Borro, Girolamo, De motu gravium et levium, 1575

Page concordance

< >
Scan Original
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
< >
page |< < of 316 > >|
    <archimedes>
      <text>
        <body>
          <chap>
            <subchap1>
              <p type="main">
                <s id="s.000309">
                  <pb pagenum="31" xlink:href="011/01/051.jpg"/>
                  <emph type="italics"/>
                tantum relatione quadam, quod cælum rotundum ſit, & in
                  <lb/>
                abſoluti orbis ſpeciem ita efformatum, vt nihil inueniri possit
                  <lb/>
                aut rotundius, aut æque rotundum, & propterea nullam con
                  <lb/>
                trariam partium poſitionem habeat: ideo hæc locorum inter­
                  <lb/>
                ualla, & haſce locorum rationes ſat non eſſe cenſuit, ad gra­
                  <lb/>
                uium, & leuium definitiones constituendas; idipſum Platoni
                  <lb/>
                adſcripſit Alcinous in libro, cui titulus eſt de dogmate Plato­
                  <lb/>
                nis capite vigeſimo: leuia ergo Plato affirmauit, quæ (vt ipſe
                  <lb/>
                loquitur) ex paucioribus triangulis
                  <expan abbr="cõponuntur">componuntur</expan>
                ; grauia, quæ
                  <lb/>
                quaſi pluribus ex triangulis fiunt, perinde ac ſi per partes
                  <lb/>
                eiuſdem generis, triangulos intelligat, nullum enim corpus,
                  <lb/>
                apud Platonem in Timæo inuenitur, quin illud ex figuris
                  <lb/>
                concretum ſit. </s>
                <s id="s.000310">Hinc Plato ſequi putat prima corpora ex pri
                  <lb/>
                mis figuris eſſe concreta, ſed prima omnium figurarum est
                  <lb/>
                circularis, quæ rotundo cælo, quod ad volubilitatem rotun­
                  <lb/>
                datum est, à natura tribuitur; de quo nobis est alio loco di­
                  <lb/>
                ſputatum. </s>
                <s id="s.000311">Secunda figura est plana; & inter planas, pri­
                  <lb/>
                ma est triangula, quæ primis illis corporibus adſcribitur; quæ
                  <lb/>
                recto motu cientur: nec omnes trianguli ſunt eodem loco
                  <lb/>
                habendi, cum illi ſint natura priores, qui rectum angu­
                  <lb/>
                lum habent, vt ſunt lſoſcheles, & Scalenus; at rectus
                  <lb/>
                angulus natura præcedit acutum, atque obtuſum: rectus
                  <lb/>
                etiam vnius naturam optimè redolet, cum nulla ratione va­
                  <lb/>
                riari queat: acutus autem, & obtuſus multis modis va­
                  <lb/>
                rientur; propter has omnes cauſas lſoſchelem, & Scale­
                  <lb/>
                num Plato elegit, vt ex illis, quas planas primas figu­
                  <lb/>
                ras cenſuit, prima elementorum corpora componeret, mo­
                  <lb/>
                do Platonis, & non Timæi Pythagorici ſit illa ſententia,
                  <lb/>
                quæ in Timæo ſcribitur, & ex libro de vniuerſitate Ti­
                  <lb/>
                mæi ad verbum transfertur: cuiuſcumque tamen ſit: feren-
                  <emph.end type="italics"/>
                </s>
              </p>
            </subchap1>
          </chap>
        </body>
      </text>
    </archimedes>