Descartes, René, Renati Des-Cartes principia philosophiae

Table of figures

< >
[Figure 51]
[Figure 52]
[Figure 53]
[Figure 54]
[Figure 55]
[Figure 56]
[Figure 57]
[Figure 58]
[Figure 59]
[Figure 60]
[Figure 61]
[Figure 62]
[Figure 63]
[Figure 64]
[Figure 65]
[Figure 66]
[Figure 67]
[Figure 68]
[Figure 69]
[Figure 70]
[Figure 71]
[Figure 72]
[Figure 73]
[Figure 74]
[Figure 75]
[Figure 76]
[Figure 77]
[Figure 78]
[Figure 79]
[Figure 80]
< >
page |< < of 334 > >|
1mutuò facilè adharerent. Sed omnia hîc explicari
non poſſunt.
XXXVII.
Quomodo infimum cor­
pus C, in plura alia
fuerit diviſum.
5
1o
15
64[Figure 64]

Ubi auteni etiam particulae, minùs ſolidae iis quae
corpus D componebant ex B deorſum lapſae ſunt,
haeſerunt in ſuperficie hujus corporis D; ac ple­
raeque ex ipſis ſuerunt ramoſae, paullatim ſibi mutuò

annexae, corpus durum E, à duobus B & D, quae ſunt
fluida, valde diverſum, compoſuerunt.
Atque hoc cor­
pus E initio admodùm tenue erat, inſtar cruſtae vel
corticis ſuperficiem corporis D contegentis: ſed
tempore craſſius evaſit, novis particulis ex corpore B
ſe illi adjungentibus; nec non etiam ex D, quia, cùm
reliquis ejuſdem corporis D plan ſimiles non eſſent,
motu globulorum coeleſtium expellebantur, ut mox
dicam.
Et quia iſtae particulae aliter diſponebantur,
iis partibus terrae ubi dies erat vel aeſtas, quàm in

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index