The arte of logick Plainely taught in the English tongue, according to the best approued authors. Very necessary for all students in any profession, how to defend any argument against all subtill sophisters, and cauelling schismatikes, and how to confute their false syllogismes, and captious arguments. By M. Blundevile.

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Title
The arte of logick Plainely taught in the English tongue, according to the best approued authors. Very necessary for all students in any profession, how to defend any argument against all subtill sophisters, and cauelling schismatikes, and how to confute their false syllogismes, and captious arguments. By M. Blundevile.
Author
Blundeville, Thomas, fl. 1561.
Publication
London :: Printed by William Stansby, and are to be sold by Matthew Lownes,
1617.
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Subject terms
Logic -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A16218.0001.001
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"The arte of logick Plainely taught in the English tongue, according to the best approued authors. Very necessary for all students in any profession, how to defend any argument against all subtill sophisters, and cauelling schismatikes, and how to confute their false syllogismes, and captious arguments. By M. Blundevile." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A16218.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.

Pages

How many kindes of this mouing be there, and which be they?

Of this mouing there be three kindes, that is, right, circular, and mixt. The right belongeth to the foure elements, and to bo∣dies without life: for their natuall mouing is either right vpward, or else right downeward, as the fire, whose proper mouing is al∣waies to ascend right vp, and the mouing of a stone, or such like heauie thing, is to fall right downeward: for (according to the rules of philosophie) all light things doe moue vpward, and all heauie things downeward. Circular, or round mouing, belongeth to the heauens, and celestiall bodies, which doe turne round like a Cart wheele. The mixt mouing (that is to say, partly right, and partly round) belongeth to all liuing beasts, that goe sometime forward, sometime backward, or sidelong, sometime vpward, and sometime downeward.

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