestrial, you'll find it
emerging from a UFO.
Motion
• change in position of an
object w/ respect to time.
• typically described in
terms of displacement,
distance, velocity,
acceleration, time and
speed.
Types of Terrestrial Motion
• Motion with respect to quality -
called as alteration, a general
designation that is used to
include both contraries and by
quality not by property of
substance but a passive quality
in virtue of which a thing is said
to be acted on or to be in capable
of being acted on.
Types of Terrestrial
Motion
• Motion with respect to quantity
- has no name that includes both
contraries, but it is called increase
or decrease according as one or
the other is designated:
• that is to say motion in the
direction of complete magnitude is
increase, motion in the contrary
direction is decrease.
Types of Terrestrial
Motion
• Motion with respect to place -
has no name either general or
particular: but we may designate it
by general name of locomotion,
though strictly the term
'locomotion' is applicable to things
that change their place only when
they have not the power to come
to a stand, and to things that do
not move themselves locally.

1. TerrestrialMotion.pptx

  • 1.
  • 2.
    Terrestrial Motion • themovement that the earth makes.
  • 3.
    Terrestrial • Not strayingfar from its Latin root terra meaning "earth," terrestrial means "of the earth." If it's terrestrial, you'll find it on earth. If it's extraterrestrial, you'll find it emerging from a UFO.
  • 4.
    Motion • change inposition of an object w/ respect to time. • typically described in terms of displacement, distance, velocity, acceleration, time and speed.
  • 5.
    Types of TerrestrialMotion • Motion with respect to quality - called as alteration, a general designation that is used to include both contraries and by quality not by property of substance but a passive quality in virtue of which a thing is said to be acted on or to be in capable of being acted on.
  • 6.
    Types of Terrestrial Motion •Motion with respect to quantity - has no name that includes both contraries, but it is called increase or decrease according as one or the other is designated: • that is to say motion in the direction of complete magnitude is increase, motion in the contrary direction is decrease.
  • 7.
    Types of Terrestrial Motion •Motion with respect to place - has no name either general or particular: but we may designate it by general name of locomotion, though strictly the term 'locomotion' is applicable to things that change their place only when they have not the power to come to a stand, and to things that do not move themselves locally.