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

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The cauſe which
impedeth
the
dulum
, and
ceth
it to reſt.
SIMP. See, here it is where he beginneth to argue againſt the
diurnal
motion of the Earth, he having firſt confuted the annual.
Motus terræ annuus aſſerrere Copernicanos cogit converſionem
juſdem
quotidianam; alias idem terræ Hemiſphærium continenter
ad
Solem eſſet converſum obumbrato ſemper averſo. [In Engliſh
thus
:] The annual motion of the Earth doth compell the
pernicans
to aſſert the daily converſion thereof; otherwiſe the
ſame
Hemiſphere of the Earth would be continually turned
wards
the Sun, the ſhady ſide being always averſe.
And ſo one
half
of the Earth would never come to ſee the Sun.

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