Borro, Girolamo, De motu gravium et levium, 1575

Page concordance

< >
Scan Original
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
< >
page |< < of 316 > >|
    <archimedes>
      <text>
        <body>
          <chap>
            <subchap1>
              <p type="main">
                <s id="s.000426">
                  <pb pagenum="57" xlink:href="011/01/077.jpg"/>
                  <emph type="italics"/>
                rint, ſursum eſſe dicuntur, & re uera ſunt; vt docet Aristo­
                  <lb/>
                teles in his, quæ de cælo, & mundo: ſicut tota terra in centro
                  <lb/>
                ſistetur, it a & quælibet eius particula: nam ad eumdem lo­
                  <lb/>
                cum totum, & partes natura mouentur, & in eodem loco
                  <lb/>
                natura manent.
                  <emph.end type="italics"/>
                </s>
              </p>
            </subchap1>
            <subchap1>
              <p type="head">
                <s id="s.000427">Difficultas ſoluitur, qua probari poſſe videtur, ele
                  <lb/>
                menta dum quieſcunt, elementa non eſſe, ſed
                  <lb/>
                tantum, dum mouentur. </s>
                <s id="s.000428">Ca. XXXIIII.</s>
              </p>
              <p type="main">
                <s id="s.000429">DVABVS
                  <emph type="italics"/>
                elementorum definitionibus explanatis, quæ
                  <lb/>
                rum alter a per motum, alter a per
                  <expan abbr="quietẽ">quietem</expan>
                datur, aduer­
                  <lb/>
                ſus elementorum quietem argumentum ex Ariſtotele
                  <lb/>
                texitur, qui octauo Phyſicorum particula prima scripſit: Mo
                  <lb/>
                tum eſſe
                  <expan abbr="vitã">vitam</expan>
                eorum omnium, quæ natur a conſiſtunt, & duo de
                  <lb/>
                cimo Diuinorum dixit. </s>
                <s id="s.000430">Deum æterno tempore mouere, quia
                  <lb/>
                ſuam perennem vitam in perenni motu conſiſtere intelligit:
                  <lb/>
                ſed elementa natura conſiſtunt; ergo motus eſt eorum vita; er­
                  <lb/>
                go quies eſt eorum mors: per locum ab oppoſitis, ergo
                  <expan abbr="elemẽta">elementa</expan>
                ,
                  <lb/>
                dum quieſcunt, non sunt elementa, ſed
                  <expan abbr="tantū">tantum</expan>
                , dum mouentur.
                  <lb/>
                </s>
                <s id="s.000431">Reſpondeo primo ad materiam; ſecundo ad formam. </s>
                <s id="s.000432">Ad ma
                  <lb/>
                teriam ſciendum; ea quæ per ſe inſunt, rei naturam magis,
                  <lb/>
                & melius explicare, iis quæ per accidens ineſſe dicuntur; vt
                  <lb/>
                participatio rationis, quæ per ſe eſt in homine, hominis
                  <expan abbr="naturā">naturam</expan>
                  <lb/>
                magis, & melius explicat, quam aut albedo, aut nigredo; quæ
                  <lb/>
                ſunt hominis accidentia;
                  <expan abbr="quāquam">quanquam</expan>
                ad intelligendam rei natu
                  <lb/>
                ram non ſolum neceſſarium eſt ea, quæ per ſe inſunt, cognoſce­
                  <lb/>
                re, ſed & ea etiam, quæ accidunt rei cognoſcendæ, ad cogni­
                  <lb/>
                tionem naturæ magnum adferunt momentum; vt Aristo­
                  <lb/>
                teles docuit libro primo de anima particula vndecima.
                  <emph.end type="italics"/>
                </s>
              </p>
            </subchap1>
          </chap>
        </body>
      </text>
    </archimedes>