The logicians school-master: or, A comment upon Ramus logick.: By Mr. Alexander Richardson, sometime of Queenes Colledge in Cambridge. Whereunto are added, his prelections on Ramus his grammer; Taleus his rhetorick; also his notes on physicks, ethicks, astronomy, medicine, and opticks. Never before published.

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Title
The logicians school-master: or, A comment upon Ramus logick.: By Mr. Alexander Richardson, sometime of Queenes Colledge in Cambridge. Whereunto are added, his prelections on Ramus his grammer; Taleus his rhetorick; also his notes on physicks, ethicks, astronomy, medicine, and opticks. Never before published.
Author
Richardson, Alexander, of Queen's College, Cambridge.
Publication
London :: Printed by Gartrude Dawson, and are to be sold by Sam. Thomson at the White-Horse in Paul's Church-yard,
1657.
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Subject terms
Logic
Ramus, Petrus, -- 1515-1572
Talon, Omer, -- ca. 1510-1562
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A91783.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The logicians school-master: or, A comment upon Ramus logick.: By Mr. Alexander Richardson, sometime of Queenes Colledge in Cambridge. Whereunto are added, his prelections on Ramus his grammer; Taleus his rhetorick; also his notes on physicks, ethicks, astronomy, medicine, and opticks. Never before published." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A91783.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 10, 2024.

Pages

Page 167

Natura.

Because their nature springs from them mutually, for nature is arising from causes, here we may see in the Trinity, that one person is not before another, there is no respect of priority, or posteriority in the rest of contraries, because there is no force of argu∣ing from thence, we heard before that all of them were aeque manifesta, that is, aeque intelligibiia, and not as consentanies, where the cause cleareth the effect more, then contra, because the causes are more simple and single: so likewise the subject is not beholding to the adjunct, but contra; again, the ause and sub∣ject did more argue the effect, and adjunct, than con∣tra Again, from hence it is, that qui alterum perfecte norit, norit & reliquum, for they are mutual causes, and our scientia est e causis.

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