Page:Mathematical collections and translations, in two tomes - Salusbury (1661).djvu/292

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Dialogue. III.
265

ed, and as such to be refused; but the businesse doth not succeed in that manner, my Simplicius, and I excuse you for not having comprehended the matter as it is, in regard of your small experience in such affairs; but yet cannot I under that cloak palliate the error of the Author, who dissembling the knowledge of this which he did perswade himself that we in good earnest did not understand, hath hoped to make use of our ignorance, to gain the better credit to his Doctrine, among the multitude of illiterate men. Therefore for an advertisement to those who are more credulous then intelligent, and to recover you from error, know that its possible (and that for the most part it will come to passe) that an observation, that giveth you the star v. gr. at the distance of Saturn, by the adition or substraction of but one sole minute from the elevation taken with the instrument, shall make it to become infinitely distant; and therefore of possible, impossible, and by conversion, those calculations which being grounded upon those observations, make the star infinitely remote, may possibly oftentimes with the addition or subduction of one sole minute, reduce it to a possible scituation: and this which I say of a minute, may also happen in the correction of half a minute, a sixth part, and less. Now fix it well in your mind, that in the highest distances, that is v. g. the height of Saturn, or that of the fixed Stars, very small errors made by the Observator, with the instrument, render the scituation determinate and possible, infinite & impossible. This doth not so evene in the sublunary distances, and near the earth, where it may happen that the observation by which the Star is collected to be remote v. g. 4. Semidiameters terrestrial, may encrease or diminish, not onely one minute but ten, and an hundred, and many more, without being rendred by the calculation either infinitely remote, or so much as superior to the Moon. You may hence comprehend that the greatnesse of the error (to so speak) instrumental, are not to be valued by the event of the calculation, but by the quantity it self of degrees and minutes numbred upon the instrument, and these observations are to be called more just or less erroneous, which with the addition or substraction of fewer minutes, restore the star to a possible situation; and amongst the possible places, the true one may be believed to have been that, about which a greater number of distances concurre upon calculating the more exact observations.

Simpl.I do not very well apprehend this which you say: nor can I of my self conceive how it can be, that in greater distances, greater exorbitancies can arise from the errour of one minute only, than in the smaller from ten or an hundred; and therefore would gladly understand the same.

Salv.You shall see it, if not Theorically, yet at least Practi-cally,