Harriot, Thomas, Mss. 6787

List of thumbnails

< >
361
361 (181v)
362
362 (182)
363
363 (182v)
364
364 (183)
365
365 (183v)
366
366 (184)
367
367 (184v)
368
368 (185)
369
369 (185v)
370
370 (186)
< >
page |< < (247) of 1155 > >|
492247

[Translation: ]
A progression increasing being given, next first progresionall first differences
are unæquall, & the secondnext after differences æquall: to devide the sayde
progression into a fewer nomber of progresionall

The first case. as of the progresionall differences decreasing,
as it is in the progression of
Example of the progresion given
This example I have
so set downe as though the
nombers were answerable
to
[Commentary: 'Arkes' are arcs of a fixed circle, that is, measures of angle. Each sine (or number) corresponds to, or is 'answerable to', an arc (or angle). (Hence the modern terminology ]
That by it you may
se the use of the problem
for
Suppose that it be required to find the nomber answerable to
The number answerable to 30'' is 2280. that which is answerable
to 40'' is 2925. there difference is
And because the other
differences of the same order ranke are unæquall, the rule of pro-
portion will not find the number desired. But it must be
found by a speciall Canon. which followeth
The purpose
of which canon thereof must for to find (because 30''& 40'' do differ
[by] 10''.) to find the 110first tenth parte progresionall, that is to say that

Text layer

  • Dictionary

Text normalization

  • Original

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index