thumb|right|100px|Cartesian planetary vortices, Physica Particularis, 1754.

Pierre Lemonnier (; aka Petro Lemonnier; 28 June 1675 in Saint-Sever, Province of Normandy – 27 November 1757 in Saint-Germain-en-Laye) was a French astronomer, a professor of Physics and Philosophy at the Collège d'Harcourt (University of Paris), and a member of the French Academy of Sciences.

Lemonnier published the 6-volume Latin university textbook Cursus philosophicus ad scholarum usum accommodatus (Paris, 1750/1754) which consisted of the following volumes (generally consistent with the Ratio Studiorum):

  • Volume 1 - Logica
  • Volume 2 - Metaphysica
  • Volume 3 - Physica Generalis including mechanics and geometry
  • Volume 4 - Physica Particularis (Part I) including astronomy (Ptolemaic, Copernican, Tychonic), optics, chemistry, gravity, and Newtonian versus Cartesian dynamics
  • Volume 5 - Physica Particularis (Part II) including fluid mechanics, human anatomy, magnetism, and miscellaneous subjects (earthquakes, electricity, botany, metallurgy, etc. ...)
  • Volume 6 - Moralis including appendices on trigonometry and sundials

He was also the father of Pierre Charles Le Monnier and Louis-Guillaume Le Monnier.

See also

  • Johann Baptiste Horvath
  • Andreas Jaszlinszky
  • Edmond Pourchot
  • Philip of the Blessed Trinity
  • Charles Morton

References