Salusbury, Thomas, Mathematical collections and translations (Tome I), 1667

List of thumbnails

< >
181
181
182
182
183
183
184
184
185
185
186
186
187
187
188
188
189
189
190
190
< >
page |< < of 701 > >|
1then when they are in a ſtate of having a propenſion of moving
naturally
to the ſame.
Tie a bottle that hath water in it, to
the
end of a cord, and holding the other end faſt in your hand,
and
making the cord and your arm the ſemi-diameter, and the
knitting
of the ſhoulder the centre, ſwing the bottle very faſt
bout
, ſo as that it may deſcribe the circumference of a circle,
which
, whether it be parallel to the Horizon, or perpendicular to
it
, or any way inclined, it ſhall in all caſes follow, that the
ter
will not fall out of the bottle: nay, he that ſhall ſwing it,
ſhall
find the cord always draw, and ſtrive to go farther from the
ſhoulder
.
And if you bore a hole in the bottom of the bottle,
you
ſhall ſee the water ſpout forth no leſs upwards into the skie,
than
laterally, and downwards to the Earth; and if inſtead of
ter
, you ſhall put little pebble ſtones into the bottle, and ſwing it
in
the ſame manner, you ſhall find that they will ſtrive in the like
manner
againſt the cord.
And laſtly, we ſee boys throw ſtones
a
great way, by ſwinging round a piece of a ſtick, at the end of
which
the ſtone is let into a ſlit (which ſtick is called by them a
ſling
;) all which are arguments of the truth of the concluſion,
to
wit, that the vertigo or ſwing conferreth upon the moveable,
a
motion towards the circumference, in caſe the motion be ſwift:
and
therefore if the Earth revolve about its own centre, the
tion
of the ſuperficies, and eſpecially towards the great circle,
as
being incomparably more ſwift than thoſe before named, ought
to
extrude all things up into the air.
Our krowledg is
a
kind of
cence
according to
Plato
.

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index