The great and new art of weighing vanity, or, A discovery of the ignorance and arrogance of the great and new artist, in his pseudo-philosophical writings by M. Patrick Mathers, Arch-Bedal to the University of S. Andrews ; to which are annexed some Tentamina de motu penduli & projectorum.
About this Item
Title
The great and new art of weighing vanity, or, A discovery of the ignorance and arrogance of the great and new artist, in his pseudo-philosophical writings by M. Patrick Mathers, Arch-Bedal to the University of S. Andrews ; to which are annexed some Tentamina de motu penduli & projectorum.
Author
Gregory, James, 1638-1675.
Publication
Glasgow [Scotland] :: By Robert Sanders ...,
1672.
Rights/Permissions
To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.
Subject terms
Sinclair, George, d. 1696. -- Hydrostaticks.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A42066.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The great and new art of weighing vanity, or, A discovery of the ignorance and arrogance of the great and new artist, in his pseudo-philosophical writings by M. Patrick Mathers, Arch-Bedal to the University of S. Andrews ; to which are annexed some Tentamina de motu penduli & projectorum." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A42066.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 13, 2025.
Pages
§. I. Hic rejicitur Authoris Theorema primum.
LIb. 1. 2. & 3. de Baroscopij phaenomenis agitur: quod Baroscopij vocabulum, sicut & quaedam alia, se primum excogitasse gloriatur Author, Regiamq́ue Societatem plagij accusat, ac¦si ea è suis Manuscriptis compilaverit; licèt res ipsae jampridem extiterint.
descriptionPage 54
Dial. 1. lib. 1. Varia proponuntur theo∣remata, quorum primum (quod tantum∣modo divisio est, quam membrorum defi∣nitiones sequuntur) sie se habet. Quod cor∣porafluida, uti Aqua, Aër & Hydrargyrus, duplicem videantur habere gravitatem, unam Sensibilem, aliam Insensibilem. Eam appello (inquit) gravitatem Sensibilem, quam sentio, dum verbi causa, amphoram aquae plenam, à terra manu allevo & sustollo; quod quidem om∣nium aliorum corporum gravium, etiam est pro∣prium. Gravitas Insensibilis, fluidorum solum∣modo proprium, est illa vis & potentia quâ cor∣poraseipsis leviora sursum pellunt, &c. Vir∣tute hujus, ait Author sub finem Sect. 2. Cir∣cumsusum hunc aërem aequipondium efficere cum Hydrargyro, vel aqua, adminiculo tubi in forman Cylindri redacta. Sed haec definitio nullatenus convenit isti potentiae, quâ aër cum aqua tubi constituit aequipondium, nam virtute ejus, aër aquam (quae est cor∣pus gravius) in tubo sursum pellit. Nec convenit aquae; nam haec in tubo, corpus le∣vius viz. aërem deorsum premit aut pellit. Sidicatur, quod aqua tubi aërem prius qui∣dem deorsum premit, sed sic premendo, eundem etiam necessario sursum pellit in
descriptionPage 55
locum cadentis aquae: Respondebitur, Ob¦eandem rationem, lapidi cadenti gravita∣tem istam insensibilem similiter compe∣tere; quam tamen, supra assertum est, flui∣dorum esse propriam.
Theorema tertium Sect. 5. est falsum; nempe, Aqua & id genus alia corpora fluida in libra naturali pendentia, gradatim insensibi∣lem deperdunt gravitatem, prout gradatim re∣clinatur tubus vel Siphonis crus horizontem ver∣sus. Hoc fundamentum est totius doctrinae, lib. 1. & 2. Dialogorum Philosophicorum, & duobus libris de instrumentis Hydrago∣gicis, traditae; praeterea, id passim fere praesupponitur in plerisque corporum flui∣dorum phaenomenis, per reliqua authoris opera solvendis. Qualis sit illa doctrina, hujus Theorematis eversione apparebit.
email
Do you have questions about this content? Need to report a problem?
Please contact us.