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

Table of figures

< >
[Figure 91]
[Figure 92]
[Figure 93]
[Figure 94]
[Figure 95]
[Figure 96]
[Figure 97]
[Figure 98]
[Figure 99]
[Figure 100]
[Figure 101]
[Figure 102]
[Figure 103]
[Figure 104]
[Figure 105]
[Figure 106]
[Figure 107]
[Figure 108]
[Figure 109]
[Figure 110]
[Figure 111]
[Figure 112]
[Figure 113]
[Figure 114]
[Figure 115]
[Figure 116]
[Figure 117]
[Figure 118]
[Figure 119]
[Figure 120]
< >
page |< < of 579 > >|
    <archimedes>
      <text>
        <body>
          <chap>
            <p type="main">
              <s id="s.000013">
                <pb xlink:href="010/01/007.jpg"/>
              Franciſco De Andrea, Leonardo à Capua, Luca Antonio Por­
                <lb/>
              tio, innumeriſque aliis; quibus cum me quoque benignè excep­
                <lb/>
              tum, adiunxeris, ne Vacuis manibus accedam, tibi ecce Vir
                <lb/>
              Excellentiſſime offero hoc meum Opus de Naturalibus Motio­
                <lb/>
              nibus à grauitate pendentibus, quod eſt ſecundum præcedentium
                <lb/>
              Doctrinam de Animalium motibus, in quo rationes Philoſophi­
                <lb/>
              cæ, quam plurimorum Experimentorum naturalium afferuntur,
                <lb/>
              quæ Florentiæ in Academia Experimentali Medicea Vidi, pa­
                <lb/>
              riterque accuratiſſime ſunt obſeruata in tua Neapolitana: Tu ſi­
                <lb/>
              quidem, Vir Optimè, in hoc libro aliqua reperies, quæ natura­
                <lb/>
              lem Scientiam, cuius ſanè ſtudio impensè teneris, promouere
                <lb/>
              valeant, iis fruere, et Vale. </s>
            </p>
          </chap>
        </body>
      </text>
    </archimedes>