A Historical Method Approach to Teaching Kepler's 2nd law
Wladimir Lyra

TL;DR
This paper proposes a historical method-based teaching approach for Kepler's 2nd law, emphasizing its revolutionary nature and integrating quantitative and active learning components for advanced students.
Contribution
It introduces a novel teaching method that contextualizes Kepler's 2nd law historically and mathematically, enhancing understanding for research-oriented students.
Findings
Highlights the revolutionary aspect of Kepler's 2nd law.
Provides a quantitative formulation linking time and area.
Suggests active learning exercises for student engagement.
Abstract
Kepler's 2nd law, the law of the areas, is usually taught in passing, between the 1st and the 3rd laws, to be explained "later on" as a consequence of angular momentum conservation. The 1st and 3rd laws receive the bulk of attention; the 1st law because of the paradigm shift significance in overhauling the previous circular models with epicycles of both Ptolemy and Copernicus, the 3rd because of its convenience to the standard curriculum in having a simple mathematical statement that allows for quantitative homework assignments and exams. In this work I advance a method for teaching the 2nd law that combines the paradigm-shift significance of the 1st and the mathematical proclivity of the 3rd. The approach is rooted in the historical method, indeed, placed in its historical context, Kepler's 2nd is as revolutionary as the 1st: as the 1st law does away with the epicycle, the 2nd law does…
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