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

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SALV. Stay a little; and find me out this place in the Book.
Fingamus modo cum Copernico terram aliqua ſuâ vi, & ab indito
principio
impelli ab Occaſu ad Ortum in Eclipticæ plano; tum
ſus
revolvi ab indito etiam principio, circa ſuimet centrum, ab

Ortu in Occaſum; tertio deſlecti rurſus ſu opte nutu à
ne
in Auſtrum, & viciſſim. I had thought, Simplicius, that
that
you might have erred in reciting the words of the
thor
, but now I ſee that he, and that very groſſely,
veth
himſelf; and to my grief, I find that he hath ſet himſelf to
oppoſe
a poſition, which he hath not well underſtood; for theſe
are
not the motions which Copernicus aſſignes to the Earth.
Where doth he find that Copernicus maketh the annual motion
by
the Ecliptick contrary to the motion about its own centre?
It
muſt
needs be that he never read his Book, which in an hundred
places
, and in the very firſt Chapters affirmeth thoſe motions to
be
both towards the ſame parts, that is from Weſt to Eaſt.
But without others telling him, ought he not of himſelf to
prehend
, that attributing to the Earth the motions that are ta
ken
, one of them from the Sun, and the other from the
mum
wobile, they muſt of neceſſity both move one and the ſame

A groſſe error
of
the oppoſer of
Copernicus
.
A ſubtil and
withal
ſimple
gument
againſt
Copernicus
.

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