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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              <pb o="55" file="0067" n="67" rhead="That the Moon may be a World."/>
            on enough, to ſay, ’tis Plato’s. </s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s861" xml:space="preserve">However, for
              <lb/>
            the ſirſt part of this Aſſertion, it was aſſented
              <lb/>
            unto by many others, and by Reaſon oſ the
              <lb/>
            Groſſneſs and inequality of this Planet, ’twas
              <lb/>
            frequently call’d quaſi terra cœleſtis, as being
              <lb/>
              <note position="right" xlink:label="note-0067-01" xlink:href="note-0067-01a" xml:space="preserve">De facie
                <lb/>
              Lunæ.</note>
            eſteem’d the Sedement, and more imperfect
              <lb/>
            part of thoſe purer Bodies; </s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s862" xml:space="preserve">you may ſee this
              <lb/>
            Prov’d by Plutarch, in that delightful Work
              <lb/>
              <note position="right" xlink:label="note-0067-02" xlink:href="note-0067-02a" xml:space="preserve">Inſtit. ad
                <lb/>
              diſcp. Plat.
                <lb/>
              Cœl. Rho-
                <lb/>
              dig. l. I c.4.</note>
            which he properly made for the Conſirmation
              <lb/>
            of this particular. </s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s863" xml:space="preserve">With him agreed Alcinous
              <lb/>
            and Plotinus, later Writers.</s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s864" xml:space="preserve"/>
          </p>
          <p>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s865" xml:space="preserve">Thus Lucian alſo in his Diſcourſe of a Jour-
              <lb/>
            ney to the Moon, where though he does ſpeak
              <lb/>
            many things out of Mirth and in a jeſting man-
              <lb/>
            ner: </s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s866" xml:space="preserve">yet in the beginning of it he does inti-
              <lb/>
            mate that it did contain ſome ſerious Truths
              <lb/>
            concerning the real Frame oſ the Univerſe.</s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s867" xml:space="preserve"/>
          </p>
          <p>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s868" xml:space="preserve">The Cardinal Guſanus and Fornandus Brunus
              <lb/>
              <note position="right" xlink:label="note-0067-03" xlink:href="note-0067-03a" xml:space="preserve">Cuſa. de
                <lb/>
              doct.ign. l. 2.
                <lb/>
              cap. 12.</note>
            held a particular World in every Star, and
              <lb/>
            therefore one of them Deſigning our Earth, he
              <lb/>
            ſays, it is Stella quædam nobilis, quæ lunam & </s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s869" xml:space="preserve">
              <lb/>
            calorem & </s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s870" xml:space="preserve">influentiam babet aliam, & </s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s871" xml:space="preserve">diverſam
              <lb/>
            ab omnibus aliis ſtellis; </s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s872" xml:space="preserve">‘A Noble Star, having
              <lb/>
            ‘ a diſtinct Light, Heat, and Infiuence from
              <lb/>
              <note position="right" xlink:label="note-0067-04" xlink:href="note-0067-04a" xml:space="preserve">Philoſ.
                <lb/>
              Epicur.
                <lb/>
              part. 434.</note>
            ‘ all the reſt. </s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s873" xml:space="preserve">Unto this Nichol. </s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s874" xml:space="preserve">Hill, a Coun-
              <lb/>
            try Man of ours, was enclin’d, when he ſaid,
              <lb/>
            Aſtrea terræ natura probabilis eſt: </s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s875" xml:space="preserve">‘That ’tis
              <lb/>
            ‘ probable the Earth hath a Starry Nature.</s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s876" xml:space="preserve"/>
          </p>
          <p>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s877" xml:space="preserve">But the Opinion which I have here deliver’d
              <lb/>
              <note symbol="a" position="right" xlink:label="note-0067-05" xlink:href="note-0067-05a" xml:space="preserve">In Theſi.
                <lb/>
              bus.</note>
            was more directly prov’d by Mæſlin,
              <note symbol="b" position="right" xlink:label="note-0067-06" xlink:href="note-0067-06a" xml:space="preserve">Diſſerta-
                <lb/>
              tio cum
                <lb/>
              Nunc.</note>
              <note symbol="c" position="right" xlink:label="note-0067-07" xlink:href="note-0067-07a" xml:space="preserve">Nuncius
                <lb/>
              Syderius.</note>
            Keplar, Galileus, each of them late Writers, and famous Men for their ſingular Skill in A-
              <lb/>
            ftronomy. </s>
            <s xml:id="echoid-s878" xml:space="preserve">Keplar calls this World by the Name
              <lb/>
            of Levania, from the Hebrew Word תגב
              <unsure/>
            ל,
              <lb/>
            which ſigniſies the Moon, and our Earth by
              <lb/>
              <note position="right" xlink:label="note-0067-08" xlink:href="note-0067-08a" xml:space="preserve">Somn. Aſtr.</note>
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