Borelli, Giovanni Alfonso, De motionibus naturalibus a gravitate pendentibus, 1670

Table of figures

< >
< >
page |< < of 579 > >|
    <archimedes>
      <text>
        <body>
          <chap>
            <p type="main">
              <s id="s.002756">
                <pb pagenum="518" xlink:href="010/01/526.jpg"/>
                <arrow.to.target n="marg727"/>
                <lb/>
              que aſſeclæ. </s>
              <s id="s.002757">
                <expan abbr="Inquiũt">Inquiunt</expan>
              enim corpus eſſe
                <expan abbr="rẽ">rem</expan>
                <expan abbr="extẽſam">extenſam</expan>
              , ſci­
                <lb/>
              licèt præditam longitudine, latitudine, & profundi­
                <lb/>
              tate, vnde vbicumque ponitur extenſio, neceſſariò
                <lb/>
              corpus ſubſtantiale admitti debere: hinc ſequitur
                <lb/>
              nullo pacto concedi poſſe ſpatium denudatum priua­
                <lb/>
              tumque corpore ſubſtantiali, cùm dari non poſſit ex­
                <lb/>
              tenſio ſeparata à corporibus phyſicis, & ideò aiunt,
                <lb/>
              quòd quicumque ſpatium vacuum admittit neceſſa­
                <lb/>
              riò in eodem vacuo conceſſo rem, ſeu
                <expan abbr="ſubſtãtiam">ſubſtantiam</expan>
              ex­
                <lb/>
              tenſam, ſcilicèt corpus concedat neceſsè eſt, propte­
                <lb/>
              rea adeò verum eſt
                <expan abbr="vacuũ">vacuum</expan>
              eſſe impoſſibile, vt is, qui
                <lb/>
              ipſum admittit eodem ſpiritu idipſum neget. </s>
              <s id="s.002758">Hoc
                <lb/>
              porrò argumentum tantæ energiæ, & tanti robo­
                <lb/>
              ris eſſe prædicti Authores cenſent, vt mirentur, miſe­
                <lb/>
              reanturque debilitatem intellectus eorum, qui huic
                <lb/>
              argumento non acquieſcunt, & manus non dant. </s>
            </p>
            <p type="margin">
              <s id="s.002759">
                <margin.target id="marg726"/>
              4. phy ſ. </s>
              <s id="s.002760">c. 8.</s>
            </p>
            <p type="margin">
              <s id="s.002761">
                <margin.target id="marg727"/>
              Cap. 12. dę
                <lb/>
              vacui neceſ­
                <lb/>
              ſitate.</s>
            </p>
            <p type="main">
              <s id="s.002762">
                <emph type="center"/>
              PROP. CCLV.
                <emph.end type="center"/>
              </s>
            </p>
            <p type="main">
              <s id="s.002763">
                <emph type="center"/>
                <emph type="italics"/>
              Dimenſiones, quæ ſpatio vacuo tribuuntur, non ſunt reales,
                <lb/>
              ſed meræ negationes, & priuationes.
                <emph.end type="italics"/>
                <emph.end type="center"/>
              </s>
            </p>
            <p type="main">
              <s id="s.002764">HVic obiectioni reſponderi poſſe mihi videtur,
                <lb/>
              quod illę, quæ dimenſiones vocantur in va­
                <lb/>
              cuo non ſunt, neque reales, neque poſitiuæ, ſed me­
                <lb/>
              ræ priuationes, & negationes, ſcilicèt deficit in tali
                <lb/>
              loco tanta longitudo, tanta latitudo, & tanta profun­
                <lb/>
              ditas, quandoquidem ibidem deficit corpus, quod
                <lb/>
              rem, ſeu ſubſtantiam extenſam eſſe de finitum eſt: pa­
                <lb/>
              ritèr falſum eſt prædictum vacuum menſurari poſſe,
                <lb/>
              cùm nihilum nullam dimenſionem menſurabilem ha­
                <lb/>
              beat, ſed tantummodò intellectus noſter fictione </s>
            </p>
          </chap>
        </body>
      </text>
    </archimedes>