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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[61.] PROP. VII. Tis probable that the Sun is in the Gentre of the World.
[62.] PROP. VIII. That there is not any ſufficient reaſon to prove the Earth incapable of thoſe mo-tions which Copernicus aſcribes un-to it.
[63.] Provebimur portu, terræque, verbeſq; recedunt.
[64.] PROP. IX. That it is more probable the Earth does move, than the Sun or Heavens.
[65.] PROP. X. That this Hypotheſis is exactly agreeable to common appearances.
[66.] Quicunq; ſolam mente præcipiti petit
[67.] Brevem replere non valentis ambitum, # Pudebit aucti nominis.
[68.] FINIS.
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146134That the Moon may be a World. of him in Sir Walter Rawleigh. Their Reaſon
11Comment.
in 2 Gen.
v. 8.
L. 1. c. 3.
ſect. 6. 7.
was this:
becauſe in probability, this place
was not overflowed by the Flood, ſince there
were no Sinners there, which might draw that
Curſe upon it.
Nay, Toſtatus thinks, that the
Body of Enoch was kept there;
and ſome of
the Fathers, as Tertullian and Auſtin have af-
firmed, that the bleſſed Souls were reſerv’d in
that place till the day of Judgement, and
therefore ’tis likely that it was not overflow’d
by the Flood;
it were eaſie to produce the
unanimous conſent of the Fathers, to prove
that Paradiſe is yet really exiſtent.
Any dili-
gent peruſer of them may eaſily obſerve how
they do generally interpret the Paradiſe where-
to Saint Paul was wrapt, and that wherein our
222 Cer.12.4.
Luke 23.
43.
Saviour promiſed the Thieſ ſhould be with
him, to be locally the ſame where our firſt
Parents were baniſhed.
Now there cannot be
any place on Earth deſign’d where this
ſhould be:
and therefore ’tis not altogether
improbable that it was in this other World.
And beſides, ſince all Men ſhould have went
Naked if Adam had not Fell, ’tis requiſite
therefore that it ſhould be ſituated in ſome
ſuch place where it might be priviledged from
the Extremeties of Heat and Cold.
But now
this could not be (they thought) ſo conveni-
ently in any lower, as it might in ſome higher
Air.
For theſe and ſuch like Conſiderations
have ſo many affirm’d that Paradiſe was in a
high elevated place.
Which ſome have con-
ceived could be no where but in the Moon.
For it could not be in the top of any Moun-
tain;
nor can we think of any other Body

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