Page 68
Sect. 6.
I let pass what is between, and come to the upshot; [This decaying sense (saith he) when we would expresse the thing it self, (I mean fancy its selfe) we call Imagina∣tion.]
This that he calls decaying sense, I confesse we call I∣magination, but I have shewed it not to be sense, there∣fore not decaying sense. [But (saith he) when we would expresse the decay, and signifie that the Sense is fading, old and past, we call it Memory.]
* 1.1Here are d••vers words, of most distinct nature, hudled together, to confound the Reader, (old and past) many things are now past, yet not old; and those past things, although but just now, are remembred, although not old. Then, saith he, [Imagination and Memory are one thing, which for divers considerations hath divers Names:* 1.2] I deny that they are the same thing, and prove it thus: