Foscarini, Paolo Antonio, An epistle to fantoni, 1661

List of thumbnails

< >
11
11
12
12
13
13
14
14
15
15
16
16
17
17
18
18
19
19
20
20
< >
page |< < of 33 > >|
(a) Eccleſ. c. 1. v.
ult.
(b) Chap. 3. v. 11.
(c) 1 Cor. c. 4. v. 5
(d) 1 Cor. c. 13. v.
12
.
(e) 1 John c. 3. v.
2
.
(f) 1 Cor. c. 13. v.
12
.
(g) Eccleſiaſt. 15. 3
(h) 1 Cor. c. 2. v. 2
(i) Iſa. c. 48. v. 17.
1 Theſſ. 4.
And the Authorities of the ſecond Claſſe in particular by
this
ſame Maxime, Of the ordinary manner of apprehending
things
as they appear to us, and after the common way of ſpeak­
ing
, may be thus reconciled and expounded; namely, Oftentimes
an
Agent is commonly, and not improperly ſaid to move, (though
it
have no motion) not becauſe it doth indeed move, but by ex­
trinſick
denomination, becauſe receiving its influence and action at
the
motion of the Subject; the Form and Quality infuſed to
the
Subject by the ſaid Agent doth likewiſe move.
As for ex­
ample
, a Fire burning in a Chimney is an immoveable Agent,
before
which a man oppreſt with cold ſits to warm himſelf who
being
warmed on one ſide, turns the other to the Fire, that he
may
be warmed on that ſide alſo, and ſo in like manner he holds
every
part to the Fire ſucceſſively, till his whole body be warm­
ed
. 'Tis clear, that although the Fire do not move, yet at the
Motion
of the Subject, to wit the Man, who receiveth the heat
and
action of the Fire, the Form and Quality of its Heat doth
move
ſingulatim, & per partes, round about the mans body, and
alwayes
ſeeketh out a new place: and ſo, though the Fire do
not
move, yet by reaſon of its effect, it is ſaid to go round all
the
parts of the Mans body, and to warm it, not indeed by a
true
and real motion of the Fire it ſelf, ſince it is ſuppoſed (and
that
not untruly) not to move, but by the motion to which the
Body
is excited, out of a deſire of receiving the heat of the Fire
in
each of its parts.
The ſame may be applied to the Illumina­
tion
impreſſed ſucceſſively on the parts of any Globe, which
moves
Orbicularly at the aſpect of a ſhining immoveable
Light
.
And in the ſame manner may the Sun be ſaid to riſe and
ſet
, and to move above the Earth, although in reality he doth
not
move, nor ſuffer any mutation; that is to ſay, Inaſmuch as
his
Light (which effect is the Form and Quality proceeding from
him
, as the Agent, to the Earth as the Subject) doth ſenſibly
glide
forwards, by reaſon of the Orbicular motion of the Earth;
and
doth alwayes be take it ſelf to ſome new place of her ſurface;
upon
which ground he is truly ſaid (ſecundum vnlgarem ſermo­
nem
) to move above, and revolve about the Earth: Not that the
Sun
doth move, (for by this Opinion we affirm the Earth to
move
, that it may receive the Sun one while in one, another
while
in another part of it) but that at the motion of the Earth

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index