Salusbury, Thomas, Mathematical collections and translations (Tome I), 1667

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SAGR. And what is this?
SAGR. Indeed, it ſeems then, that the Moon hath a great

er
over theſe Oyſter-fiſhes, which we call ^{*} armed ſiſbes.
* Peſci armai, or
armati
.
SIMP. And this is that calculation, which I mentioned, of this
Journey
in a natural day, in an hour, in a firſt minute, and in a
ſecond
, which a point of the Earth would make placed under the
Equinoctial
, and alſo in the parallel of 48 gr. And then followeth
this
, which I doubted I had committed ſome miſtake in reciting,
therefore
let us read it. His poſitis, neceſſe est, terra circulariter
mota
, omnia ex aëre eidem, &c.
Quod ſi haſce pilas æquales
nemus
pondere, magnitudine, gravitate, & in concavo Sphæræ
naris
poſitas libero deſcenſui permittamus, ſi motum deorſum
mus
celeritate motui circum, (quod tamen ſecus eſt, cum pila A,
&c.) elabentur minimum (ut multum cedamus adverſariis) dies
ſex
: quo tempore ſexies circa terram, &c. [In Engliſb thus.]
Theſe
things being ſuppoſed, it is neceſſary, the Earth being
cularly
moved, that all things from the air to the ſame, &c.
So
that
if we ſuppoſe theſe balls to be equal in magnitude and
vity
, and being placed in the concave of the Lunar Sphere, we
permit
them a free deſcent, and if we make the motion
wards
equal in velocity to the motion about, (which nevertheleſs
is
otherwiſe, if the ball A, &c.) they ſhall be falling at leaſt (that
we
may grant much to our adverſaries) ſix dayes; in which time
they
ſhall be turned ſix times about the Earth, &c.

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