Andrew Mason said:
I think you are going back too far. After all, Newton did not deal with electrical forces so if the test is: "it isn't in the Principia", you are leaving out classical electromagnetic theory.
Should we not just stick to the four fundamental forces of nature but dispense with the concept of well defined objects with well defined positions and movements at the atomic and sub-atomic level?
AM
"After all, Newton did not deal with electrical forces so if the test is: "it isn't in the Principia", you are leaving out classical electromagnetic theory."
When I said classical, I meant without quantum mechanics. Many physicists refer to relativity as classical physics. In fact, general relativity starts with the notion that there are no "pseudoforces." The law of equivalence says that the gravity is locally equivalent to inertia. So I really did mean what I say.
There are all sorts of artificial kluges that make quantum mechanics look more classical. For example, many physicists have worked on developing "pseudopotentials" for atoms. That is, they develop a force law for atoms that they can use in Newtonian style computer simulations. The reason that it is a pseudopotential rather than a potential is that they have to solve Schroedinger's equation to get the force law. I am borrowing the word pseudoforce to describe the forces taht are associated with pseudopotentials. I don't mean any harm!
You are right about one thing. Principia does have certain limitations with respect to electromagnetic forces. It works fine with a certain type of electromagnetic problem. However, there is an important limitation of Principia with respect to electromagnetic theory.
Newton wrote the third law of motion in present tense. His mathematical analysis is consistent with the third law of motion as written in present tense. This means that his analysis is good only for forces that act instantaneously. This means that his analysis only works for contact forces and forces that propagate with infinite speed.
When Newton derives the speed of sound, he hypothesizes contact forces between fluid elements. His hypothesized forces are local, working only on contact. He uses the bulk modulus, which pretty much means elastic forces that work on contact. So his "speed of sound" has nothing to do with the speed of the forces between objects at a distance. So in effect, the speed of sound is independent of the speed of the forces involved. In his analysis of sound, there is no delay between action and reaction.
Principia works very well for forces that are effectively "acting at a distance". If there were no delay between action and reaction, then the dynamics will satisfy the famous three laws of motion with no difficulty.
If the delay between action and reaction in the third law is negligible, then for all practical purposes the force is instantaneous. Hence, Principia can be used with almost no modification as long as the electromagnetic fields are effectively static. Principia can be used in the limit of the near field approximation even if there is some time variation in the electromagnetic fields.
Benjamin Franklin and Greene managed to analyze electrostatic problems by assuming that electric charges obeyed an analogous law to gravity. They did not postulate any deviation from the three laws of motion. Their type of analysis was classical electromagnetic theory at its most classical.
There is a delay in electromagnetic forces that is related to the speed of light in a vacuum. However, the third law of motion was written in the present tense. If the distances in a problem are large enough that the delay time is significant, then the problem is beyond Principia's range of validity.
This little problem with delay time was what motivated H. A. Lorentz to develop his "Theory of Electrons" (1915). Of course, it was also crucial when A. Einstein developed relativity. Einstein started with different hypotheses, but finished with the importance of the delay time.
Which is irrelevant to chemical potential. Chemical potential works for getting a certain amount of "classical mechanics" into the calculations. For instance, the laws of thermodynamics work fine with chemical potential. If ones sticks to chemistry, and not think about the physical basis of chemical potential, then one can solve all sorts of problems without difficulty. You don't need a deep understanding of quantum mechanics to do chemistry. If you want to know why "chemical potential", then you will need a deeper understanding of quantum mechanics.
Don't get me wrong. One needs at least a shallow understanding of quantum mechanics to do chemistry. However, a very deep understanding of quantum mechanics may slow you down. I find it helpful to think of chemical potential as a pseudopotential. Something that allows one to use classical mechanics, sometimes.