Galilei, Galileo, The systems of the world, 1661

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1from this to the other yet bigger of Saturn, whoſe period is of
thirty
years, it is neceſſary, I ſay, that you paſſe to another
Sphere
incomparably greater ſtill than that, and make this to

compliſh
an entire revolution in twenty four hours.
And this yet is
the
leaſt diſorder that can follow.
For if any one ſhould paſſe
from
the Sphere of Saturn to the Starry Orb, and make it ſo
much
bigger than that of Saturn, as proportion would require, in
reſpect
of its very ſlow motion, of many thouſands of years, then
it
muſt needs be a Salt much more abſurd, to skip from this to
another
bigger, and to make it convertible in twenty four hours.
But the motion of the Earth being granted, the order of the
riods
will be exactly obſerved, and from the very ſlow Sphere of
Saturn, we come to the fixed Stars, which are wholly

ble
, and ſo avoid a fourth difficulty, which we muſt of neceſſity
mit
, if the Starry Sphere be ſuppoſed moveable, and that is the

immenſe
diſparity between the motions of thoſe ſtars themſelves;
of
which ſome would come to move moſt ſwiftly in moſt vaſt
cles
, others moſt ſlowly in circles very ſmall, according as thoſe
or
theſe ſhould be found nearer, or more remote from the Poles;
which
ſtill is accompanied with an inconvenience, as well becauſe
we
ſee thoſe, of whoſe motion there is no queſtion to be made,
to
move all in very immenſe circles; as alſo, becauſe it ſeems to
be
an act done with no good conſideration, to conſtitute bodies,
that
are deſigned to move circularly, at immenſe diſtances from
the
centre, and afterwards to make them move in very ſmall
cles
.
And not onely the magnitudes of the circles, and
quently
the velocity of the motions of theſe Stars, ſhall be moſt

different
from the circles and motions of thoſe others, but
(which ſhall be the fifth inconvenience) the ſelf-ſame Stars
ſhall
ſucceſſively vary its circles and velocities: For that

thoſe
, which two thouſand years ſince were in the Equinoctial,
and
conſequently did with their motion deſcribe very vaſt
cles
, being in our dayes many degrees diſtant from thence, muſt
of
neceſſity become more ſlow of motion, and be reduced to
move
in leſſer circles, and it is not altogether impoſſible but that
a
time may come, in which ſome of them which in aforetime had
continually
moved, ſhall be reduced by uniting with the Pole, to
a
ſtate of reſt, and then after ſome time of ceſſation, ſhall return
to
their motion again; whereas the other Stars, touching whoſe
motion
none ſtand in doubt, do all deſcribe, as hath been ſaid,
the
great circle of their Orb, and in that maintain themſelves
without
any variation.
The abſurdity is farther enlarged (which

let
be the ſixth inconvenience) to him that more ſeriouſly
neth
the thing, in that no thought can comprehend what ought to
be
the ſolidity of that immenſe Sphere, whoſe depth ſo ſtedfaſtly

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