Physics | physics | Institute of Physics | Nobel Prize in Physics | particle physics | Applied Physics Laboratory | mathematical physics | American Institute of Physics | nuclear physics | International Physics Olympiad | Condensed matter physics | Nuclear Physics | Cartesian coordinate system | Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory | Plasma (physics) | Physics | Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology | Solid-state physics | Particle physics | List of Nobel laureates in Physics | Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics | condensed matter physics | Cartesian product | The Tao of Physics | Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics | Physics Today | physics engine | Physics (Aristotle) | Nuclear physics | Max Planck Institute for Physics |
Edmond Pourchot (1651, Poilly – 1734, Paris) was a university professor noted for his controversial advocacy of Cartesianism (and the Cartesian theory of mechanics) in place of Aristotelianism.