Gravesande, Willem Jacob 's, An essay on perspective

Table of contents

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[11.] Corollary I.
[12.] Corollary II.
[13.] Corollary III.
[14.] Theorem II.
[15.] Corollary I.
[16.] Corollary II.
[17.] Theorem III.
[18.] Theorem IV.
[19.] Corollary I.
[20.] Corollary II.
[21.] Corollary III.
[22.] Corollary IV.
[23.] Theorem V.
[24.] Theorem VI.
[25.] Corollary.
[26.] CHAP. III.
[27.] Problem I.
[28.] Operation.
[29.] Demonstration.
[30.] Remarks.
[31.] Method II.
[32.] Operation.
[33.] Demonstration.
[34.] Remarks.
[35.] Method III.
[36.] Operation.
[37.] Demonstration.
[38.] Remark.
[39.] Method. IV.
[40.] Operation, Without Compaſſes.
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page |< < (iv) of 237 > >|
12ivThe PREFACE. what Uſe ſuch an exceſſive Variety of Exam-
ples will be to them.
I believ’d then, that I might be able to
treat of this Art after another Manner:
And altho’ I know my ſelf to be much infe-
rior to ſeveral of thoſe who have written on
this Subject;
yet I am of Opinion, that if
Perſpective ſhould loſe any thing by me, on
account of my want of fudgment;
yet that
may be regain’d, perhaps, (and with In-
tereſt too) by my great Diligence in this Bu-
ſineſs.
I have conſider’d, moreover, that the te-
dious Particulars, inherent to the Subject on
which I have choſen to write, will always
hinder Genius’s capable of great Matters,
from undertaking a Subject ſo little worthy
their Endeavours, and ſo barren of great
Diſcoveries.
Thus, hoping, on one hand, to give a new
Turn to the Practice of Perſpective, and
make it eaſier;
and being perſuaded, on the
other, that more learned Perſons than my ſelf
will not take this Trouble upon them;
I ven-
ture to publiſh this ſmall Work, and expoſe
it to the Taſte of the Learned World;
from
whom I expect no other Praiſe, but what
may reaſonably be claim’d by an aſſiduo{us} Ap-
plication.

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