While solving mechanical problems in which a body was conceptually replaced by a point, the question of how to add forces was answered simply on the preceding pages. The parallelogram law of forces yielded an answer to this question, and if the forces were parallel, we added their magnitudes like numbers.
Now matters are more complicated. For the effect of a force on an object is characterized not only by its magnitude and direction but also by the point of its application, or—we have explained above that this is the same thing—its line of action.
To add forces means to replace them by a single force. This is by no means always possible.
The replacement of parallel forces by a single resultant is a problem which can always be solved (except in a special case, which will be discussed at the end of this section). Let us consider the addition of parallel forces. Of course, the sum of forces of
Two forces acting on a body are depicted in Figure 2. The resultant force

A point lying on the segment joining the points of application of
Denoting the lever arms of
Denote the distance between the points of application of
Let us solve the following system of two equations in two variables

Such a combination of forces is called a couple.
The action of a couple cannot be reduced to the action of one force. Any other pair of parallel or antiparallel forces can be balanced by a single force, but a couple cannot.
Of course, it would be false to say that the forces constituting a couple cancel each other. A couple has quite a significant effect—it rotates a body; the peculiarity of the action of a couple consists in the fact that it does not produce a translational motion.
In certain cases, the question may arise not of adding parallel forces but of decomposing a given force into two parallel ones.

Two persons carrying a heavy basket together on a pole are depicted in Figure 3. The weight of the basket is distributed between the two of them. If the load presses down on the centre of the pole, they both feel the same weight. If the distances from the point of application of the load to the hands which carry it are