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

Page concordance

< >
Scan Original
41 29
42 30
43 31
44 32
45 33
46 34
47 35
48 36
49 37
50 38
51 39
52 40
53 41
54 42
55 43
56 44
57 45
58 46
59 47
60 48
61 49
62 50
63 51
64 52
65 53
66 54
67 55
68 56
69 57
70 58
< >
page |< < (81) of 370 > >|
But this by the way. For the better proof
of
this Propoſition, I might here Cite the Te-
ſtimony
of Diodorus, who thought the Moon
to
be full of rugged places, velut terreſtribus
tumultis
ſupercilioſam;
but he erred much in
ſome
Circumſtances of this Opinion, eſpecial-
ly
where he ſays, there is an Iſland amongſt
the
Hyperboreans, wherein thoſe Hills may
to
the Eye be plainly diſcover'd;
and for this
reaſon
Gælius calls him a Fabulous Writer.
11Lect. aut.
l
. 1. c. 15.
But you may ſee more expreſs Authority for
the
Proof of this in the Opinions of Anaxago-
22Plut. de
plac
. l. 2. c.
25
.
ras and Democritus, who held that this Planet
was
full of Champion Grounds, Mountains
and
Vallies.
And this ſeemed likewiſe proba-
ble
unto Auguſtinus Nifus, whoſe words are
theſe
:
Forſitan non eſt remotum dicere lunæ par-
33De calo.l. 2.
part
. 49.
tes eſſe diverſas, veluti ſunt partes terræ, quarum
aliæ
ſunt valloſæ, aliæ montoſæ, ex quarum diffe-
rentia
effici poteſt facies illa lunæ;
nec eſt rationi
diſſonum
, nam luna eſt corpus imperfecte Sphæ-
ricum
, cum ſit corpus ab ultimo cœlo elongatum,
ut
ſupra dixit Ariſtoteles.
‘Perhaps, it

Text layer

  • Dictionary

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index