Salusbury, Thomas
,
Mathematical collections and translations (Tome I)
,
1667
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from the piece; and the departing from the ſtate of reſt, cannot
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be, unleſſe the immobility of the Terreſtrial Globe be
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ſed, which is the concluſion of that was in diſpute; Therefore,
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I reply, that thoſe who make the Earth moveable, anſwer, that
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the piece, and the ball that is in it, partake of the ſame motion
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with the Earth; nay that they have this together with her from
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nature; and that therefore the ball departs in no other manner
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from its quieſcence, but conjoyned with its motion about the
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tre, the which by its projection upwards, is neither taken away,
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nor hindered; and in this manner following, the univerſal motion
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of the Earth towards the Eaſt, it alwayes keepeth perpendicular
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over the ſaid piece, as well in its riſe as in its return. </
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<
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>And the
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ſame you ſee to enſue, in making the experiment in a ſhip with
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a bullet ſhot upwards perpendicularly with a Croſſe-bow, which
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returneth to the ſame place whether the ſhip doth move, or ſtand
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An inſtance
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gainst the diurnal
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motion of the earth,
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taken from the ſhot
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of a Peece of
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nance
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larly.
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The anſwer to the
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objection, ſhewing
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the equivoke.
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Another anſwer
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to the ſame
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on.
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<
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>SAGR. </
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>This ſatisfieth very well to all; but becauſe that I have
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ſeen that
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Simplicius
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taketh pleaſure with certain ſubtilties to
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puzzle his companions, I will demand of him whether,
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ſing for this time that the Earth ſtandeth ſtill, and the piece
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cted upon it perpendicularly, directed to our Zenith, he do at all
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queſtion that to be the true perpendicular ſhot, and that the ball
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in departing, and in its return is to go by the ſame right line,
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ſtill ſuppoſing all external and accidental impediments to be
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moved?</
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<
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>SIMP. </
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<
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>I underſtand that the matter ought to ſucceed exactly
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in that manner.</
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<
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>SAGR. </
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<
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>But if the piece were placed, not perpendicularly, but
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inclining towards ſome place, what would the motion of the ball
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be? </
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<
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>Would it go haply, as in the other ſhot, by the
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cular line, and return again by the ſame?</
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<
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>SIMP. </
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<
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>It would not ſo do; but iſſuing out of the piece, it
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would purſue its motion by a right line which prolongeth the
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rect perpendicularity of the concave cylinder of the piece, unleſſe
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ſo far as its own weight would make it decline from that erection
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towards the Earth.</
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<
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>SAGR. </
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<
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>So that the mounture of the cylinder is the regulator of
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the motion of the ball, nor doth it, or would it move out of that
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line, if its own gravity did not make it decline downwards. </
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<
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>And </
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therefore placing the cylinder perpendicularly, and ſhooting the
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ball upwards, it returneth by the ſame right line downwards;
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cauſe the motion of the ball dependent on its gravity is
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ward, by the ſame perpendicular. </
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<
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>The journey therefore of the
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ball out of the piece, continueth or prolongeth the rectitude or
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perpendicularity of that ſmall part of the ſaid journey, which it
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made within the ſaid piece; is it not ſo?</
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