A Table. 



refulteth locall motion. 



2. What place is both nationally, 

 and really. 



3. Loctll motion is that dtvifion, 

 whereby it body changtth its 

 f/ace. 



4. The nature of quantity of it 

 felf is fufficient to unite a body 

 to its place. 



5. All operations amongst bodies 7 

 are either locatl motion , or 

 fuch of follow out of to call mo- 

 tion. 



6. Earth compared to water in 

 activity. 



7. Tht manner -whereby fire get- 

 tcthinto fewell, proveth that 

 it exceedeth earth in activity. 



The third reason, becaufe if 

 we imagine to our felvcs the 

 fftbflance of fire to be rtrificd, 

 it will have the fame appearen- 

 ces which light hath. 

 6. The fourth reafon, from the 

 manner .of the generation and 

 corruption of light, which a. 

 greet h with fire. 



Tht fifth rtafon, becaufefuch 

 properties belong to light as a- 

 gree onely unto bodies. 



CHAP. VII. 



Two obje&ions anfwered againft 

 light being fire, a more ample 

 proofe of its being fuch. 



ner, whereby fire cometh out of, 

 fetvell and wtrketh upon other 2. 

 bodies. 



8. The fame is proved by the watt- \ i. That all light is hot and apt 



to heat. 



The reafon why our bodies for 

 the most part do not feel the 

 heat of pure light. 

 The experience of burning glaf~ 

 fes, and of foultry gloomy wea- 

 ther, '-prove light to be fire. 



CHAP. VI. 



Of Light, what it is. 



1. In what fen fe the Author rc- 

 jelteth qualities. 



2. In what fenfe the Author doth 

 admit of qualities. 



5. Five arguments propofed to 

 prove that light is not a body. 



4. The two firft reafons to prove 

 light to be a body are, the re- 

 femb lance it hath with fire^and 

 because if it were a quality, it 

 would always produce an equal 

 to it felf. 



4. Philofophers ought not to 

 judge of things by the rales of 

 vulgar people. 



5. The different names of light 

 and fire , proceed from diffe- 

 rent notions of the fame fub- 

 stancf. 



6- The reafon why many times 

 fire and heat are deprived of 

 light. 



7. Whatbecometh of the body of 

 light when it dieth. 



* a 8. 



