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

Table of contents

< >
[31.] Necnon Oceano paſci phæbumque polumq; Gredimus.
[32.] PROP. IV. That the Moon is a Solid, Compacted, Opacous Body.
[33.] PROP. V. That the Moon hath not any Light of her own.
[34.] PROP. VI. That there is a World in the Moon, bath been the direct Opinion of many Ancient, with ſome Modern Mathematicians, and may probably de deduc’d from the Tenents of others.
[35.] PROP. VII. That thoſe Spots and brighter parts, which by our ſight may be diſtinguiſhed in the Moon, do ſhew the difference betwixt the Sea and Land, in that other World.
[36.] PROP. VIII. The Spots repeſent the Sea, and the brighter parts the Land.
[37.] PROP. IX. That there are high Mountains, deep Vallies, and ſpacious Plains in the Body of the Moon.
[38.] PROP. X. That there is an Atmo-ſphæra, or an Orb of groſs, Vaporous Air, immediately encompaſſing the body of the Moon.
[39.] PROP. XI. That as their World is our Moon, ſo our World is their Moon.
[40.] Provehimur portu, terræque urbeſque recedunt.
[41.] PROP. XII.
[42.] PROP. XIII.
[43.] PROP. XIV.
[44.] FINIS.
[45.] A DISCOURSE Concerning a Rem Planet. Tending to prove That ’tis probable our EARTH is one of the PLANETS. The Second Book. By John Wilkins, late L. Biſhop of Cheſter.
[46.] LONDON: Printed by J. D. for John Gellibrand, at the Golden Ball in St. Paul’s Church-Yard. M.DC.LXXXIV.
[47.] To the Reader.
[48.] PROP. I.
[49.] PROP. II.
[50.] PROP. III.
[51.] PROP. IV.
[52.] PROP. V.
[53.] PROP. VI.
[54.] PROP. VII. PROP. VIII. PROP. IX. PROP. X.
[55.] That the EARTH May be a PLANET. PROP. I.
[56.] PROP. II.
[57.] PROP. III.
[58.] PROP. IV.
[59.] PROP. V. That the Scripture, in its proper conſtru-ction, does not any where affirm the Immobility of the Earth.
[60.] PROP. VI. That there is not any Argument from the Words of Scripture, Principles of Na-ture, or Obſervations in Aſtronomy, which can ſuſſiciently evidence the Earth to be in the Gentre of the Uni-verſe.
< >
page |< < (141) of 370 > >|
153141That the Moon may be a World. this Orb of vaporous Air, it might there reſt
immovable, and would not have in it any pro-
penſion to this motion of Deſcent.
For the better illuſtration of this, you muſt
know, that the heavineſs of a body, or (as
11De cælo
lib.4.cap.1.
Ariſtotle defines it) the proneneſs of it to tend
down unto ſome Centre, is not any abſolute
quality intrinſical unto it, as if, whereever the
body did retain its Eſſence, it muſt alſo retain
this quality:
or as if Nature had emplanted in
every condenſed Body Appetitionem centri, &

fugam extremitatis.
Such a Love to the Cen-
tre, and hatred to the Extremities.
Becauſe
one of theſe being leſs than a quantity, and the
other no more, cannot have any power of At-
traction or Diſpulſion in them.
According to
that common principle, Quantitatis nulla eſt
efficacia.
But now the true nature of Gravity is this.
22A magne-
tical natu-
ral axtra-
ction.
So Keplar
Somn.
Aſtron. N.
66.
Coper. l. 1.
cap. 26.
Foſcarin in
epiſt. ad
Sebaſt.
Fantonum.
’Tis ſuch a reſpective mutual deſire of Union,
whereby condenſed Bodies, when they come
within the Sphere of their own Vigour, do
naturally apply themſelves, one to another by
Attraction or Coition.
But being both with-
out the reach of eithers Virtue, they can ceaſe
to move, and though they have general Apti-
tude, yet they have not any preſent Inclinati-
on or proneneſs to one another.
And ſo con-
ſequently, cannot be ſtiled heavy.
The meaning of this will be clearly Illuſtra-
ted by a Simtlitude.
As any light Body
(ſuppoſe the Sun) does ſend forth his Beams
in an orbicular form;
ſo likewiſe any magneti-
cal Body, for inſtance, a round Load-ſtone does
33Gilbert de
Maguete.
l. 2. cap. 7.
caſt abroad his magnetical Vigour in a Sphere.
Thus.

Text layer

  • Dictionary

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index