( 6f73 ) 
Body aod Spirit both togetberjhe informs us, what the World 
is to fueh Being or Beings spirit alcogether^io cootradi- 
ftioaion to Body. Where coofidering Room and Tim^and lay- 
iog the one to Gods Immmftty^ snd the other to his Eternitj^ 
he concludes, that RoommW not bear acoextecfion to the 
former y nor time a lengthening out with the latter ^ but that 
they are different altogether. And here he difputes againft 
thofeAuthorSjthat would maiotain Eternal TIME^and Bound* 
lefs ^ODr^endcavourkig to make itout^that all r/«/^ isa Nor» 
to Gods Eternity^^znA^MBHlk^ Point to his Immn/yiTakwg 
alfo cccafion to prove,that Room is no where but where Body 
is,and Spirit(m the ftrid notion of the word) no more laRoom 
thstn Thought is/ and as far from taking up Room, as 'tis from 
putting on ^^^^j'. 
Having thus difcourfed^what Body is to God and Spirit^ he 
confidersjwhat Body is to Body and t^/.In the doing of which, 
he undertakes to fhew^ i.How far Body or the World of Bo- 
dies may be ftretcht out ? 2. Into what fmalloefi a Piece of 
Body maybe crumbled <? 3. How fwifc or how flow either 
may bemoved f And 4jb€caufe theftuff ofBody is of a more 
flitting kindj than the fubftance of Spirit, he inquires^ How 
long it hath or might have aire idy becn^and how long it doth 
or may laft ^ jvForafmuch as Body may fhift its Being as well 
as itsSeat,he examins^Wbcther there may not have been fome 
Bodies or Worlds heretofore, which now are not? Lnftly, 
fince one may be a great way diftant from another, he inqiii- 
reth. Whether fome are not lb far from our place, as to be far 
alfo from the World in which we are placed ? 
In the firjl of thefe, he examins Dr. More's opinion about a 
boundlefs Extenfion made by him as needful as God is , and, 
upon occafion of the laid DoUors objecStion, denies, that an 
Arrow can be (hot beyond the rim of th^ World, or an Arm 
born out of it,the veryFrame of the world hiadringitas much, 
as the ftiffeft bodies obftrufit paffage. 
In the Second^h^ endeavors to (hew, that as a Body by put- 
ting to it cannot be magnified beyond a certain bulk, fo by 
taking from it cannot be leiTened beneath a certain fmallne% 
(ince that which is not boundlefs one way, cannot be fo in its 
little part. And here he labors to put an end to that puzling 
qu^ftionjWhether a Body be made up of a throog of If^divi^ 
Aa a aaa a a Jlbl^ 
