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
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27090That the Earth may be a Planet. ment (as it is according to Copernicus) is
ſaid
to be too big;
’tis likely, that this word
is
to be underſtood in reference to ſome o-
ther
thing of the ſame kind, the leaſt of
which
is the Moons Orb:
But now if its
being
ſo much bigger than this may be a ſuf-
ficient
reaſon, why it ſhould be thought too
great
, then it ſeems that every thing which
exceeds
another of the ſame kind, in ſuch
a
proportion, may be concluded to be of
too
big a quantity:
and ſo conſequently,
we
may aſſirm, that there is no ſuch thing
in
the World.
And hence it will follow,
that
Whales and Elephants are meer Chimæ-
ra
's, and poetical Fictions, becauſe they do
much
exceed many other living Creatures.
If all this eighth Sphere, (ſaith Gallilæus)
as
great as it is, were a light Body, and pla-
ced
ſo far from us, that it appeared but as
one
of the leſſer Stars, we ſhould then eſteem
it
but little;
and therefore, we have no rea-
ſon
now to thruſt it out from being amongſt
the
Works of Nature, by reaſon of its
too
great immenſity.
’Tis a frequent ſpeech
of
our Adverſaries, Tycho, Fromondus, and
others
, in excuſe of that incredible ſwift-
neſs
which they imagine in their Primum
Mobile
, That ’twas requiſite the Motion of
the
Heavens ſhould have a kind of inſinity
in
it, the better to manifeſt the infiniteneſs
of
the Creator.
And why may not we as
well
affirm this concerning the bigneſs of
the
Heavens ?
Difficilius eſt accidens præter
modulum
ſubjecti intendere, quàm

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