Jerzy & Hanibal : I think the problem with this whole business is that you can argue forever about definitions - as we frequently do. If enough people define a term a certain way, even if it's technically questionable to begin with, that's still eventually going to become the definition, and of course this happens with language in general as well. Many respected textbooks actually say "center of gravity is the same as center of mass" (for example, Mathematics Dictionary, James & James, or Principles of Mechanics, Synge & Griffith). If ninety percent of reliable sources define it that way, how can you argue ? On the other hand, if you make the statement that the force of gravitational attraction between two bodies is identical to that between two equivalent point masses at the centers of mass of the original bodies, this is unarguably incorrect unless the bodies happen to be spheres. Another example of incorrect usage eventually becoming accepted is the term "moment of inertia" - which in the US has come to be universally used to refer also to second moment of area, which actually has nothing to do with inertia. Of course, that's not to say that you can't get a lot of fun and insight out of these endless discussions.