Galilei, Galileo
,
The systems of the world
,
1661
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thoſe that I ever heard beſides, but yet nevertheleſſe I eſteem it
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not true and concluding: but keeping alwayes before the eyes
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of my mind a ſolid Doctrine that I have learn't from a moſt
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learned and ingenuous perſon, and with which it is neceſſary to
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ſit down; I know that both you being asked, Whether God, by
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his infinite Power and Wiſdome might confer upon the Element
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of Water the reciprocal motion which we obſerve in the ſame in
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any other way, than by making the containing Veſſel to move; I
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know, I ſay, that you will anſwer, that he might, and knew how
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to have done the ſame many wayes, and thoſe unimaginable to
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our ſhallow underſtanding: upon which I forthwith conclude,
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that this being granted, it would be an extravagant boldneſſe
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for any one to goe about to limit and confine the Divine
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Power and Wiſdome to ſome one particular conjecture of
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his own.</
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<
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>SALV. </
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>This of yours is admirable, and truly Angelical
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ctrine, to which very exactly that other accords, in like manner
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divine, which whilſt it giveth us leave to diſpute, touching the
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conſtitution of the World, addeth withall (perhaps to the end,
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that the exerciſe of the minds of men might neither be
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raged, nor made bold) that we cannot find out the works made
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by his hands. </
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<
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>Let therefore the Diſquiſition permitted and
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dain'd us by God, aſſiſt us in the knowing, and ſo much more
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admiring his greatneſſe, by how much leſſe we finde our ſelves
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too dull to penetrate the profound Abyſſes of his infinite
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dome.</
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<
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>SAGR. </
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<
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>And this may ſerve for a final cloſe of our four dayes
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Diſputations, after which, if it ſeem good to
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Salviatus,
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to take
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ſome time to reſt himſelf, our curioſity muſt, of neceſſity, grant
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him the ſame, yet upon condition, that when it is leſſe
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dious for him, he will return and ſatisfie my deſire in particular
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concerning the Problemes that remain to be diſcuſt, and that I
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have ſet down to be propounded at one or two other
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ces, according to our agreement: and above all, I ſhall very
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impatiently wait to hear the Elements of the new Science of our
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Academick
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about the natural and violent local Motions. </
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<
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>And
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in the mean time, we may, according to our cuſtome, ſpend an
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hour in taking the Air in the
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Gondola
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that waiteth for us.</
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FINIS.
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