Foscarini, Paolo Antonio, An epistle to fantoni, 1661

Page concordance

< >
Scan Original
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
< >
page |< < of 33 > >|
1by reaſon of their proclivity make towards their Centre are
Grave
, and thoſe that incline to the Circumference Light.
And
ſo
in the Sun, Moon, and Starrs, there are parts as well Grave as

Light
.
And conſequently Heaven it ſelf that ſo Noble Body,
and
of a fifth Eſſence, ſhall not be conſtituted of a Matter diffe­
rent
from that of the Elements, being free from all Mutation in
it
's Subſtance, Quantity, and Quality: Nor ſo admirable and

excellent
as Ariſtotle would make us to believe; nor yet a ſolid
Body
, and impermeable; and much leſſe (as the generality of
men
verily believe) of an impenetrable and moſt obdurate Den­
ſity
: but in it (as this Opinion will have it) Comets may be ge­
nerated
; and the Sun it ſelf, as tis probable, exhaling or attract­
ing
ſundry vapours to the ſurface of its Body, may perhaps pro­
duce
thoſe Spots which were obſerved to be ſo various, and irre­

gular
in its Diſcus: of which Galilæus in a perticular ^{*} Treatiſe
hath
moſt excellently and moſt accurately ſpoken; inſomuch,
that
though it were not beſides my preſent purpoſe, yet it is con­
venient
that I forbear to ſpeak any thing touching thoſe matters,
leaſt
I ſhould ſeem to do that which he hath done before me: But
now
if there be found in the Sacred Scriptures any Authority
contrary
to theſe things, it may be ſalved by the foreſaid Argu­
ments
Analogically applyed.
And further more it may be ſaid,
that
that Solidity is to be ſo underſtood, as that it admits of no
vacuum
, cleft, or penetration from whence the leaſt vacuity might
proceed
For the truth is, as that cannot be admitted in bodily
Creatures
, ſo it is likewiſe repugnant to Heaven it ſelf, being
indeed
a Body of its own Nature the moſt Rare of all

thers
, and tenuoſe beyond all Humane Conception, and happly
hath
the ſame proportion to the Aire, as the Aire to the
Water
.
All Cœleſtial Bo­
dies
have Gravity
and
Levety.
* Delle Macchie
ſolarj
.
* Vnius Corporis
fimplicis
, unus eſt
motus
ſimplex, et
huic
duæ ſpecies,
Rectus
& Circu­
laris
: Rectus du­
plex
à medio, &
ad
medium; pri­
mus
levium, ut
eris
& Ignis: ſe­
cundus
gravium,
ut
Aquæ & Ter­
: Circularis,
quieſt
circa medi­
um
competit Cœlo,
quod
neque eſt
grave
, neque leve.
Ariſt
. de Cœlo.
Lib
. 1.

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index