300 } NOTES, 
Philosophice, 4to. Basil. 1571. [Ib.] Tilesius: a misprint for Telesius, 
as it stands in the De Augmentis, though.the editions of 1605, 1629, 
1633 of the Advancement read ‘Tylesius.’ Bernardino Telesio of 
Cosenza (1508-1588), according to the Latin, revived the philosophy 
of Parmenides, and turned the weapons of the Peripatetics against 
themselves. He wrote De Rerum Natura in nine books (Napoli, 1586), 
De Colorum Generatione (1570), and De Mari (1570). See Maurice, 
Mod. Philosophy, p. 162. [29] Donius; Augustino Doni, a physician 
of Cosenza, wrote two books De Natura Hominis, 4to. Basil. 1581. 
[Ib.] as a pastoral philosophy: i.e. as Bacon explains it in the treatise 
De Principiis atque Originibus, a philosophy which contemplates the 
world placidly and at its ease. See also p. 46, l. 14. [30] Fracas- 
torius: Hieronymus Fracastorius, poet and physician, born at Verona 
1483. Paul III. appointed him physician in ordinary to the Council 
of Trent, with a salary of ninety thalers a month. He died of apoplexy, 
Aug. 6, 1553, on his estate near Verona. Neither Donius nor Fraca- 
storius is mentioned in the Latin, but there is substituted ‘ Patricius the 
Venecian, who hath sublimated the fumes of the Platonists’ ( Wats’ 
trans. ed. 1640). [33] Gilbertus: See p. 41, 1. 8. 
P. 129. [2] For Xenophanes the Latin has Philolaus. [10] De 
Augm. iv. 1. [11] Plato, Alcib. Pr. ii. 124; Protag. i. 343; Cic. de 
Legg. i. 22. §§ 58, 59. I'v@& cavrdy is one of the sentences which are 
said to have been written over the entrance to the temple of Apollo 
at Delphi. [17] Comp. Seneca, Ep. Mor. xiv. 1. 2: Faciam ergo, quod 
exigis, et philosophiam in partes non in frusta dividam, Dividi enim illam, 
non concidi, utile est. [24] Cicero, De Orat. iii. 16, 19. Comp. Of the 
Interpretation of Nature (Works, iii. 228). [27] Comp. Of the Inter- 
pretation of Nature (Works, iii. 229): ‘And therefore the opinion of 
Copernicus in astronomy, which astronomy itself cannot correct, because 
it is not repugnant to any of the appearances, yet natural philosophy 
doth correct.’ Observe the change in the text of ‘appearances’ to 
phainomena and of ‘doth correct’ to ‘may correct.’ [28] The Latin 
adds gue nunc quoque invaluit. [31, 32] the science of medicine, if 
it be destituted...i is not much better &c.: For examples of a 
similar redundancy of the pronoun see p. 39, ll. 11, 33. 
P. 130. [26] Aristotle: in his Physiognomica. [27] Hippocrates: 
in his Preenotiones. [31] physiognomy: used in a wider sense than 
at present. 
P. 131. [4] the factures of the body: Lat. corporis fabricam dum 
guiescit, [12]‘For as the tongue speaketh to the eares, so doeth the 
gesture speake to the eyes of the auditour.” Basilicon Doron, book iii. 
(Works of King James I. p. 183). [24] affects of the body: Lat. tem- 
peramentum corporis. 
- P. 132. [2] the Pythagoreans: Referring to the precepts against eat- 
