dd vary according to the inequality ^ or the various Circles of 
the Air's preflure, and the feveral Trads of thofe Circles^ in re- 
fpeft of their Scite and Extent 5 fothat if all the Circles of that 
preflure of the Air were free, that is, if the water did cover 
the whole Surface of the Earth , it would rife much higher in 
the Tydess (See pag. 4065407:)^ Befides, of a Qiicftion, Whe- 
ther in a Ship moved, all the motions of the people carried in 
it will be made after the fame manner, as if made in a Ship not 
moved $ Of the 7 Rules of Motion delivered by Hugeftr^ 
withlbmeconfiderations thereon^» p*4i i s Of the great Com- 
preflion of the Air, in reference to what Mr.^ Boyle hath pub- 
lifli't on that Subjeti5p.456 5 Of the ControverfyjWhether the 
Mercury in theT<?mVe//* Experiment be fuftain*d by fheexter* 
nal Air, or by a Tenfe matter within ^ Of the caufe of the Glafs- 
dr{)ps fhiver'd in (mall pieces by breaking off the tail of them^ 
Of Ele&naty^ p.4753&c. But whether our Author 
hia ve the better of thoie, againft whom he writes , 1 (hall not 
take upon me to Judge, but le^veit to the Reader to think as 
he (hall fee caufe* 
V. jmoNII AdOLINEtri, Fhil & Med, Veneti, &c* DIS- 
SERTATIONES ANAtOMLC^ & PATHOLOGICjS cle Sen- 
fihus ^ eoru^ 0rgamf4 Pataviij 1669. in 4% 
IN this Learned Treatife of the Sei^fes^tliQ Author begins from ^ 
the con(ideration of the Touchy di(cour(ing of the genuin ^ 
Organ thereof, which he.maketh to be the/oft fubftance of the 
Nerve only. 
Next^ht treatS'of the and its Organ 3 where he largely 
difcuflfeth the old Controverfy of the manner how Vidon is 
made, whether by the Reception of the Species or vifiblexays 
of theObjeft, or by the Emi(fion of the Spirits of the Eyes - 
maintaining theformer, and refuting the latten Then he prc- 
ceedeth ^ r. To fpeak of the nature of L/gA/ and r<?&^r/ 5 e- 
fteeming the diflinition of Colours into Real and Apparent to ^ 
be puerile* 2*To treat of the Three Refradionsof the Lumi- 
nous rays made in the Eye , by the feveral humors thereoC 
3 ,ToaiIign the different apertures of the Pupill according to - 
the diftance of the objeft, and the degrees of its illumination^ 
as alfo the refpeflive C)(Ec;e$ of the Chryftallin^ Vitreous, and ^ 
Aqueous humors j and the reafon of their pofition 5 and donfi- 
guratio%. 
