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NAME: LEANNE GEM C.

MONTEROLA GRADE & SECTION: 11 AQUAMARINE


Show how the Aristotle’s concepts of vertical motion, horizontal motion and projectile motion is similar
and different from Galileo through a Venn diagram.

GALILEAN CONCEPT
ARISTOTELIAN CONCEPT

Vertical motion - When two objects of


differing weights are dropped from a
height, they will both touch the ground
Vertical motion- All motion, at the same moment.
according to Aristotle, is subject to SIMILARITIES
two factors: motive force (F) and
resistance (R) (R). He believed that In Horizontal movement they are both Horizontal motion - If no obstruction
vertical motion was caused by a level movements, in the two movements' exists, a moving object will continue to
items fall normally and they are move in a straight path indefinitely.
force proportionate to weight
subjectively unique to vertical movement There is no need to push, pull, or use
(FWeight). Heavy things weighed
more soil or water and dropped yet vertical movements don't influence any form of force. A ball moving on a
quickly. the level movement. Also, Both tended horizontal plane, for example, would
toward having faith in a universe neither speed up nor slow down.
Horizontal motion- To maintain represented at last by unoriginal general Friction would eventually bring it to a
horizontal motion, bodies must be regulation, and that those regulations halt. He coined the term "inertial,"
pushed or pulled. could be perceived through levelheaded which refers to an object's ability to
request instead of disclosure. Aristotle resist changes in motion.
Projectile motion - occurs when an
was too quick to even consider
object is impacted by gravity's
condemning the Olympian divine beings,
downward force.
yet he imagined his God more as an Projectile motion is characterized by a
"Unaffected Mover" or a "First Cause." bent trajectory. Galileo believed that
projectile motion could be understood
by separating the horizontal and
vertical components.

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