Boyle, Robert, New experiments physico-mechanicall, touching the spring of the air and its effects, 1660

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1
And as for the Allegations above
mention'd, they ſeem to prove but that
the Receiver devoy'd of Air, May be re­
pleniſh'd with ſome ſuch Etherial Matter,
as ſome Modern Naturaliſts write of; but
not that it really is ſo. And indeed to me
it yet ſeems, that as to thoſe ſpaces which
the Vacuiſts would have to be empty, be­
cauſe they are manifeſtly devoid of Air;
and all groſſer Bodies, the Pleniſts (if I
may ſo call them) do not prove that ſuch
ſpaces are repleniſh'd with ſuch a ſubtle
Matter as they ſpeak of, by any ſenſible
effects, or operations of it (of which di­
vers new Tryals purpoſely made, have not
yet ſhown me any) but onely conclude
that there muſt be ſuch a Body, becauſe
there cannot be a Void.
And the reaſon
why there cannot be a Void, being by
them taken, not from any Experiments,
or Phænomena of Nature, that clearly and
particularly prove their Hypotheſis, but
from their notion of a Body, whoſe Na­
ture, according to them, conſiſting one­
ly in extenſion (which indeed ſeems the
property moſt eſſential to, becauſe inſepa­
rable from a Body) to ſay a ſpace devoid
of Body, is to ſpeak in the School-mens
Phraſe, a Contradiction in Adjecto: This

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