Galilei, Galileo
,
De Motu Antiquiora
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the
heaviness
of
water
so
that
resists
:
for
since
they
are
assumed
to
remain
as
they
are
,
the
pressure
will
not
be
greater
than
the
resistance
,
nor
vice
versa.
Consequently
,
the
heaviness
of
water
so
is
equal
to
the
heaviness
of
the
magnitude
ef:
which
is
unacceptable
;
for
since
the
size
of
ef
taken
as
whole
is
greater
than
the
size
of
the
same
water
so
,
the
heaviness
of
the
magnitude
ef
also
will
be
greater
than
the
heaviness
of
water
so
.
It
is
consequently
manifest
that
magnitudes
equally
as
heavy
as
water
are
completely
submerged
in
water
:
in
addition
,
I
say
that
they
are
no
more
carried
upward
than
downward
,
but
that
,
wherever
they
are
placed
,
there
they
remain
.
For
there
is
no
cause
in
virtue
of
which
they
should
go
down
or
up
:
for
since
they
are
assumed
to
be
equally
as
heavy
as
water
,
to
say
that
they
go
down
in
water
would
be
the
same
as
if
we
were
to
say
that
water
,
in
water
,
goes
down
under
water
,
and
that
on
the
other
hand
the
water
that
rises
above
the
first
water
then
goes
down
again
,
and
that
water
thus
continues
without
end
going
alternately
down
and
up
;
which
is
unacceptable
.
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