Wilkins, John, A discovery of a new world : or a discourse tending to prove, that 'tis probable there may be another Habitable World in the Moon ; with a discourse concerning the Probability of a Passage thither; unto which is added, a discourse concerning a New Planet, tending to prove, that 'tis probable our earth is one of the Planets

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[61.] PROP. VII. Tis probable that the Sun is in the Gentre of the World.
[62.] PROP. VIII. That there is not any ſufficient reaſon to prove the Earth incapable of thoſe mo-tions which Copernicus aſcribes un-to it.
[63.] Provebimur portu, terræque, verbeſq; recedunt.
[64.] PROP. IX. That it is more probable the Earth does move, than the Sun or Heavens.
[65.] PROP. X. That this Hypotheſis is exactly agreeable to common appearances.
[66.] Quicunq; ſolam mente præcipiti petit
[67.] Brevem replere non valentis ambitum, # Pudebit aucti nominis.
[68.] FINIS.
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6250That the Moon may be a World. in his Preface to his Treatiſe concerning the
Auſtriaca
ſydera;
Luna, Venus, & Mercurius,
terreſtris
&
humidœ ſunt ſubſtati ideoquœ de ſuo
non
lucere, ſicut nec terra.
The Moon, Venus,
and
Mercury, ſaith he, are of an Earthly and
moiſt
Subſtance, and therefore have no more
Light
of their own, than the Earth hath.
Nay,
ſome
there are, who think (though without
Ground
) that all the other Stars do receive that
Light
whereby they appear Viſible to us, from
the
Sun:
So Ptolomy, Iſidore Iſpalenſis, 11Originum
l
. 3. c. 60.
Albertus Magnus, and Bede;
much more then muſt the Moon ſhine with a borrowed
22D; Cœlo.
1
. 2:
Light.
The Moabites in Fehoram's time, when they
772 King. 3.
22
.
Roſe Early in the Morning, and beheld

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