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Classical Mechanics obeys the principle of relativity: the same laws apply in any inertial reference frame. By "inertial", I mean that the system is at rest or moving with constant velocity. 1
1. This raises an awkward problem. If the laws of physics hold just as well in a uniformly moving frame, then we have no way of identifying the "rest" frame in the first place, and hence no way of checking that some other frame is moving at constant velocity. To avoid this trap, we define an inertial frame formally as one in which Newton's first law holds. If you want to know whether you're in an inertial frame, throw some rocks around -- if they move in straight lines at a constant speed, you've got yourself an inertial frame, and any frame moving at constant velocity with respect to you will be another inertial frame.