Galilei, Galileo
,
Mechanics
,
1665
Text
XML
Document information
None
Concordance
Figures
Thumbnails
List of thumbnails
<
1 - 10
11 - 20
21 - 30
31 - 40
>
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
<
1 - 10
11 - 20
21 - 30
31 - 40
>
page
|<
<
of 40
>
>|
the
Beetle
;
we
ſhall
ceaſe
to
wonder
at
the
Effect
,
which
doth
not
in
the
leaſt
exceed
the
terms
of
Natural
Conſtitutions
,
and
of
what
hath
been
ſpoken
.
Let
us
,
for
better
underſtanding
,
give
an
example
thereof
in
particular
Terms
.
There
is
a
Beetle
,
which
ha-
ving
four
degrees
of
Reſiſtance
,
is
moved
by
ſuch
a
Force
,
that
being
freed
from
it
in
that
term
where
it
maketh
the
Percuſſion
,
it
would
,
meeting
with
no
ſtop
,
go
ten
Paces
beyond
it
,
and
in
that
term
a
great
poſt
being
oppoſed
to
it
,
whoſe
Reſiſtance
to
Moti-
on
is
as
four
thouſand
,
that
is
,
a
thouſand
times
greater
than
that
of
the
Beetle
, (
but
yet
is
not
immoveable)
ſo
that
it
without
mea-
ſure
or
proportion
exceeds
the
Reſiſtance
of
the
Beetle
,
yet
the
Percuſſion
being
made
on
it
,
it
ſhall
be
driven
forwards
,
though
in-
deed
no
more
but
the
thouſandth
part
of
the
ten
Paces
which
the
Beetle
ſhall
be
moved
:
and
thus
in
an
inverted
method
,
changing
that
which
hath
been
ſpoken
touching
the
other
Mechanical
Effects
,
we
may
inveſtigate
the
reaſon
of
the
Force
of
the
Percutient
.
I
know
that
here
ariſe
difficulties
and
objections
unto
ſome
,
which
they
will
not
eaſily
be
removed
from
,
but
we
will
freely
remit
them
to
the
^{*}
Problems
Mechanical
,
which
we
ſhall
adjoyn
in
the
end
of
this
Diſcourſe
.
*
Theſe
Pro-
blems
he
here
promiſeth
were
never
yet
ex-
tant
.
Text layer
Dictionary
Text normalization
Original
Regularized
Normalized
Search
Exact
All forms
Fulltext index
Morphological index