344- Mifcelhnea Curio fa. 



46. I am aware of fotne Objections to be 

 made, whether to fomc Points of the Procefs, 

 or to fome of the Suppofitions. But I (aw not 

 well how to wave it, without making the Com- 

 putation much more perp'ex'd And in a Mat- 

 ter fo nice, and which mull depend upon Phyfi- 

 cal Observations, 'twill be hard to attain fuch 

 Accuracy, as not to ftand in need of fome Allow- 

 ances. 



47. Somewhat might have been farther added 

 to direct the Experiments fuggefted at 5 2l>and 

 31. But that may be done at Jeifure, after de- 

 liberation had, which way to attempt the Expe- 

 riment. 



48. The like is to be £iid of the different re- 

 finance which different Bodies may meet with in 

 the lame M<diutv 9 according to their different 

 Gravities (extenfively or intenfively confider'd) 

 and their different Figures and Pofitions in Mo- 

 tion. Whereof we have hitherto taken no ac- 

 count j but luppofed them, as to all thefe, to be 

 alike and equal. 



POSTSCRIPT. 



49. The Computation in £ 4T, 41, 43, 



may (if that be alio defired) be thus reprelented 

 by Line* and Spaces. The Ablatives a y m a y 

 mm a, &c. (being the fame with the firft Co- 

 lumn taken backward) are fitly reprelented by 

 the Segments of NF (beginning at n) in Figure 

 y and 6, and therefore by Parallelograms on thefe 

 Bafes, affuming the common height of F % or 

 the Aggregate of which is N^orFg. 

 And, fo many times 1, by fo many equal Spaces, 

 00 the fame Bales, between the feme Parallels, 



terminate^ 



