Boyle, Robert
,
New experiments physico-mechanicall, touching the spring of the air and its effects
,
1660
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little by little; and conſequently, in divers
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ſuch parcels as were able to conſtitute
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bubbles, each of them big enough to
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raiſe the Viol and keep it aloft until the
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avolation of that bubble. </
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>Whereby it
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may appear, that the grand rule in
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Hy
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droſtaticks,
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That a Body will ſwim in the
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Water, in caſe it be lighter then as much
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of that Water that equals it in bulk, will
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hold likewiſe when the preſſure of the At
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moſphere is in very great meaſure, if not
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when it is totally taken off from the Li
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quor and the Body: though it were worth
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inquiring what it is that ſo plentifully
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concurs to fill the bubbles made in our
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Experiment by the ſo much expanded
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Air, for to ſay with the old Peripatetick
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Schools, That the Air, in Rarefaction,
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may acquire a new extent, without the
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admiſſion of any new ſubſtance, would
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be an account of the
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Phænomenon
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very
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much out of date, and which, I ſuppoſe,
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our Modern Naturaliſts would neither
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give, nor acquieſs in. </
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>I know not whether it may be requiſite
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to adde, that in this Experiment, as in
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the former, the outward Air being let in
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did ſoon precipitate the floating Viol. </
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<
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I think it will not be amiſs to note, that </
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