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

Table of figures

< >
[Figure 261]
[Figure 262]
[Figure 263]
[Figure 264]
[Figure 265]
[Figure 266]
[Figure 267]
[Figure 268]
[Figure 269]
[Figure 270]
[Figure 271]
[Figure 272]
[Figure 273]
[Figure 274]
[Figure 275]
[Figure 276]
[Figure 277]
[Figure 278]
[Figure 279]
[Figure 280]
[Figure 281]
[Figure 282]
[Figure 283]
[Figure 284]
[Figure 285]
[Figure 286]
[Figure 287]
[Figure 288]
[Figure 289]
[Figure 290]
< >
page |< < of 701 > >|
1
GALILÆUS
Galilæus Lyncæus,
HIS
SYSTEME
OF THE
WORLD.
The Third Dialogue.
INTERLOCVTORS.
SALVIATUS, SAGREDUS, and SIMPLICIUS.
SAGR. The great deſire wherewith I have expected
your coming, that I might hear the novel
conceits touching the annual
on of this our Globe, hath made me
think the houres of the laſt night, and
thoſe of this morning very tedious,
though I ſpent them not idly, but lying
awake I imployed a good part thereof in
ruminating upon our yeſterdayes
ſes, weighing the reaſons alledged by both parties, in favour of
the two contrary Hypotheſes, that of Ariſtotle and Ptolomy, and
this of Ariſtarchus, and Copernicus. And really methinks, that
which ever of theſe parties have been deceived, they are worthy of
excuſe, ſo ſpecious and valid in appearance are the reaſons that
may have perſwaded them either way; though nevertheleſſe we

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index