An example of a limit. A limit is a quantity that continues to change as time goes on, but it changes less and less and gradually approaches a definite value. For example, as the time to release gets shorter, the path of the stone changes less and less, but it keeps changing, gradually approaching a straight line tangent to the circle. We can make the path as straight as we wish by choosing the time to release sufficiently short. But we can never in fact get to an absolutely straight path, because if we make the time to release zero, the length of the path is also zero. This can seem to be a paradox, and it makes thinking about this situation difficult. In fact, for much of human history, before Newton and Leibniz, such thinking seemed impossible. However, as Newton and Leibniz demonstrated in the process of inventing the differential calculus, a "limit" such as this does exist—it is possible to think about—and calculate—the speed and direction of motion of the object at the exact time of release, or, in fact, at any time.