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

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1remotiores, in minori circulo feruntur? [ſcilicet:] Why are
thoſe
near the Æquinoctial carried about in a greater circle, and
thoſe
which are remote in a leſſer?
SIMP. Quarè Pila eadem ſub Æquinoctiali tota circa centrum
terr
æ, ambitu maximo, celeritate incredibili; ſub Polo verò circa
centrum
proprium, gyro nullo, tarditate ſupremâ volveretur?
[That is:] Why is the ſame ball under the Æquinoctial wholly
turned
round the centre of the Earth in the greateſt
rence
, with an incredible celerity; but under the Pole about its
own
centre, in no circuite, but with the ultimate degree of
dity
?
SIMP. Quare eadem res, pila v. g. plumbea, ſi ſemel terram
circuivit
, deſcripto circulo maximo, eandem ubique non
migret
ſecundùm circulum maximum, ſed tranſlata extra
ctialem
in circulis minoribus agetur? [Which ſpeaketh thus:]
Why
doth not the ſame thing, as for example, a ball of lead
turn
round every where according to the ſame great circle, if once
deſcribing
a great circle, it hath incompaſſed the Earth, but being
removed
from the Æquinoctial, doth move in leſſer circles?
SIMP. No Sir; hearken therefore. Si latio circularis
vibus
& levibus eſt naturalis, qualis eſt ea quæ fit ſecundùm
am
rectam?
Nam ſi naturalis, quomodo & is motus qui circum est,
naturalis
eſt, cùm ſpecie differat à recto?
Si violentus, quî fit, ut
miſſile
ignitum ſurſùm evolans ſcintilloſum caput ſurſùm à terrâ,
non
autem circum volvatur, &c. [Which take in our idiom:] If
a
circular lation is natural to heavy and light things, what is that
which
is made according to a right line?
For if it be natural, how
then
is that motion which is about the centre natural, ſeeing it

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